HR-CROATIA-BULLETINS-Politika BRIEF NEWS BULLETIN IN ENGLISH NO. 5287 MESIC SAYS BELIEVES CROATIA WILL GET POSITIVE AVISRIJEKA, April 14 (Hina) - President Stjepan Mesic, who on Wednesday visited Primorje-Gorski Kotar County and the
seaport of Rijeka, said he believed that Croatia would obtain a positive opinion of the European Union because it had met all the conditions. Objections refer only to one citizen, who is on the run and not responding to the summons of the Hague-based UN war crimes tribunal, while all other Croatian citizens have responded, either as witnesses or as suspects, Mesic said answering a reporter's question about Croatia's prospects of obtaining a positive avis.
MESIC SAYS BELIEVES CROATIA WILL GET POSITIVE AVIS
RIJEKA, April 14 (Hina) - President Stjepan Mesic, who on Wednesday
visited Primorje-Gorski Kotar County and the seaport of Rijeka, said
he believed that Croatia would obtain a positive opinion of the
European Union because it had met all the conditions. Objections refer
only to one citizen, who is on the run and not responding to the
summons of the Hague-based UN war crimes tribunal, while all other
Croatian citizens have responded, either as witnesses or as suspects,
Mesic said answering a reporter's question about Croatia's prospects
of obtaining a positive avis.#L#
Mesic said that the Gotovina case should not be an obstacle to a
positive avis.
Speaking of a new stand-by arrangement with the International Monetary
Fund (IMF), the head of state said the deal with the IMF was necessary
for Croatia to have the credit rating it deserved. This will help
Croatia to produce and export and transform itself from an
import-oriented country into an export-oriented one, he added.
EXPECTED DATE OF AVIS APRIL 20 - FOREIGN MINISTER
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - The European Commission is expected to issue
its opinion on Croatia's EU membership application (the so-called
avis) on April 20, Foreign Minister Miomir Zuzul said on Wednesday
after a meeting with Prime Minister Ivo Sanader and Croatian
ambassadors accredited to EU member and candidate states.
"The expected date is April 20, but it does not necessarily have to be
that exact date," said Zuzul, adding that Croatia expected the
European Commission to forward its "recommendation to the European
Council so that the decision on Croatia's status can be made".
Zuzul said that during the meeting with the ambassadors, opinions were
exchanged and a strategy on future steps agreed on.
"We firmly believe that (Croatia's application) will be discussed on
June 17 or 18, based on that recommendation," Zuzul said.
He added that a conditional or an unconditional avis did not exist in
the official terminology, but that Croatia could draw conclusions
based on the recommendations given previously to other countries.
The minister said diplomacy would be very important in the coming
period, notably regarding communication with the European Commission
about the dates of the avis and Croatia's status.
Zuzul said Croatia's diplomacy was ready to make important steps in
"this historical period ahead of us". He added, however, that even
though diplomacy was important, the most important thing for a
positive outcome were Croatia's internal affairs.
CROATIAN PRESIDENT RECEIVES AMBASSADORS TO EU MEMBER AND CANDIDATE
STATES
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - Croatian President Stjepan Mesic on Wednesday
received Croatian ambassadors to EU member-states and candidate
countries, the heads of multilateral missions to Croatia as well as
Foreign Minister Miomir Zuzul and European Integration Minister
Kolinda Grabar Kitarovic to discuss Croatia's tasks in promoting the
country's interests in the world.
According to a press release issued by the president's office, Zuzul
and Grabar Kitarovic informed the president of the meeting they held
with Croatian ambassadors earlier this week. Grabar Kitarovic informed
the president of the course of negotiations on Protocol VII.
Mesic said Croatia's fundamental orientation was the European Union
and stressed the country's role in the stabilisation of Europe's
southeast. In that light, Mesic pointed to the importance of
cooperation with neighbouring countries.
The talks also focused on Croatia's cooperation with the International
Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.
