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Geert Lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> An Appeal to the Leaders of the Free World Albanian Physicians call for Airlift and Ground Troops An Appeal in Favor of Montenegro [Libæration] Kosovo Newspaper Resurrected in Macedonia IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS REPORT, NO. 24 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Sat, 24 Apr 1999 11:57:05 +0200 (CEST) From: Geert Lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: An Appeal to the Leaders of the Free World Gazeta Wyborcza April 5 An Appeal to President Bill Clinton ,President Jacques Chirac,Prime Minister Tony Blair,Chancellot Gerhard Schr=F6der,Janvier Solana ,Secretary General of NATO and to the governments of the 19 members of NATO. MAREK EDELMAN The decision of the member states of NATO to initiate a bombing campaign to save the people of Kosovo will change the nature of the world.For the first time in History,war is not being waged to conquer power or territory,or to defend economic interests.,but for humanitarian reasons. During the time of Second World War ,in the Warsaw Ghetto I was a witness to genocide.The leaders of the Free World ,President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, didn't know how to stop it.They proclaimed that once the war was over, all men ,whatever their race religion, nationality or ethnic group would reconquer their equality and live in peace, instead of being hunted down like animals.When the war ended and democracy had triumphed, those in whose name the struggle had been fought were no longer there to enjoy the peace. One can have little doubt that the allies will win the war to defend the rights of the Kosovars.Will the Albanians of Kosovo be around to see the victory? We may well wake up one day to find that the people for whom we fought are no longer with us. Our intervention must not be limited to air raids. I call on the leaders of the free world to send ground troops to Kosovo. In the present situation ,only the presence of NATO troops can prevent the genocide of the Albanians.I know how difficult it is to send soldiers into battle knowing that they might die. But, like the other members of my generation, I know that freedom has a price.A price which we must be willing to pay. Marek Edelman was a leader of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Sat, 24 Apr 1999 11:58:39 +0200 (CEST) From: Geert Lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: Albanian Physicians call for Airlift and Ground Troops April 22, 1999 For Immediate Release Contact: Barbara Ayotte (617) 695-0041 ext 210/(617) 776-8020 <center><bold>KOSOVAR ALBANIAN PHYSICIANS CALL FOR IMMEDIATE NATO GROUND TROOPS AND AIRDROP OF FOOD AND MEDICINES TO SAVE REMAINING CIVILIAN POPULATION IN KOSOVO</center> </bold>Eighteen leading ethnic Albanian physicians from Kosovo who have fle= d to Macedonia today called upon NATO to employ at once all possible measures to bring food and medical supplies to the population left in Kosovo. They urge NATO to arrange for the immediate air drop of food and medicine to the populations trapped in the countryside within the next two weeks or else it may be=93too late=94. =93Mass death may be imminent=94 unless help reaches them in that period, they say. =93Only these two measures, in the view of these respected, senior Pristina physicians, will offer any reasonable possibility of saving the remnant populations of Kosovo and effect the return of those who have been forced to flee,=94 said Jennifer Leaning, MD, a member of the board of Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) who just interviewed the physicians, now living in Skopje and Tetova, Macedonia, arriving since March 24. =93These physicians experienced terrifying threats to themselves and their families as they fled or were forcibly expelled from Kosovo. Their main concern, however, is how to avert mass death among the hundreds of thousands who are still left in Kosovo,=94 said Leaning. The Kosovar Albanian physicians from the Pristina area report that in the city of Pristina there is very little food left in the homes and neighborhoods where people are trapped. People are unable to leave their apartments because of armed forces patrolling the streets, snipers, and marauding gangs of armed Serbian civilians. A physician who left Pristina on April 15 said that his friends had reported having reserves of food for their families of only two days to one week. All the Albanian stores in Pristina have been looted or