Chris Byrne on Mon, 14 May 2001 21:06:05 +0100


[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

Syndicate: Macedonia briefing 11 may 01


>From ebalkan@soros.org.mk


"EURO-BALKAN" INSTITUTE ON MACEDONIAN
    CRISIS

    11-05-2001

    CONTENTS:

    - Daily briefing from Macedonian press about
    Macedonian crisis

    - Daily briefing from international press about
    Macedonian crisis

    SUPPLEMENT 1: <FontFamily><param>Times New
    Roman</param>=93<FontFamily><pa=
    ram>Courier New</param>TERROR AND ROSES IN GROUND ZERO
    VILLAGE=94 - NICK WOOD DESCRIBES HOW HE AND
    PHOTOGRAPHER ANDREW TESTA WERE CAUGHT IN
    MACEDONIAN ARMY TANK FIRE 



    <paraindent><param>out</param>a) DAILY BRIEFING FROM
    MACEDONIAN PRESS
    ABOUT MACEDONIAN CRISIS


    THE MACEDONIAN FORCES ACT ON NEW TERRORIST
    POSITIONS

    The Spokesman of the Macedonian Army
    Headquarters, Blagoja Markovski, marked
    yesterday as one of the most peaceful in the
    past week. He said that yesterday no intense
    movement was noticed of the Albanian terrorist
    groups in the Kumanovo region. =93The Macedonian
    security forces acted twice in direction of the
    terrorists=92 positions, at 11:30 action was taken
    directed on the revealed new positions of the
    terrorist group in Orizare, and an hour later,
    on a bunker south from Otlja=94, stated the
    Macedonian Army spokesman, Blagoja Markovski.
    Two Danish journalists yesterday sought help
    from the Macedonian forces to be pulled out from
    Lipkovo. Markovski said that the journalists
    will be pulled out from there and that it
    remains unclear how they entered the village.
    (=93VEST=94)


    THE NEW COALITION IS FORMED TOMORROW, WITH OR
    WITHOUT PDP

    The new coalition government may be formed
    tomorrow, regardless or the participation or non-
    participation of the Party for Democratic
    Prosperity. This is agreed by all coalition
    partners and is supported by the international
    community. The Prime Minister, Ljubcho
    Georgievski, announced for today a meeting with
    the political leaders on which all problematic
    issues are to be discussed. If possible, already
    tomorrow the Macedonian Parliament will hold the
    formal event of choosing of the new government.
    The PDP announced that it will present their
    definite standpoint on the participation in the
    coalition. They remain categorical with their
    request to get guarantees for change of the
    Macedonian Constitution and the stop of the
    military actions before they give their
    approval. The leaders of the PDP had contacts
    with foreign ambassadors in Macedonia and asked
    them to guarantee them change of the
    Constitution, the same guarantees are asked from
    the SDSM (Social Democratic Union of Macedonia).
    In the SDSM, they say that they have no
    intention to give any guarantees beforehand that
    the Constitution will be changed, but that they
    are only willing to discuss the problematic
    issues. (=93DNEVNIK=94)


    THE TV NETWORK =93TELMA=94 CONTACTED THE CAPTURED
    MACEDONIAN ARMY SOLDIER, GORAN MITROVSKI

    The captured Macedonian Army Soldier (23 years
    old), from Pehchevo, who is in Kosovo for two
    weeks already in the hands of the terrorists, is
    alive and well. This was announced on the TV
    network =93Telma=94, the day before yesterday, live
    by phone by the Captured soldier Mitrovski
    personally. Asked how he is being treated by the
    kidnappers and if he is tortured, Mitrovski said
    that they feed him regularly, give him water and
    all other necessities, and that they treat him
    quite well. (=93VEST=94)

    IS THERE A SECRET AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE
    NEGOTIATORS OF THE GRAND COALITION AND JAVIER
    SOLANA TO WHOM THE PDP CALL UPON?