DEL PONTE TALKS WITH VERHEUGEN ABOUT CROATIA'S COOPERATION WITH ICTY
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - The chief prosecutor of the UN war crimes
tribunal, Carla del Ponte, on Wednesday talked on the phone with the
EU's enlargement commissioner, Guenter Verheugen, about Croatia's
cooperation with the tribunal, del Ponte's spokeswoman Florence
Hartmann told Hina.
The European Commission has said that it will publish its opinion on
Croatia's application for EU membership next Tuesday, after a session
in Strasbourg. Cooperation with the UN war crimes tribunal is one of
the preconditions for a positive avis.
Hartmann would not reveal any details of the talks between del Ponte
and Verheugen. The UN tribunal's chief prosecutor does not have any
visit to Brussels scheduled until Tuesday.
Great Britain and the Netherlands, which have not ratified Croatia's
Stabilisation and Association Agreement with the EU, have been
consistently repeating that a positive assessment by del Ponte of
Croatia's cooperation with the tribunal is a precondition for a
positive avis.
The EC will forward its opinion to the European Council, which makes
the final decisions on granting candidate status and on the date of
the start of negotiations on full membership.
SLOVENE MINISTER: CROATIA HAS MADE MOST HEADWAY
LJUBLJANA/BRUSSELS, April 14 (Hina) - Janez Potocnik, the candidate for
the first Slovene European Union commissioner, answered for 90 minutes
questions by European Parliament members about his views on EU
expansion during the introduction of new European commissioners on
Wednesday. Potocnik commented on the western Balkans and Croatia,
which he described as a country that had made the most progress.
Potocnik, Slovenia's incumbent European Integration Minister, is
expected to work together with the European Commissioner for
Enlargement, Guenter Verheugen, in the European Commission until
October, when the term of office of the current Commission expires.
Western Balkan states need clear European prospects, they are the ones
that can do the most for their European future, but they also need
unselfish support on that path, Potocnik said, adding that Croatia had
made the biggest progress in this context.
"Croatia has made the greatest progress and I sincerely hope that in
the coming weeks it will obtain a positive opinion of the European
Commission," Potocnik said.
Asked by a Socialist deputy from Austria, Hannes Swoboda, whether
Croatia should solve outstanding issues with Slovenia before joining
the EU, Potocnik answered that bilateral issues should be settled
through bilateral negotiations, and those pertaining to the European
'acqui' in line with the acqui. The problem of demarcation of the
borderline at sea is a bilateral issue, while Croatian parliament's
proclamation of a protected zone on the sea is an issue pertaining to
the fulfillment of European rules, because the Adriatic sea must be
protected in cooperation with neighbouring countries, Potocnik said.
Commissioners from 10 countries which will join the EU on 1 May are to
be confirmed by the European Parliament at its session in Strasbourg
on 5 May. After that, the Council of the EU is to give the green light
for their appointment. The new commissioners will be active in the
current EC team led by Romano Prodi, whose term ends in October this
year. They will have the right to vote, but they will not head any
departments. Instead, they will be appointed to work together with
commissioners from 'old' EU member-states.
RACAN CONFIDENT EC HAS ALREADY DRAFTED POSITIVE AVIS
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - The leader of the Social Democratic Party
(SDP), Ivica Racan, has said that he has information on the European
Commission having drafted a positive opinion on Croatia's candidacy
for membership in the European Union and that the only remaining
question is the date of its publication.
Speaking at a news conference on Wednesday, Racan said it was
irrelevant if the opinion (the so-called avis) would be made public
this or next month.
He described as unfair a statement by Britain's Minister for Europe
Denis MacShane, who said that Great Britain would not vote for a
positive Croatian avis until the case of the runaway general Ante
Gotovina was solved. He voiced confidence the position of an
individual EU member could not prevent a country from obtaining a
positive avis, but added that it could hamper the continuation of
integration into the EU, including the obtaining of candidate status
and the start of negotiations on membership.
Racan reiterated that both the former and incumbent Croatian
authorities had done everything to arrest Gotovina and hand him over
to the UN war crimes tribunal. "It is therefore unfair for Gotovina to
be an obstacle to a positive avis and Croatia a hostage to one man
whose case it wants, but cannot solve".
