OHR BiH Media Round-up, 12/11/2002
Headlines in Print Media |
Dnevni Avaz: Implementation of the Sarajevo deal – Fuel prices raise again; Depleted uranioum threatens to Hadzici, Han-Pijesak
Dnevni List: Dangerous uranium found in suburbs of Sarajevo; Support of International Community to Customs offices
Vecernji List: NATO bombs have caused increase of cancer diseases; Today verdict in Leutar case: Indictees expect freedom
Slobodna Dalmacija: Anic: We were selling APCs that were not in working order to Israel; Scandal at session of intellectual ‘Circle 99’: Minister of Culture Gojer had his mobile phone ringing while he was talking about primitivism
Glas Srpski: Alarming findings of the UN experts for environment protection: too much uranium; Banja Luka: Brcko in a better position
Nezavisne Novine: “Gazexport” decided 1st December is a deadline for BiH authorities: No more Russian gas for BiH; Strong reactions over dismissals of special police members in Sarajevo – Lagumdzija: Security undermined in the entire state; Dragan Cavic, RS Vice President: The “Orao” affair is orchestrated by the officer’s circles according to the JNA recipe; OHR and CAFAO representatives in BiH Federation Customs Administration: Criminals better connected than the customs officers
Blic: Extended detention to Orao’s directors; Dodik: It is a lie that I negotiate with SDS on new authority
OHR/international community’s activities; related commentaries |
Vecernji List (front and page 3, by Zdenko Jurilj) reads that the Federation Customs Administration is about to get a special armed unit which will help the Administration in its line of duty. The said unit will accompany the inspectors on the ground and will be entitled to seize any document and search every premise to achieve its goal. Zelimir Rebac, the Director of the Administration: “They (the special unit) will have special insignia and official uniforms just like the special police. The authorities are big because they have to be like that in order to trace frauds worth millions committed by owners of some companies”.
Nezavisne Novine quotes (p 6) SNSD Executive Board Chairman Nebojsa Radmanovic as saying in Banja Luka that it is necessary to make entity customs administration more efficient, and that decisions on the BiH-level customs administration should not be made over night. “Without a serious analysis, in which experts from both entities should be take part, no measures regarding the setting up a joint, state-level customs administration should be taken“, said Radmanovic. He said that SNSD advocates efficient customs policy at the state level, which can be achieved in various ways, but definitely not with hasty introduction of the joint customs administration. “OHR and some other forces from BiH exert pressure in order to have as many institutions under state control and they justify their demands with inefficiency of current solutions“, said Radmanovic.
High Representative Paddy Ashdown met on Monday in Sarajevo with BiH Minister of Foreign Trade and Economic Relations Azra Hadziahmetovic to discuss the establishment of state control over arms export, as well as the ongoing economic reforms in BiH, OHR Spokesman Mario Brkic told Onasa, Fena (Oslobodjenje, p 6, Dnevni Avaz, p 3, by Sead Numanovic, Dnevni List, p 8, Slobodna Dalmacija, last page, Nezavisne Novine, p 3). Hadziahmetovic informed Ashdown of the progress made so far and the activities that are to be completed by the end of the week. The BiH authorities have determined a plan of activities on the basis of which state institutions should by 15 November take over full control over the import and export of weapons and military equipment. Brkic said the High Representative requested that the “case of the Orao Aviation Bureau, which has exported military equipment to Iraq and violated the UN arms embargo lifted against this country, happens never again”. It is clear, he said, that it is needed to have entity defence ministries cooperating with state institutions in order to establish an adequate arms export control system. Ashdown said better cooperation is needed between the BiH Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Relations, which is issuing licences for import and export of weapons, and agencies that verify the legality of export.
“The High Representative, Paddy Ashdown, has removed Munir Alibabic from the office of FOSS Director after Alibabic had started to deeply investigate into certain dossiers. He has still not offered convincing arguments for that removal. If he does not offer these arguments, there will be a real room for further speculations that he had removed Alibabic under political pressures or in accordance to some sort of a deal,” Mirko Sagolj wrote in the Oslobodjenje In Focus column.
“The High Representative, Paddy Ashdown, and US Ambassador to BiH Clifford Bond are in disagreement over the implementation of the election results and over the policy towards the RS in reaction to the Orao affair. Ashdown believes that it is not important who will be on power and that it is not his job to influence the process (of the election results implementation), while Bond is resolute that an alternative to the national political parties must be established,” Zija Dizdarevic wrote in an Oslobodjenje editorial.
