ZAGREB, April 2 (Hina) - Prime Minister Ivo Sanader and Croatian Peasant Party (HSS) leader Zlatko Tomcic exchanged harsh words and accusations in parliament on Friday during a debate on an HSS interpellation about the government's
work on Protocol VII.
ZAGREB, April 2 (Hina) - Prime Minister Ivo Sanader and Croatian
Peasant Party (HSS) leader Zlatko Tomcic exchanged harsh words and
accusations in parliament on Friday during a debate on an HSS
interpellation about the government's work on Protocol VII.#L#
Tomcic countered Sanader's accusations that the interpellation was
"replete with untruths and lies" by labelling them as "manipulation
nobody in parliament has ever used yet". "Nobody has dared to speak in
such a hypocritical, dirty and utterly artificial manner," Tomcic
said.
He called Sanader two-faced, saying he had "protected" war veterans
but recently sent "an entire regiment" to the Hague war crimes
tribunal, that he had "shed tears" when the economic zone in the
Adriatic was not proclaimed while his cabinet today refused to protect
the ecological and fishing zone from tankers.
Referring to the need of reaching a national consensus on issues as
significant as Protocol VII, Tomcic called on Sanader to reconsider
signing the document on May 1 since, he said, nothing bound him to do
so on that date.
Darko Milinovic criticised the HSS for bad timing with the
interpellation, saying that the slightest government instability could
negatively affect the European Commission's opinion on Croatia's
European Union membership application, which was expected to be
defined soon.
Neven Mimica of the Social Democrats criticised the government for
bypassing parliament in the Protocol VII negotiations and keeping them
under a veil of secrecy.
Jozo Rados of Libra applauded Sanader's statement that import quotas
would not be raised but said that with such a crucial issue as the
protocol, parliament should give its opinion before it was signed.
Pero Kovacevic of the Party of Rights said the negotiating platform
should be based on the informing of farmers and fishermen because they
would bear the brunt of the protocol's effect.
(Hina) ha