    The TV Network =93Channel 5=94 from Skopje, in the
    second edition of the news, showed a document
    allegedly signed by the negotiators of the grand
    coalition and Javier Solana. According to their
    information, there are 8 requests in the
    document: ceasefire, while the security forces
    will keep their positions and will not progress;
    giving the NLA members 48 hours to leave
    Macedonia and to surrender their arms to the
    KFOR and not to be arrested, unless they are
    charged in Kosovo. Then, with the mediation of
    international representatives, 72 hours after
    the retreat of the NLA, the Internal Affairs
    Ministry should enter the villages which the
    terrorists will leave and they should be
    restrained in this action, the Macedonian Army
    will enter the terrain 10 days after the
    retreat, but accompanied by international
    monitors. The international community should
    announce their support of an intensified
    political dialogue publicly, which is agreed by
    the 4 political parties that support the
    participation in the grand coalition. There is a
    request for amnesty regarding reforms that will
    be conducted in three phases after which the NLA
    stops with all kind of future use of threat and
    military force. =93The presented requests, on
    which the PDP calls upon are not true. In
    bilateral negotiations with Mr. Javier Solana,
    we agreed on the forming of a grand coalition
    that will be the base for stabilizing of the
    situation in Macedonia, without any preset
    conditions, says the general secretary of the
    SDSM, Gjorgji Spasov. (=93VECHER=94)


    MESSAGE FROM THE MACEDONIAN JOURNALISTS =96
    POLITICIANS, COME TO YOUR SENSES FINALLY

    =93It seems as if you have forgotten that
    Macedonia is at a verge of an abyss. With
    completely unexplainable relaxation and ease,
    you are spending the little time left to get out
    of this chaos. The functioning of your grand
    coalition hesitates. In the meantime, the
    paramilitary army is intensified, the regions
    out of state control are spreading, and the
    international public is losing interest for the
    occurrences in our country. We, the Macedonian
    journalists, are reminding you that while you
    continue with your fights for ministerial and
    directorial positions, soldiers and policemen
    are meaninglessly losing lives on the
    battlefield with the paramilitary formations,
    awaiting your political decisions. Politicians,
    come to your senses finally! With each passing
    day, we are getting closer to our doom. Is that
    your political platform? It is true that
    Macedonia is all we have, but it is also true
    that we are losing it because of you=94, it is
    said in the joint message sent by the
    journalists from the medias =93A1 TV=94, =93Sitel=94,
    =93ZUM=94, =93Channel 5=94, =93Makedonija Denes=94, =93Denes=94,
    =93Dnevnik=94, =93Vest=94, =93Kanal 77=94, =93Young
    Journalists=92 Forum=94, =93Sky Net TV=94.


    THE CLAIM OF A WESTERN DIPLOMAT IN SKOPJE

    A western diplomat, yesterday in Skopje gave a
    statement for Reuters that Great Britain and the
    USA are trying to convince the PDP to give up
    the requests for changing the Constitution as a
    condition to join the grand coalition. In the
    talks, as stated by the anonymous diplomat, =93it
    seems that ceasefire will be agreed=94, which is
    one of the main requests made by the PDP. =93We
    are pressuring the PDP to enter the coalition.
    We are trying to convince the PDP to stop
    insisting terrorist representatives to join the
    Government=94, stated the diplomat. (=93VEST=94)


    <paraindent><param>out</param>b) DAILY BRIEFING FROM
    INTERNATIONAL PRESS
    ABOUT MACEDONIAN CRISIS