burned. Ethnic Albanians who dare to go out for milk or bread are turned away by the Serbian police and are told that only Serbs can wait in line for food. The Pristina physicians, many of who traveled regularly throughout the countryside before they were expelled, say the situation now is even more desperate. One physician made contact two days ago by cell phone with a friend in Peja (Pec) who said that 15,000 internally displaced people had just come to three small villages outside Peja, and there was absolutely no food or medicine to support them. Several physicians reported that there are now no medical supplies, surgical supplies, or medicines of any kind left in the countryside. People in the cities cannot seek care at the hospitals because it is too dangerous to go out in the streets and because the hospitals are effectively closed to Albanians since the Serb authorities dismissed all Albanian staff and expelled all Albanian patients in late March. The eighteen physicians interviewed by PHR call upon NATO to employ at once all possible measures to bring food and medical supplies to the population left in Kosovo. They urge NATO to arrange for the immediate air drop of food and medicine to the populations trapped in the countryside. They also request that NATO act with the greatest urgency to bring ground forces into Kosovo in order to rescue those now living in hiding and under siege, and to locate and liberate the large numbers of men and boys who were separated from their families by Serb forces and taken to unknown locations. Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) has a nine member delegation in Macedonia and Albania conducting a comprehensive survey of some 1,000 Kosovar refugees about human rights abuses suffered over the past few weeks. Three members of the team, led by Dr. Jennifer Leaning, are interviewing physicians about conditions leading to their flight out of Kosovo. For the past six months, PHR has reported on the systematic pattern of abuses against ethnic Albanian physicians and their patients by Serb authorities in Kosovo. PHR has documented murder of at least three physicians, and harassment, detention, and torture of physicians=97with abuses occurring as far back as the fall of 1998. Dr. Leaning conducted a training for ethnic Albanian and Serbian physicians in mid-March on human rights and humanitarian law. <nofill> Barbara Ayotte Physicians for Human Rights 100 Boylston Street, Suite 702 Boston, MA 02116 Tel. (617) 695-0041 Fax. (617) 695-0307 Email: bayotte@phrusa.org http://www.phrusa.org - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Sat, 24 Apr 1999 12:06:38 +0200 (CEST) From: Geert Lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: An Appeal in Favor of Montenegro Libæration April 21,1999 An Appeal In Favor Of Montenegro Wednesday, April 21, 1999 The destabilization of Montenegro which is threatened by a Serbian coup d'ætat could lead to civil war. The return of peace to this country is a vital condition if Montenegro is to consolidate its the process of democratization, and economic liberalization. Because Montenegro is an oasis of political opposition in Yugoslavia. Because It has given political asylum to students and intellectual who have fled MIlosevic's national -socialist repression. Europe has a moral duty to preserve this enclave of freedom and democracy. Over a third of the population of Montenegro is composed of refugees, Kosovars and others. Its economy is bled dry. It needs help to be able to deliver emergency humanitarian aid. Political support for the democratic orientation of the government of Montenegro must take the form of a warning to Milosevic to withdraw his troops from that country. First signatories: Pascal Bruckner, Andræ Glucksmann, Gilles Hertzog, Bernard-Henri Lævy, Væronique Nahum-Grappe, Jean-Francois Revel, Alain Touraine - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Sat, 24 Apr 1999 12:38:08 +0200 (CEST) From: Geert Lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: Kosovo Newspaper Resurrected in Macedonia April 23, 1999 Kosovo Human Rights Flash #29 Kosovo Newspaper Resurrected in Macedonia The Albanian-language newspaper Koha Ditore resumed publication from Macedonia yesterday, April 22, 1999. Before its March closure by Serb police, Koha Ditore was the largest and most influential Albanian-language newspaper in Kosovo. On March 22, the newspaper and its editor, Baton Haxhiu, were convicted for publishing information that "incited hatred between nationalities," according to article 67 of Serbia's controversial Law on Public Information. (For more information about Mr. Haxhiu's conviction, please see our March 22 press release, available on the Human Rights Watch website). The paper was fined 420,000 dinars (US$26,800) and Haxhiu personally was fined 110,000 dinars (US$7,200). On March 24, Serbian police shot and killed the guard at the Koha Ditore newspaper office in Pristina, and then ransacked the office. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Sat, 24 Apr 1999 12:52:35 +0200 (CEST) From: Geert Lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS REPORT, NO. 24 WELCOME TO IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS REPORT, NO. 24, 23 April 1999 MACEDONIA UNRAVELS. KLA arms caches, Serbian pro-Milosevic demonstrators, and friction between Skopje and the West. The signs are ominous for the fragile republic. Iso Rusi in Skopje reports. CREEPING COUP IN MONTENEGRO. Podgorica is distancing itself further from Belgrade--and from the Yugoslav Army, which it feels poses a direct threat. Zeljko Ivankovic reports from Podgorica. TROOPS COME TO PREVLAKA. Since 1992, this disputed peninsula has remained quiet, but effectively blocked, and talks got nowhere. This week, explains Mark Thompson, Milosevic broke the silence. ON HOLD IN RS. Whatever the outcome, the repercussions from the NATO bombing will be huge for Republika Srpska. Igor Gajic reports from Banja Luka. ***************************************************** IWPR's network of leading correspondents in the region provide inside analysis of the events and issues driving crises in the Balkans. The reports are available on the Web in English, Serbian and Albanian; English-language reports are also available via e-mail. For syndication information, contact Anthony Borden <tony@iwpr.net>. The project is supported by the European Commission, Press Now and the Carnegie Corporation. *** VISIT IWPR ON-LINE: www.iwpr.net *** To subscribe to this service, send an e-mail to <majordomo@iwpr.org.uk>; in the body of the email write the message <subscribe balkan-reports>. To unsubscribe, write <unsubscribe balkan-reports>, Alternatively, contact Duncan Furey directly for subscription assistance at <duncan@iwpr.org.uk>. For further details on this project and other information services and media programmes, visit IWPR's Website: <www.iwpr.net>. Editor: Anthony Borden. Assistant Editing: Christopher Bennett, Alan Davis. Internet Editor: Rohan Jayasekera. Translation by Alban Mitrushi. "Balkan Crisis Report" is produced under IWPR's Balkan Crisis Information Project. The project seeks to contribute to regional and international understanding of the regional crisis and prospects for resolution. The Institute for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR) is a London-based independent non-profit organisation supporting regional media and democratic change. Lancaster House, 33 Islington High Street, London N1 9LH, United Kingdom Tel: (44 171) 713 7130; Fax: (44 171) 713 7140 E-mail:info@iwpr.org.uk; Web: www.iwpr.net The opinions expressed in "Balkan Crisis Report" are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the publication or of IWPR. Copyright (C) 1999 The Institute for War & Peace Reporting <www.iwpr.net>. ************************************************* MACEDONIA UNRAVELS KLA arms caches, Serbian pro-Milosevic demonstrators, and friction between Skopje and the West. The signs are ominous for the fragile republic. Iso Rusi in Skopje In the first evidence of a guerrilla presence within Macedonia, police have seized a tractor-trailer filled with 308 pieces of weaponry in the town of Kumanovo. Subsequently in a nearby in a deserted mine, 4.5 tons worth of guns, ammunition, land mines and hand grenades were uncovered. Their Chinese origin suggests that the cache was smuggled in from Albania by the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA). According to Interior Minister Pavle Trajanov, there will be more attempts to smuggle in arms from Albania weaponry. Trajanov fears that unless the war in Yugoslavia is resolved soon, the security crisis there will be "exported" to Macedonia. Guns, ammunition and the like are not the only problem according to Trajonov, who has speculated on the likely presence of KLA members among the refugees now camped inside Macedonia. The New York Times has already reported meeting with a half-dozen Albanian men it said were "self-described officers of the KLA." And Albanian radicals are not the only ones becoming active in Macedonia. Skopje held its first rock concert for