“The Bosnia experience offers some support for this more muscular postwar scheme. Paddy Ashdown, the veteran British politician and statesman who is now the high representative in Bosnia, has pointed out that the repeated elections in that country have sometimes impeded rather than advanced the progress of desperately needed economic and political reforms. Most of the important changes in the country, from guarantees for returning refugees to the purging of criminals from government, have happened on the orders of Mr. Ashdown and his predecessors. And further progress is unlikely unless Western governments tightly condition continued aid on concrete steps by the Bosnians. In short, while democracy should be a central aim of postwar nation-building, it cannot necessarily be the starting point — and even if it is, a strong outside authority is essential,” said the editorial in today’s Washington Post.
Sarajevo special policemen case |
The revoking of work permits of 19 members of the Sarajevo canton police special unit is the most direct message to criminals in Sarajevo and BiH that they should not fear the police and that the police should fear them, BiH Minister of Foreign Affairs Zlatko Lagumdzija told a news conference in Sarajevo on Monday. The move has pushed the relations between BiH authorities and the international community to the most critical point in the past two years, according to Lagumdzija. “I believe that this example is something that has completely destroyed the partnership that was painstakingly built over almost two years. I have to say that we shall all – and particularly I in the capacity of BiH minister of foreign affairs – support everybody who was in such a brutal way brought into a position in which their basic human right is violated – that they are found guilty without a trial,” Lagumdzija emphasized. Given that the legal dispute involving these police officers is still under way, the IPTF decision violated the so-called presumption of innocence, Zlatko Lagumdzija said, despite the fact that one of the priorities of the international community in our country is to build a law-governed state. All police officers whose work permits were revoked by the IPTF have the right to file a complaint within eight days of receiving the decision. (Oslobodjenje, pages 4-5, Dnevni Avaz, p 11)
War crimes |
Vecernji List (page 5) carries an interview with a former member of the BiH Presidency, Stjepan Kljujic, in which he talks about the missing transcripts from wartime sessions of the BiH Presidency, the transcripts that were according to VL requested by the ICTY investigators and representatives of IC in BiH. “The BiH Presidency, unlike other institutions, had a generator during the war and all the sessions were taped. There is not a possibility that transcripts disappear. At the beginning of the Muslim-Croat conflict I was not in the Presidency but I know for sure that all the sessions were taped and that transcripts existed. It is exactly known who was in charge of that at the time and there are no reasons to hide it”, says Kljujic.
The RS Government’s bureau for relations with the Hague tribunal forwarded on Monday criminal files on Alija Ibric nicknamed Kurta and Fahrudin Sasanovic nicknamed Beli, who are suspected of committing war crimes against civilians in the municipality of Bratunac, to the Banja Luka office of the Hague tribunal. A statement issued by the bureau says that, as members of the 213th infantry brigade of the BiH Army, Ibric and Sasanovic are suspected of being in charge of and taking part in the attack on the Serb village of Loznica in Bratunac, and of killing and wounding villagers and setting their homes ablaze on 28 June 1992. (Blic p 7)
Weapons sale affairs |
Several hundred workers of the Bijeljina-based Orao Aviation Institute rallied in the institute on Monday to protest against the arrest of Orao managers. “The livelihood of over 500 workers depends on this firm and we will not allow Orao to collapse,” head of Orao’s laboratory sector Milan Buha told the rally. Buha went on to say that “Orao workers are indignant at the current situation, because they are creators, not destroyers as someone would like to portray”. The Orao workers earlier in the day issued a statement saying that
“the detention of the director, his deputy and the head of marketing thwarts the functioning of the institute.” (Articles on Orao affair: Oslobodjenje, p 6, Dnevni Avaz, p 2, Nezavisne Novine, p 2, Glas Srpski, p 3, Blic p 7)
The RS Treasury has no records that the Orao conducted payments to certain company or the entity budget through the single account of the Treasury – Nada Trninic, the official for implementation of budget in the RS Treasury, confirmed. She said that Orao was presented in the system of public treasury as a supplier of the RS Defence Ministry, and on this basis 432.655 KM were paid to Orao by the Ministry as of January 1 this year to date. “The RS Defence Ministry has not yet paid in 193.000 KM to “Orao” as the supplier, which it owes on this basis“, said Trninic. (Blic p 7)
Commenting on the “Orao” affair, RS President Dragan Cavic in his today’s interview to Nezavisne Novine stated that the ongoing investigation is being carried out thoroughly: “From what we have learnt so far, I got an impression that everything was done is officers’ circles, as it seems to me that there is a JNA organisation that never stopped existing. When we finalise the investigation, we will send the report to the BiH Presidency so it can brief the UN.” (Vecernje Novosti p 5)
“I am not familiar with any trip of Orao’s officials to Iraq”, General Manojlo Milovanovic, who was RS Minister of Defence during Dodik’s government, said, commenting the accusations of Dragan Cavic, the RS President, who said that Milovanovic “blessed” the trip. (Vecernje Novosti p 5)
Slobodna Dalmacija (front and page 15, by Zlatko Tulic) carries article in which Federation Minister of Defence Mijo Anic says that he is embittered on accusations coming from officials of Financial Police. Although he is still not officially informed about charges that are brought against him, Anic stated that the whole story has sauced him huge political damage, and therefore, he will file charges against Director of Financial Police, Zufer Dervisevic. “It was Dervisevic’s interest to discredit me”, Anic stated. Anic stated that all the military vehicles that were sold were not in working order.