    MACEDONIA CAUGHT IN MILITARY AND POLITICAL
    STALEMATE

    In addition to its call for a total halt to
    shelling, the PDP wants the withdrawal of all
    fighters and a phased return of police to the
    conflict zone under foreign monitoring. It also
    backs the =93National Liberation Army=94 rebels'
    demands to join the coalition - a non-starter
    with the government. Britain said it was worried
    by the delay. =93Every passing day increases the
    risk of deepening divisions between Macedonia's
    different ethnic communities,=94 a Foreign Office
    spokesman said. (Reuters) Ethnic Albanian
    guerrillas say they have not retreated an inch
    despite heavy army bombardment of villages they
    hold. The army has not yet moved forward,
    partly, it says, because civilians cannot or
    will not leave the battle area. Government
    sources said a quiet deal with the PDP would
    give "National Liberation Army" (NLA) fighters
    72 hours to pull out. But Macedonian
    presidential adviser Nikola Dimitrov said there
    could be no unilateral ceasefire with
    "terrorists. "If the PDP's ceasefire condition
    envisages a stop in defending the country, it
    would be unacceptable," he said. The government
    fears the rebels will simply create another
    flashpoint somewhere else, claiming that
    Albanians are being offered empty promises.
    (Reuters) But Georgievski said the army guns,
    which were silent Thursday apart from occasional
    shellfire, could not stay out of action for
    long. "We have the generals' recommendations not
    to cease fire for a long period of time because
    it would only be abused by the rebels to regroup
    and bring in more weapons." A western diplomat,
    speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP
    that the PDP's tactic was thought to be a means
    of raising the stakes, gaining publicity and
    securing better ministerial posts in an eventual
    coalition. He admitted that officials had been
    caught off guard by the party's change of tack
    after the coalition had been announced Tuesday,
    but predicted the party would fall into line
    after winning short-term political capital.
    (AFP) The party, however, says it will only join
    the government if the army declares a unilateral
    ceasefire. Mr. Georgievski says a truce is out
    of the question. (VOA) =93There will be no long-
    lasting cease-fire except for the daily five-
    hour break we give civilians to enable them to
    leave the villages,=94 he told a news conference.
    (Reuters)


    PDP IS DELAYING THE DECISION

    PDP Deputy Chairman Abdylhadi Veseli said he
    hoped to find a solution to break the deadlock
    in a crisis. =93We want to rule responsibly with
    the coalition,=94 he said. Hashim Thaci, a former
    guerrilla leader in Kosovo but now head of the
    main ethnic Albanian party in the United Nations
    run Yugoslav province, urged PDP to do just
    that. =93We all understand that the (PDP's)
    boycott of this process does not help in solving
    the problems,=94 Thaci said. Macedonian Prime
    Minister Ljubco Georgievski said a new
    government would be formed on Saturday
    regardless of who signs up. =93The PDP will be
    asked for the last time: 'Are they ready?'=94 NLA
    Commander Sokoli said the PDP's maneuvering
    would not end the insurgency that the shelling
    has sought to crush. =93All they're interested in
    is being co-opted into the political process to
    try and feather their nests,=94 he said. (Reuters)</color>
    PDP spokesman Bektesi said the PDP believes that
    joining the coalition would be counterproductive
    without an end of military operations. =93The
    international community should help in creating
    conditions for an end of military operations,=94
    he added before the planned PDP meeting started.
    (AP) =93We are waiting today for a confirmation of
    our demands, which have to be guaranteed by
    international institutions and Macedonian
    authorities,=94 said the party's vice-president,
    Aziz Pollozhani. (<color><param>0100,0100,0100</param>Toronto
    Star)


    ROBERTSON: THE NATION=92S SURVIVAL IS AT STAKE

    NATO Secretary-General George Robertson
    reiterated on Thursday his plea that political
    leaders in Macedonia find a way of creating a
    united government. "When the nation's very
    survival is at stake, there is no room for
    playing politics," Robertson told a news
    conference in Madrid "All political leaders who
    care for the future of the people of Macedonia
    should unite, stand together and face the future
    as a united country," he added. NATO has
    provided military advice to Macedonia while its
    peacekeeping troops in Kosovo attempt to seal
    the border to infiltrators. (CNN) </color>In a statement
    issued Thursday by Swedish Foreign Minister Anna
    Lindh, the European Union said Macedonia's
    leadership had been talking about a unity
    government for more than a month =93without any
    progress being made.=94 =93I would urge the
    leadership of the PDP to take their
    responsibility for the stability of the country
    and join the coalition,=94 Lindh said, referring
    to the ethnic Albanian party. (AP)


