SARAJEVO, Nov 18 (Hina) - The NATO-led peace Implementation Force
(IFOR) has observed no military movements in Serb-held Bosnia-
Herzegovina that would been caused by a power struggle between Serb
military and political leaders, IFOR spokesman Simon Haselock said
on Monday.
IFOR had stepped up patrols so that its troops could respond
to any increased military activity, Haselock told a news conference
in Sarajevo.
There were no blockades on roads inside the Serb entity but in
some parts IFOR troops had observed an increased Serb police
presence, especially around the southeastern town of Trebinje, he
added.
Haselock said that the IFOR command maintained regular
contacts with the Bosnian Serb amry and recognized the authority of
General Pero Colic as the new chief of staff. IFOR officials had
not met Colic yet but were in close contact with his aide, Colonel
Vinko Pandurevic.
Serb-run television at Pale resumed broadcasting after a one-
day break. However, followers of ousted General Ratko Mladic still
controlled a key transmission tower on Mount Zep which links Pale
to the northeastern town of Bijeljina and the northwestern town of
Banja Luka.
Mladic, indicted for war crimes by the International Criminal
Tribunal in The Hague, and his followers on Monday demanded a
meeting with Bosnian Serb president Biljana Plavsic in an effort to
resolve the conflict.
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