Dnevni List (page 5) carries continuation (NB: see yesterday’s Cropress) of the interview with Nihad Spahalic, General Manager of “Intrade” company, that has sold 50,000 guns to one American company this summer. “For three months of investigation inspectors haven’t found anything. Now the Financial police came and they also saw that everything is clean. But when they send their reports to their bosses than they send other inspectors and that is how it lasts for three months. (…) It is all about some political score settling and we are the collateral damage. Why exactly ‘Intrade’ company? Because the job was very good, and little children know that ministers Anic and Buljubasic are at odds, they are trying to stage each other all the time. (…) You know about Anic’s job of export of weapons to Israel, what is classic example of malversation, and inspectors don’t want to know that, but I know!”, Spahalic said.
Contamination with depleted uranium |
Vecernji List (front and page 15, by Eldina Medunjanin, title “NATO bombs have caused increase of cancer diseases”), Dnevni List (front and page 9, title “Dangerous uranium found in suburbs of Sarajevo”), Slobodna Dalmacija (back page, title “Traces of depleted uranium found in three locations in BiH”), Jutarnji List (page 6) and Vjesnik (page 2) also carry reports on depleted uranium contamination in BiH.
Dragan Cavic: I’ll be the President of all RS citizens |
Post-election deals |
The PDP President, Mladen Ivanic, stated after the session of the party Main Board that it is too early to talk about coalitions (Nezavisne Novine, p 6)
The President of the RS Socialist Party, Petar Djokic, stated that his party does not want to participate in division of power together with national parties – SDA, HDZ and SDS. According to Djokic, his party advocates an agreement with moderate political parties (Glas Srpski, p 2, Nezavisne Novine, p 6).
RS Democratic Party already supported document called Partnership for Changes, offered by SNSD, but it will also support SDS-PDP coalition, if they establish new authorities. The President of the Party, Dusko Vukotic, expressed hope that SNSD and PDP leaders, Mladen Ivanic and Milorad Dodik will reach an agreement (Nezavisne Novine, p 6).
Vecernje Novosti (p 13) reports that the formation of parliamentary majority is going on slower then it was expected. The dispute is between the SDS and SNSD that even before the elections stated they “do not want to be a part of the same wheel”. Both parties count on forming the parliamentary majority with the PDP that has won 9 seats. Dodik on Friday said that he expected the PDP would reply to the SNSD offer, adding that he had achieved an agreement with some parties from the RS and “negotiations with the SDP and Party for BiH are underway”. Three days ago the SDS Main Board held a session in Banja Luka at which it was concluded that “the main aim of gathering of so-called moderate parties is to tighten the noose around the RS and push it in embrace of a centralise BiH”. The SDS would like to form the parliamentary majority on the basis of thus-far relations with the PDP and the SPRS. But such a combination is missing several delegates’ seats. According to president of the Socialist, Petar Djokic, there are two blocks in the RS and neither of them has formed the parliamentary majority.
“Oil war” in sight again |
Headlines in Electronic Media |
- Survivors and families of Srebrenica victims could request compensation from the Dutch Government
- Establishment of state control over weapons exports to take place by November 15
- Uranium traces have been found at three locations in BiH
FTV 1 (1930)
- Presence of uranium traces has been proved at three locations in BiH
- Cantonal and state officials support members of the Sarajevo Cantonal Support Unit
- Investigation on Srebrenica massacre has been opened in Dutch Parliament
- Special session of the Iraqi Parliament
RTRS (1930)
- Workers of the Orao Factory stopped production as a sign of protest
- 231 million KM have been paid so far for salaries of the budget beneficiaries
- Dutch Parliament conducts an official investigation on Srebrenica