    <color><param>0100,0100,0100</param>MACEDONIA'S SURVIVAL AT
    STAKE

    Mr. Sakolski said Macedonia is more threatened
    now than at any time in its ten years as an
    independent state. As United Nations assistant
    secretary general, Mr. Sakolski was in charge of
    the U.N. Preventive Deployment Force [UNPREDEP],
    whose several hundred military personnel
    patrolled the tense Macedonia-Kosovo border
    between 1993 and 1999. "I strongly believe that
    it helped the country survive in the more than
    six years it was placed there," said Mr.
    Sakolski. Speaking at Washington's U.S.
    Institute of Peace where he is a senior fellow,
    Mr. Sokolski is convinced that if the force were
    still in place Macedonia would not be facing the
    possibility of civil war between its Slav
    majority and ethnic Albanian minority. The force
    was disbanded because of a Chinese veto in the
    Security Council after the Macedonian government
    extended diplomatic recognition to Taiwan in
    1999. "It was, said Mr. Sakolski, disbanded at
    the time it was needed most." The Polish
    diplomat strongly advocates the creation of a
    Macedonian government of national unity and a
    social compact to draw the country closer
    together: "First of all we should get rid of the
    problem by really negotiating what I call a pact
    for Macedonia. And a social contract between all
    the political forces in the country," said Mr.
    Sakolski. Mr. Sakolski blames outsiders from
    Kosovo for instigating the ethnic Albanian
    insurgency that he believes could tear the
    country apart. He calls for closer ties between
    Macedonia's armed forces and Nato and increased
    foreign assistance. (VOA)


    FEARS GROW FOR MACEDONIA REFUGEES

    The United Nations fears a humanitarian crisis
    may erupt in Macedonia as tens of thousands of
    civilians get caught in the nation's conflict
    zone. Hordes of frightened villagers are
    continuing to stream from the villages about 30
    km (20 miles) north of the capital, Skopje, into
    neighboring Kosovo. CNN's Chris Burns said tens
    of thousands of others appear unable or
    unwilling to leave the area, despite government
    appeals. The army claims the rebels are forcing
    civilians to stay as human shields-charges they
    deny. "There are 30,000 civilians in this area.
    How could we possibly keep them hostage against
    their will?" one rebel commander, Commander
    Sokoli told Reuters. CNN


    SOKOLI: MACEDONIAN FORCES USE RUSSIAN TACTICS

    Meanwhile, ethnic Albanian rebel leaders accused
    Macedonian forces on Thursday of systematically
    destroying remote villages to drive Albanians
    out. "That's what they're aiming for. They're
    using the scorched earth tactics the Russians
    did in Afghanistan," said Commander Sokoli of
    the National Liberation Army (UCK). "In Slupcane
    there, they're shelling the houses, not our
    positions. We're in front of the village and
    above it but not in it. But that's doesn't
    matter to them," he said. The NLA insists a
    solution is possible. "This can all be solved by
    a ball-point pen and an agreement to sign," said
    one rebel. "Sooner or later we will be sitting
    at the negotiating table, you'll see. Until
    then, we won't be moving." CNN


    DANGEROUS STALEMATE IN MACEDONIA

    The situation of Albanians in Macedonia may not
    be ideal: there are certainly instances of
    occasional discrimination. Few Albanians are
    civil servants or officers in the army or
    police. But then, traditionally, Albanians have
    not been greatly interested in such careers,
    preferring their own closely-knit trade networks
    to provide a means of subsistence. Under Prime
    Minister Georgievski, conditions for Albanians
    have been improving, rather than deteriorating;
    and in any case, their plight has never been
    comparable to that of the Kosovo Albanians,
    oppressed under Slobodan Milosevic. What poisons
    every attempt at resolving the current crisis in
    Macedonia is the thought that the March
    rebellion in the hills over Tetovo (later that
    month crushed by the army) and the May upsurge
    northeast of Skopje were if not initiated, then
    at least actively stimulated by former ethnic
    Albanian guerrilla fighters from Kosovo. People
    who, when they saw no future for themselves in
    the UN-administered province, decided to export
    their revolution to neighboring Macedonia. Even
    though it wasn=92t really what most Albanians in
    Macedonia were waiting for most urgently.(</color>Radio
    Netherlands Wereldomroep)<color><param>0100,0100,0100</param>


    MACEDONIA, SERBIA TO WORK TOGETHER

    Macedonian and Serbian leaders pledged to work
    together to fight ethnic Albanian rebels on both
    sides of the border with Kosovo, as the army
    pressed its assault Thursday against the
    insurgents in northern villages. The Macedonian
    government and Western observers have linked the
    rebels in Macedonia with members of the former
    Kosovo Liberation Army. Djindjic accused the
    rebels of serving under a joint command.

