OHR BiH Media Round-up, 8/7/2002
Print Media Headlines |
Dnevni Avaz: SFOR raids Tabacco Factory Sarajevo; Is Karadzic hiding in Ozren?
Oslobodjenje: SFOR raids Tabacco Factory in Sarajevo; The future of basketball in BIH in one place
Jutarnje Novine: SFOR raids Tabacco Factory in Sarajevo; Mesic and Kostunica in BIH on July 15
Glas Srpski: Miroslav Deronjic arrested in Bratunac; Prijedor – judiciary under pressure
Blic: Ivanic: RS does not depend on someone’s charity; Cedo Volas: The Trade Union does not need a reform; Mirko Banjac: They dictate the work of RTV with stealing money
Nezavisne Novine: 33 miners die in Ukraine
Dnevni List: SFOR raids Tabacco Factory: Instead of grenades, SFOR discovers multi-million marks fraud
Vecernji List: Serbs to form a new Canton in the Federation – Drvar, Glamoc, Grahovo
Affairs in the Federation |
Dnevni List reports, however, that the reason behind the SFOR raid was not the search for illegal weapons, but an attempt to break the network of cigarette smuggling between BiH and Yugoslavia. (front page in Dnevni Avaz, Oslobodjenje, Jutarnje Novine, Dnevni List, Vecernji List p. 3, Glas srpski p. 3 and Nezavisne novine p. 3, Blic p. 10 top story at BHTV 1 and FTV prime time news)
Vjesnik (page 10) reports that John Sylvester, the SFOR commander in BiH, urged local authorities to urgently process cases of those responsible for the illegal storage of 120 tons of mortar shells and gunpowder in Mostar. “All responsible should be brought before justice and they must bear consequences”, Sylvester said on Saturday afternoon after his meeting with Mostar Mayor Hamdija Jahic.
Commenting on the recent proclamation of Mijo Brajkovic, the manager of Aluminij Company Mostar as the top-manager in BiH, Ljiljan carries a chronology of the Aluminij case saying that because of the influence of Daimler Chrysler Company, illegal activities committed in Aluminij were ignored, while this was not the case with the Sarajevo Tobacco Factory. The article also names the Prime Minister, Alija Behmen as a person who is very much responsible for this situation.
ICTY-related issues |
Dnevni List (p. 32) quotes a document from the OHR which claims that Deronjic was present in Srebrenica at the time of the massacre, and advised general Ratko Mladic not to meet Bosniaks, because, as he said, “we will kill them all anyway”. (front page of Glas Srpski, Dnevni Avaz p. 4, Nezavisne Novine p. 3. all electronic media)
Glas srpski (front page) and Nezavisne novine (p. 6) report that the families of 5 police officers from Prijedor, who are indicted for murder of the Catholic Priest Tomislav Matanovic and his family, will gather in front of the Banja Luka District Court today at 7:30 AM because they fear that the District Court will illegally extend the detention for these police officers. The detention order for the police officers expires today at 1 PM.
Dnevni Avaz (p. 8) reports that the ICTY Prosecution will not try to prove that the Serb forces in BiH committed a genocide against Croats. “Prosecution believes that there is sufficient evidence for claims that the genocide had been committed against Bosniaks. As far as the Bosnian Croats are concerned, there is some evidence there, however, they are not sufficient,” said Graham Blewit, the deputy Tribunal spokesman told the press. However, Florence Hartmann, the Prosecution spokesperson, said that it is still too early to make any concrete conclusions about this. “Discussions are still ongoing,” she said.
BiH’s relations with neighbors |
Refugee/Return problems |
London’s Sunday Times carries a front page article on a testimony of a British officer commanding the Special Forces in Srebrenica in 1995 who argues that the UN and NATO “sold out thousands of Srebrenica Bosniaks.” “ The UN never had intention to fight for Srebrenica. The decision to leave Srebrenica to Serb soldiers was not made by so vehemently Dutch soldiers, but UN diplomats.”
Observer on Sunday also carries a similar article on Srebrenica. According to the daily, most senior UN diplomats and UNPROFOR generals met only a few days after the Srebrenica massacre with the Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic and the Serb Army general, Ratko Mladic, in Belgrade to discuss the POW exchange involving the peacekeepers, and not to condemn the tragedy. (Dnevni Avaz p. 8, Nezavinse Novine p. 7, Oslobodjenje p. 7 , Jutarnji List p. 11 carry excerpts of both articles)
In an editorial in Dnevni Avaz, Almasa Hadzic argues that “Bosniak politics” is unfortunately a good indicator of what Srbrenica means to Bosniaks as a people and BiH as a country. Hadzic notes that seven years after multi-million donations have been funneled for Srebrenica survivors, most of them do not even have a home to return to. “For the full seven years, the very mentioning of the word Srebrenica was enough for you to receive a million EURO donation for ‘curing traumas of Srebrenica women’ although, after the millions wasted, their trauma remains their only memory on this town and their slaughtered family members.”
Entity-state related relations |
Terrorism |
Brcko District |