It is also unacceptable to criticise Croatia over Gotovina and ascribe
credit for the voluntary surrender of six Croats to the UN tribunal to
individuals, he added.
The SDP leader believes that Great Britain will have understanding for
Croatia and support its efforts to draw closer to the EU, because, he
said, Croatia had deserved this in the last four years.
"Support for the avis would be not only a gesture of goodwill towards
Croatia, but an optimistic message to the entire region".
Asked if a negative avis could lead to a national coalition of the SDP
and the ruling Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), Racan said this was
hypothetically possible, but only on two conditions - that this is
vital for the protection of democracy in Croatia and the country's
prospects and that the coalition partner is a democratic party.
"For the time being, I don't see any circumstances calling for such a
coalition, and we do not see a reformed HDZ. We do see a reformed
Sanader, but not a reformed HDZ," he added.
He commended the HDZ's policy on the foreign front, but slammed its
policy on the home front because of lack of an economic strategy and
democratic conduct.
"Sanader is a good politician who talks nicely and is good at covering
up his government's tricks, but that can't last long because fine
words butter no parsnips," Racan said.
Speaking about relations with the UN war crimes tribunal, Racan said
Croatia would best be defended with the truth and readiness to face
the facts. "We were brave in the defence from aggression and the
struggle for our independence, and we have to be brave in confronting
the truth and facts which reveal the dark side of our recent history,"
he said.
BEBIC SAYS PARLIAMENT WILL DEBATE ICTY INDICTMENT REGARDLESS OF AVIS
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - The Croatian parliament will next week hold a
debate on political allegations from Hague tribunal indictments
regardless of whether the European Commission will answer to Croatia's
EU membership application on Tuesday, the president of the Croatian
Democratic Union (HDZ) club of deputies, Luka Bebic, said on
Wednesday.
After a closed meeting of the heads of clubs of deputies, Bebic said
parliament would discuss the indictments on April 22 or 23.
Asked whether the debate could have an impact on the avis that the
European Commission is expected to make public on Tuesday, Bebic said
the debate could not be harmful in any way because every nation and
country had the right to aspire to the truth. He added the debate
could not disqualify Croatia as a potential candidate for EU
membership.
"Regardless of the avis, parliament will hold the debate," Bebic said
and added the HDZ club of deputies would try to hold a debate which
would be in accordance with Croatia's interests and the interest of
ICTY indictees.
Asked whether a debate by MPs claiming that Croatia had carried out an
aggression against Bosnia could bring into question parts of the
Homeland War Declaration, Bebic said the HDZ was not questioning the
Declaration, which he said had become part of important legal
documents of the Croatian people.
He said the parliament's leadership did not plan to formally limit the
discussion, adding that it was up to deputies to see that they did not
jeopardise Croatia's interests with their statements.
IMF OFFICIAL: MAIN GOAL FOR CROATIA IS TO HALT RISE IN ITS FOREIGN
DEBT
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - The new chief of the International Monetary
Fund mission to Croatia, Dimitri Demekas, has said that the main
objective of a new stand-by deal with Zagreb will be the reduction of
risks to which Croatia is exposed because of its rising foreign debt.
Croatia is one of the most successful countries not only in its close
region but also in central Europe, but for the few recent years it has
lived beyond its means, the IMF official said.
We have not come here because of a crisis, but our priority is to halt
the rise in the Croatian foreign debt, Demekas said on Wednesday after
his talks with Croatia's Prime Minister Ivo Sanader in Zagreb.
The IMF mission chief went on to say that representatives of Croatia
and the Fund would try to find solutions in talks over the next ten
days.
In this context he pointed to the fiscal and budgetary policy as being
of key importance for the accomplishment of the objective.
What we have seen so far is a good starting position for the talks,
Demekas said, adding that the second round of talks between the Fund
and Croatian officials would be held in late May. Unit then the talks
on a new stand-by arrangement could be completed, the IMF mission
chief said and added that the new deal would cover a period of 18
months.
PM Sanader was very satisfied with Tuesday's talks with the IMF
delegation and their opinion on the situation in Croatia.
"We had good, pleasant and meaningful talks on our plans," Sanader
said.