    =93The terrorists are well-coordinated,=94 he said.
    =93That means that we have to cooperate at least
    just as closely and coordinate our actions.=94

    Georgievski agreed, calling for =93coordination=94
    between Macedonia and Serbia, the dominant
    Yugoslav republic, by exchanging information
    that could lead to the =93stifling of terrorism.=94
    They did not elaborate or indicate whether they
    were considering any joint military action - a
    step that would anger other Balkan nations.
    (AP)<FontFamily><param>Arial</param><bigger><bigger>
    <FontFamily><param>Co=
    urier New</param><smaller><smaller>


    META AND XHAFERI: PEACEFUL AND POLITICAL
    SOLUTION OF THE CRISIS

    Prime Minister Ilir Meta Wednesday asked a key
    ethnic Albanian leader in Macedonia to help
    bring an end to the violence there and form a
    grand coalition government. Meta and Arben
    Xhaferi, meeting in the Albanian town of
    Pogradec, agreed that the ongoing clashes
    between ethnic Albanian guerillas and Macedonian
    soldiers was detrimental to Macedonia's long-
    term stability and ethnic Albanian demands for
    equal rights. "A further radicalization of the
    situation in Macedonia does not serve Albanians
    or Macedonians," said a statement issued by
    Meta's office. Both agreed on the need to stop
    the fighting and begin reforms to solve the
    crises with peaceful and political means. NATO
    Secretary-General George Robertson and the
    president of European Commission, Romano Prodi,
    met the Albanian prime minister in Brussels,
    Belgium, early this week and asked Meta to use
    his influence to ease the tension in Macedonia.
    Last week, President George W. Bush and
    Secretary of State Colin Powell also met with
    Meta, asking him to play a part in ending the
    violence in Macedonia, as well as Kosovo.
    (United Press International)


    44 SUSPECTED TERRORIST FREED ON PROCEDURAL ERROR

    On Thursday, Kosovo's high court released 44 ethnic Albanians who had been=

    arrested by German peacekeeping troops along the border in March on suspic=
    ion
    of involvement in the fighting in Macedonia. UN spokeswoman Susan Manuel s=
    aid
    the suspects were freed because of a procedural error during their detenti=
    on.
    She did not elaborate. (The Canadian Press)


    <FontFamily><param>Times New Roman</param>c)
    <FontFamily><param>Courier New</param>SUPPLEMENT 1
    <FontFamily><param>Times New Roman</param>:
    =93
    <FontFamily><param>Courier New</param>TERROR AND ROSES IN
    GROUND ZERO VILL=
    AGE
    =94 
    NICK WOOD DESCRIBES HOW HE AND PHOTOGRAPHER ANDREW TESTA WERE CAUGHT IN
    MACEDONIAN ARMY TANK FIRE 
     
    We set out shortly before 6am. The ceasefire announced by the Macedonian
    government was due to end in four hours' time. On the road to Slupcane, gr=
    ound
    zero of the government's battle with the ethnic Albanian guerrilla group, =
    the
    National Liberation Army, two small groups of people were walking along th=
    e
    road, holding bags between them and heading west. The approach to the vill=
    age
    looked much the same as the last time we had gone down the road on Sunday.=