He added that his cabinet was very well aware of what was good and
what was bad, including the high foreign debt, in Croatia.
The PM went on to say that the arrival of the IMF mission should not
be viewed as the arrival of a delegation which would admonish Croatia
or tell Croatia what to do.
"We are partners and we would like to use the know-how and good advice
of IMF experts," the Croatian PM said.
The mission is scheduled to meet Sanader again at the start of next
week.
CENTRAL BANK COUNCIL CONSIDERS LATEST MONETARY, ECONOMIC TRENDS
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - The Croatian National Bank (HNB) Council on
Wednesday considered the latest monetary and economic trends, a draft
monetary projection for the April-June 2004 period, and a report on
the situation in the banking sector in the last quarter of 2003.
The session was chaired by HNB governor Zeljko Rohatinski.
The Council adopted a report on the central bank's transactions in
2003 as well as a number of decisions, the bank said in a statement.
The stability of prices continues to be satisfactory. The kuna-euro
exchange rate this March nominally went up 2.8 percent. The monetary
policy in March saw appreciation pressure put on the exchange rate and
reduced bank liquidity, which prompted the HNB to make four foreign
exchange interventions. This resulted in the purchase of EUR162.7
million and the issuance of 1.2 billion kuna, and stabilised the
exchange rate.
CROATIAN DEFENCE MINISTER HOLDS TALKS WITH HIS LATVIAN COUNTERPART
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - Croatian Defence Minister Berislav Roncevic
met his Latvian counterpart, Atis Slakteris, on Wednesday.
The two ministers signed an agreement on bilateral cooperation in
defence issues.
Roncevic, who briefly addressed the press, said he informed his
Latvian counterpart of Croatia's bid to join NATO and the course of
Croatian reforms and moves the ministry and the government plan to
take with the aim of making Croatia join NATO. The minister reiterated
that joining the alliance was Croatia's strategic goal on the defence
front.
The Latvian minister said his country attached great importance to
good relations with Croatia. Good bilateral relations have already
been confirmed, Slakteris said, adding that Croatia and Latvia were
among the first countries to recognise each other's independence in
1990.
"Today we held very successful talks about the future cooperation," he
said and added that Latvia could offer Croatia cooperation in
education and military training.
LATVIAN DEFENCE MINISTER RECEIVED BY SANADER, SEKS AND JARNJAK
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - Latvian Defence Minister Atis Slakteris, who
is on an official visit to Croatia, on Wednesday talked with Prime
Minister Ivo Sanader, Sabor President Vladimir Seks and the chairman
of the parliamentary home affairs and national security committee,
Ivan Jarnjak.
Sanader and the Latvian minister considered bilateral cooperation in
defence in light of an agreement the two countries signed earlier in
the day on the matter. They also discussed the reform of the military
and Croatia's bid to enter NATO. Present at the Sanader-Slakteris
talks was also Croatian Foreign Minister Miomir Zuzul.
Minister Slakteris strongly supported Croatia on its path toward
Euro-Atlantic institutions, and offered help which Latvia could give
Croatia on that road.
MESIC AGREES TO LAUNCHING ESTABLISHMENT OF DIPLOMATIC TIES WITH
PALESTINIAN SELF-GOVERNMENT AUTHORITY
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - Croatian President Stjepan Mesic on Wednesday
received the foreign minister of the Palestinian self-government
authority, Nabil Shaath, and agreed on launching procedure to
establish diplomatic relations between Croatia and the Palestinian
self-government authority, Mesic's office said in a statement.
Shaath had suggested establishing diplomatic relations at a meeting
earlier today with Croatian Foreign Minister Miomir Zuzul, who said he
would propose launching procedure to that end to Croatia's president
and prime minister.
Mesic also advocated finding a just and balanced solution for the
Middle East crisis. He said the solution to the problem should
acknowledge two realities - the existence of Israel as a state and the
right of the Palestinians to their own country.
Shaath said Palestine appreciated Mesic's principled foreign policy,
and relayed Palestinian President Yasser Arafat's greetings.
Shaath and Mesic also discussed prospects of upgrading relations in
the economy and culture.