    There were a few more mortar craters in the road, but the dead cow I had s=
    een
    lying bloated, face upwards in a field, was now being picked at by crows. =
    We
    were granted permission to see the village by a rebel commander who insist=
    ed
    that a "press officer", a gaunt man in a puffa jacket and dark
    trousers, g=
    o
    with us. He did not appear to be armed. First stop was a series of houses =
    at
    the southern end of the village. We drove in the BBC's armoured car, a lar=
    ge
    white Land Rover marked in six places with the letters "TV", which was
    sup=
    posed
    to afford protection against machine-gun fire. 
    Our press officer directed our attention to the houses at the edge of the
    village. All had gaping holes in them. A telegraph wire lay across the roa=
    d. As
    Andrew Testa, the Guardian photographer, went ahead with our translator, A=
    rtan,
    I turned the Land Rover around so that we faced back toward the centre of =
    the
    village. 
    I caught up with them near a line of sandbags and a bunker. "Keep in,"
    And=
    rew
    said, adding that Macedonian army positions were down the road. Before I h=
    ad
    time to think about it, the crack of machine-gun fire opened up around us.=
     I
    ran to the right and fell into a trench running along a wall, and then a f=
    ew
    seconds later into the bunker itself. Half a dozen guerrilla fighters foll=
    owed
    suit. A loud bang followed. 
    "They blown up your car," Artan said as rebels shouted down to us. The
    ter=
    ror
    of what was happening was just beginning to sink in. The Macedonian army h=
    ad
    broken its own ceasefire. The idea that journalists could safely wander in=
     and
    out of the rebel-held area had literally been blown away. We set about mak=
    ing
    frantic phone calls to government spokesmen and other contacts. The only p=
    lace
    with a signal was just outside the entrance to the bunker, in a shallow tr=
    ench.
    Andrew and I took it in turn to call. "I'll do everything I can, but its
    n=
    ot my
    area, it's the army's," said a despairing ministry of interior official. 
    This wasn't getting us anywhere. I returned to the dugout. Foam mattresses=
     had
    been laid out on the floor and covered in blankets. Opposite me a gunman
    clicked worry beads and sang. Eventually the Red Cros
    <FontFamily><param>Courier New Cyr</param>s spokesman,
    Fran=E7ois Stam, ca=
    lled: "I've just spoken to the president's chef
    de cabinet. He says the army's ceasefire is still holding." A tank shell
    slammed into a building behind us, quickly dispelling that idea. "Are you
    =
    sure
    you know where the shooti
    <FontFamily><param>Courier New</param>ng is coming from?"
    the voice on the=
     other end of the mobile asked. 
    "Don't worry Nick, everything's going to be alright," Artan said as I
    jogg=
    ed my
    knee with increasing intensity. So long as the Macedonian army stuck to he=
    avy
    machine gun and tank fire he was right. Mortars and artillery shells howev=
    er
    could pierce the earthworks piled on to the wooden roof above our heads. 
    We were with six guerrillas, including an 18-year-old woman who had fought=
     with
    the ethnic Albanian Kosovo Liberation Army two years ago. She went out dur=
    ing
    the shelling and came back with a bunch of roses, removed the thorns and h=
    anded
    me one. After two hours the shooting had died down to intermittent cannon =
    fire.
    By now the Red Cross, senior ministry of defence and interior ministry
    officials were pulling out all the stops. I was eventually given the numbe=
    r of
    the local army captain. We could leave but there was one problem. Which wa=
    y did
    we want to go? By 9am, my hopes of getting out were fading. We had one hou=
    r
    until the government was due to relaunch its bombardment. More phone calls=
     were
    made, and half an hour later we had the signal to leave. We were to make a=

    white flag, and walk about a third of a mile towards the army's checkpoint=
    .
    Andrew made quick work of a whitish woolly carpet lying beneath us. Artan =
    was
    too afraid to leave with us and said he would
    try to get out with the rebels, via a back road. 
    I waved the flag over the sandbags for a few
    seconds and emerged on to the road, with hands
    raised. It was only now we could see how near we
    were to the army's lines. Ten minutes later, we
    walked up to a line of tanks and an armoured
    personnel carrier, waving as we got closer.
    While we were being searched, a soldier asked.
    "Whose white van was that?" "Ours", I said,
    pointing at my chest. 
    "Oh, sorry," he replied. An hour later the
    shelling resumed.

    (The Guardian)</color>



-----Syndicate mailinglist--------------------
Syndicate network for media culture and media art
information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/syndicate
to post to the Syndicate list: <syndicate@eg-r.isp-eg.de>
to unsubscribe, write to <majordomo@eg-r.isp-eg.de>, in
the body of the msg: unsubscribe syndicate your@email.adress