ZUZUL MEETS PALESTINIAN FOREIGN MINISTER
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - Croatian Foreign Minister Miomir Zuzul met in
Zagreb on Wednesday with his Palestinian counterpart Nabil Shaath,
with whom he discussed, among other things, the possibility of
establishing diplomatic relations between Croatia and the Palestinian
self-government authority, the Croatian Foreign Ministry said in a
statement.
Shaath suggested the establishment of diplomatic relations between
Croatia and the Palestinian authorities. Zuzul answered that he would
contact the president of the republic and the prime minister to
propose launching procedure to establish diplomatic relations.
Zuzul also said that Croatia was ready to contribute, as much as it
could, to the solution of the Middle East conflict. The Palestinian
official invited Zuzul to visit Palestinian areas, which the minister
accepted, the statement said.
Earlier today Zuzul said the meeting with Shaath was an expression of
"Croatia's balanced approach to that part of the world".
UNION FEDERATION UNPLEASANTLY SURPRISED BY PM'S CLAIMS
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - The Association of Workers' Trade Unions of
Croatia (URSH) said in a statement on Wednesday it was "unpleasantly
surprised" by Prime Minister Ivo Sanader's rhetoric about trade unions
in a prime time Croatian Television broadcast yesterday.
Commenting on union leaders' claims that the government had done
nothing to revive the economy and improve the living standards in the
first 100 days of its term in office, Sanader said he advocated social
partnership but could not accept to have unions "lecture" the
government.
"They didn't appoint the government so they won't remove it either,
and if they want to lead the country they should go to the polls,"
Sanader said on the programme called Forum.
URSH said today such rhetoric is "diametrically opposite to the
dialogue held at the partner meeting with the union federation leaders
a few days ago".
"Since we elected you but not you us, we have to cooperate with each
other so I expect at least a higher level of open and cultured
dialogue," read the statement signed by URSH president Boris Kunst.
MINE ACTION CENTRE SATISFIED WITH DE-MINING IN FIRST THREE MONTHS OF
2004
SISAK, April 14 (Hina) - The Croatian Mine Action Centre (HCR) Council
adopted a report on de-mining in this year's first three months at a
session in Sisak on Wednesday.
In the first three months of this year, 52 de-mining and mine search
projects were carried out on an area of 11.3 square kilometres, which
exceeds plans by 19 percent, HCR director Otto Jungwirth said.
A total of 1.8 square kilometres were cleared of mines and 989
explosive devices were discovered. An area of 9.5 square kilometres
was searched for mines.
De-mining activities in the said period cost 46.3 million kuna, of
which 35 million was provided by the government, 2.3 million was
secured through domestic and foreign donations, and the rest was
secured from other sources, Jungwirth said.
Five persons were injured and four were killed, including two
mine-removal experts, in mine-related incidents.
HCR deputy director Mirko Ivanusic said that an international seminar
on humanitarian de-mining would be held in Sibenik on April 21-23. The
event is expected to pool 250 participants from 32 countries.
CROATIA WILL INSIST FREE TRADE AGREEMENT WITH BOSNIA BE RESPECTED
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - The Croatian government will insist that a
free trade agreement with Bosnia-Herzegovina be respected. Its
implementation is not in question and possible changes of the content
of the agreement could be made only through bilateral talks in the way
which would be satisfactory to both sides.
This is the standpoint of the Croatian Economy, Labour and
Entrepreneurship Ministry which Minister Branko Vukelic and state
secretary for the economy Vladimir Vrankovic presented at a news
conference on Wednesday.
All relations between the two countries are regulated by international
agreements signed by both sides, but Bosnia clearly did not manage to
prepare itself for the implementation of the free trade agreement,
Vrankovic said commenting on a recent statement by the chairman of the
Bosnian Council of Ministers, Adnan Terzic, who said that his
government would reduce import tariffs for some food products from EU
countries as a measure against "Croatia's monopoly" on the Bosnian
market.
Vukelic said that so far the two countries had problems in
agriculture, adding that competent ministers were intensively working
in order to solve them.
Bosnia did not request that the free trade agreement be withdrawn or
revoked, Vukelic said and added that the relevant Croatian ministry
was not considering that either.
SCOTTISH JUDGE TO REPLACE JUDGE MAY IN MILOSEVIC TRIAL
ZAGREB/THE HAGUE, April 14 (Hina) - Judge Iain Bonomy of Scotland will
replace British Judge Richard May at the trial of former Yugoslav
President Slobodan Milosevic before the International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), ICTY spokesman Jim Landale
said on Wednesday.
Judge Bonomy, 58, will take an oath on June 1, but he has already
arrived in The Hague to become acquainted with the file, Landale
said.
Bonomy will have to review the file with all documents referring to
the trial, including more than 30,000 pages of transcripts.
The prosecution completed the presentation of evidence on February 25
and the trial is scheduled to resume on June 8, by which time
Milosevic is expected to prepare his defence.
SENIOR BOSNIAN OFFICIALS CONFIRM READINESS TO COOPERATE WITH ICTY
SARAJEVO, April 14 (Hina) - Senior Bosnian officials on Wednesday
signed in Sarajevo a joint declaration confirming their readiness to
fully cooperate with the UN war crimes tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia and bring to justice all war crimes indictees.
The declaration, formulated by the Presidency of Bosnia-Herzegovina,
was signed by the President of the Presidency, Sulejman Tihic, the
presidents of the Croat-Muslim and Serb entities, Niko Lozancic and
Dragan Cavic respectively, the chairman of the country's Council of
Ministers, Adnan Terzic, the presidents of entity parliaments, Muhamed
Ibrahimovic and Dragan Kalinic, and the entities' premiers.
"Working with commitment on the creation of conditions for integration
into Euro-Atlantic associations, the bodies of authority of
Bosnia-Herzegovina and its entities express their political will and
determination to cooperate fully with the ICTY. We undertake to invest
maximum effort to bring to justice all war crimes suspects and call on
all suspects to surrender voluntarily to the Hague-based tribunal,"
reads the declaration.
The declaration is signed at a time when Bosnia-Herzegovina is
expecting a decision from NATO member-countries on whether it will be
invited to join NATO's Partnership for Peace programme at a summit in
Istanbul.
US Ambassador to Bosnia-Herzegovina Clifford Bond has recently warned
that it is very possible that Bosnia will not be invited to
Partnership for Peace at the Istanbul summit because it has not met
the basic political condition, namely arrested Radovan Karadzic, and
that responsibility for that lies both with the state and the Bosnian
Serb authorities.
DAILY: SJEKIRICA TO APPEAR BEFORE SPANISH INVESTIGATORS ON FRIDAY
SARAJEVO, April 14 (Hina) - A citizen of Bosnia-Herzegovina, Sanel
Sjekirica, who is believed to be connected with terrorist attacks in
Madrid in March, is currently in Sweden and is willing to turn himself
in to Spanish authorities, the Sarajevo-based Dnevni Avaz wrote on
Wednesday.
The daily quoted Sjekirica on the front page as saying that he would
travel to Madrid on Friday and that he had already talked to Spanish
investigators on the phone.
"I told (Spanish police) that I had nothing to hide and that I will
depart from Sweden to Madrid on Friday evening," Sjekirica told the
daily. He is currently in Sweden where he is staying with a friend,
Suada Oric, according to the paper.
The first secretary of the Bosnian embassy in Stockholm, Zeljko Grbic,
has also talked with Sjekirica who confirmed to him that he is
available to the Spanish authorities.
A key to the entire riddle could by a Bosnian passport which Sjekirica
lost. The Spanish police found a Bosnian passport with his name among
documents possessed by terrorists who carried out the attacks in
Madrid.
Oslobodjenje, another daily from Sarajevo, reported on Wednesday that
the Swedish postal services had lost the passport which Sjekirica sent
to his mother in Spain last year to extend his visas where he and his
mother had arrived earlier as Bosnian refugees.
Although there were many media allegations on possible links between
Sjekirica and Islamic terrorists, Bosnian state officials are very
reserved in commenting on the case.
Deputy Security Minister Dragan Mektic has said that the Spanish
authorities asked only for a check up on Sjekirica's identity and that
they gave no explanation whether he might be in any way connected with
terrorists.
Sources in the Croat-Muslim federal interior ministry said that Spain
actually had asked for the confirmation of the identities of seven
persons, including Sjekirica.
DAILY: BUS WITH CROATIAN PLATES CARRYING JAPANESE TOURISTS DAMAGED IN
NOVI SAD
SUBOTICA, April 14 (Hina) - Almost all windows of a bus with Croatian
licence plates carrying Japanese tourists in Novi Sad, Vojvodina, at
the end of last week were smashed, a local daily reported on
Wednesday.
The windows were broken overnight while the bus was parked in front of
a hotel in downtown Novi Sad, the daily said.
The newspaper added that representatives of the city authorities
confirmed that the bus was damaged, but the city police had no
knowledge of the incident.
The bus incident is the latest in a series in Vojvodina and Serbia
since late 2003 when the Serbian Radical Party won the Serbian
elections. The targets of the attacks have been property and buildings
with the symbols of ethnic Croats or other ethnic minorities and their
religious objects.
WITNESS ACCUSES MILOSEVIC'S SON OF ORDERING DJINDJIC'S MURDER
BELGRADE, April 14 (Hina) - Marko Milosevic, the son of former Yugoslav
president and indictee of the UN war crimes tribunal Slobodan
Milosevic, offered Serbian mobsters shortly after Milosevic's ouster
in October 2000 five million German marks to kill Serbian Prime
Minister Zoran Djindjic, a witness at the trial of Djindjic's
assassins said on Wednesday, the Beta news agency reported.
In a testimony given at Belgrade's Special Court behind closed doors,
witness Zoran Vukojevic reiterated his statement given during the
investigation. Beta unofficially reported that Vukojevic said that
Milosevic's son Marko offered mobsters five million German marks to
kill Djindjic shortly after 5 October 2000.
At the time, the principal indictee in Djindjic's slaying, Milorad
Lukovic aka Legija, former commander of Serbian special police units,
organised some people from the Zemun mobster clan, who provided
additional security for and protected Djindjic.
The indictment alleges that Lukovic and other people accused of
Djindjic's assassination were provided with information about
Djindjic's movements by a former employee of the Serbian Interior
Ministry's State Security Service and indictee in the trial, who had
connections with some members of Djindjic's security team.
The trial resumes tomorrow.
CRVENKOVSKI, KEDEV IN MACEDONIA'S PRESIDENTIAL RUNOFF
SKOPJE, April 14 (Hina) - Macedonia will hold a run-off presidential
election, with Social Democrat Branko Crvenkovski and opposition
nationalist Sasko Kedev as candidates, the Social Democratic Alliance
(SDSM) said on Wednesday after a little under 50 percent of ballots
were counted.
According to the SDSM, its candidate Crvenkovski has won 216,000 and
VMRO-DMPNE's Kedev a little over 174,000 votes so far. Kedov's party
confirmed that Crvenkovski was leading but said the difference in the
number of votes won was smaller.
The two ethnic Albanian candidates in today's presidential ballot,
Gezim Ostreni and Zidi Xhelli, have won 25,000 and 13,000 votes
respectively.
The election commission said the turnout was over the required 50
percent, even though only 26 percent of eligible voters cast their
ballots by 4 pm, and added that the voting was held in a calm and fair
atmosphere, with only minor irregularities.
IN OTHER NEWS:
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - Extraordinary flood measures, which were
called on Tuesday for the Sava near the towns of Jasenovac and
Slavonski Samac, for the Una near the town of Hrvatska Kostajnica, and
for the Cetina near the village of Han, the town of Trilj as well as
in the area around the Peruca Lake were still in effect on Wednesday
evening, the Croatian Information Centre reported. Emergency measures
were introduced at 5 pm today for the Sava in Slavonski Brod, Bebrina,
Oriovac, Vrbje, Davor, Nova Kapela, Gornji Bogi~evci and Oku~ani in
Brod-Posavina County.
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - European Integration Minister Kolinda
Grabar-Kitarovic will head a Croatian delegation in Brussels on April
16 at a fourth round of negotiations on an additional protocol to the
Stabilisation and Association Agreement and Interim Agreement signed
with the European Union, i.e. Protocol VII, which determines export
and import quotas in trade with EU members. The delegation will
include the minister of agriculture, forestry and water management,
Petar Cobankovic, the European Integration Ministry said in a
statement on Wednesday.
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - Ukrainian Foreign Minister Costyantin
Gryshchenko will arrive in Croatia on Thursday for a two-day official
visit. He and his Croatian hosts will talk about the development of
bilateral cooperation and new circumstances of the European Union's
enlargement.
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - A Croatian-Slovene committee for economic
cooperation held its seventh session in Zagreb on Wednesday to discuss
economic cooperation in light of Slovenia's admission to the EU. After
the session, the two sides signed a protocol stressing readiness to
improve the cooperation in the new circumstances.
Slovenia is Croatia's third most important trade partner and seventh
most important investor. In 2003 bilateral trade totalled more than
1.5 billion, with Croatia's exports accounting for 510 million and
imports for some one billion. Slovene investments in Croatia total
370 million.
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - The Croatian State Archives will take over
materials which the Croatian Counterintelligence Agency (POA)
collected after the 1995 'Flash' and 'Storm' operations in the areas
which were liberated in those operations in May and August that year.
Materials include the authentic materials of Serb rebel troops and
paramilitary units and bodies of the self-styled Serb Republic of
Krajina, the State Archive reported on Wednesday.
The documents testify to systematic plans about attacks on Croatia and
the aggression launched by Serb rebels supported by the then Yugoslav
Peoples' Army (JNA). Upon the take-over of the documents, the State
Archives will process them and make them available to investigators
and historians.
ZAGREB, April 14 (Hina) - Democratic Centre (DC) President Vesna Skare
Ozbolt has said that her party will persist in efforts aimed at the
founding of an international team whose task will be to establish what
happened in Croatia during the Homeland Defence War in Croatia in the
1990s, and that this team, to be set up by the Croatian parliament,
will include world-known politicians and diplomats such as Hans
Dietrich Genscher and Peter Galbraith, who were witnesses to those
historic events. The 1995 'Flash' and 'Storm' operations are the
foundations of Croatia and its freedom and independence, and crimes,
if perpetrated, must be prosecuted, but they must not be equated with
those military and police operations, Skare Ozbolt told a news
conference in Sibenik on Wednesday. Commenting on Croatia's bid to
enter the European Union, she said that the struggle for the admission
to the Union resembled the situation when the country fought for its
international recognition in 1991 and 1992. "Croatia has met all
conditions for its entry into the EU," the DC leader said, adding that
the question was no longer whether Croatia would be admitted to the
Union but when.
SUBOTICA, April 14 (Hina) - Business people from Vukovar County on
Wednesday were presented with a special award for participation in the
8th international Interexpo fair in Subotica, in the northern Serbian
province of Vojvodina.
The award was received by Vukovar County prefect Nikola Safer, who
attended the opening ceremony with his associates and representatives
of the city of Osijek. Commenting on the latest anti-Croat incidents
in Vojvodina, Safer said that those were probably isolated incidents
which did not reflect the general attitude of the local population and
that he did not believe they could worsen bilateral relations. Ivan
Marjanovic, secretary at the Croatian Chamber of Economy in Vukovar,
said trade between Vukovar County and Vojvodina had increased tenfold
in the last five years.
BANJA LUKA, April 14 (Hina) - Republika Srpska Television reported on
Wednesday afternoon that the premises of the Sveti Jovan radio station
in Pale, which is owned by war crimes indictee Radovan Karadzic's
daughter, were searched for several hours today, while the legal
affairs director of the Srpske Sume company at Sokolac confirmed that
police searched the company's directorate. Both searches were carried
out by the Bosnian Serb entity police, on orders from the Court of
Bosnia-Herzegovina. A number of items and files were seized. Neither
the NATO-led Stabilisation Force nor the European Union Police Mission
took part in the operations.
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