peace, echoing the ones being held in Serbia. Flags of the former Yugoslavia and even pictures of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic were seen in the capital's central square. Malisa Bozovic, secretary-general of the Democratic Party of Serbs in Macedonia, argues that Yugoslavia has the right to target NATO positions within Macedonia. "NATO planes are bombing Yugoslavia through Macedonian skies and they have at their disposal logistical support, complete military and civil infrastructure that is being used for spying and stationing ground forces." The Democrats are planning another big protest in the capital soon. Meantime, the owners of land around Stenkovec, the largest refugee camp in Macedonia, are refusing permission for it to be enlarged. Made up of both Macedonians as well as local Serbs, they sympathise with the demonstrators in the capital. But the camp, which already houses more than 40,000 refugees, is too small to receive the latest refugee wave from Kosovo. According to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, up to 4,000 have been arriving each day. UNHCR spokesperson Ron Redmond has predicted up to 100,000 new refugees will be arriving at the border soon. He says they include 20,000 from the region of Urosevac and 50,000 from Gnjilane. Conditions within the camps are far from ideal. Bribery to escape the camps has been reported, and cigarette and alcohol smuggling has increased. On Sunday a carton of the cheapest Macedonian cigarettes reached the staggering price of 100 DM ($57) in the camps. Sanitary conditions are deteriorating with the overpopulation, and the weather has been cold and rainy. Promises by other countries to take some 92,620 of the refugees have been delayed. UN figures show that out of 560,000 Kosovo refugees it has registered since the beginning of the NATO strikes, 132,700 entered Macedonia. The Macedonian government puts the figure at 150,000. With the existing camps only able to house a third of the refugees, the rest are being looked after in private homes. While initially, the international community planned to fly out 1,500 people a day from Skopje, less than 13,000 have departed since the airlift started. Disputes over the refugee issue have flared regularly between the Macedonian government, aid agencies and Western governments. Macedonian Minister of Defence Nikola Kljusev has stated firmly that the government has no intention of building any more camps and that new refugees from Kosovo cannot stay in the country. This has prompted German Defence Deputy Secretary of State Walter Koblon to suggest that his country will not help Macedonia's bid to join the European Union. Kljusev replied in turn that this was tantamount to blackmail. Within the Macedonian government, differences among the coalition partners about the role of NATO are getting more obvious. The parliament has passed a resolution supporting the government's refusal to allow NATO to use Macedonia to stage an intervention into Yugoslavia. The media speculate whether the Social Democrats of President Kiro Gligorov are applying pressure to change this stance. Meanwhile, Arben Xhaferi, the leader of the Democratic Party of the Albanians, which is a member of the governing coalition, argues that Macedonia has already taken sides in the conflict (with NATO) and must follow through. He has also called for a more open and generous policy towards the refugees. Iso Rusi is a journalist with Fokus in Skopje. CREEPING COUP IN MONTENEGRO Podgorica is distancing itself further from Belgrade--and from the Yugoslav Army, which it feels poses a direct threat. Zeljko Ivankovic in Podgorica The Yugoslav Army is increasing the pressure on Montenegro's civilian authorities, putting at risk the republic's attempts to remain neutral in the war between Belgrade and NATO. Some Montenegrin observers describe as a "creeping coup". Tension between Podgorica and the Yugoslav Army has grown steadily since the beginning of the month when Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic installed Gen. Milorad Obradovic at the head of the Yugoslav Army in Montenegro, replacing Gen. Radoslav Martinovic. Though both men are Montenegrins, the move was significant since General Obradovic is viewed as a Milosevic loyalist and Montenegro's President Milo Djukanovic was not consulted about the change. Since his appointment, Obradovic has charted a collision course with the Montenegrin authorities, stepping up mobilisation throughout the republic and launching a media offensive. As a result, many Montenegrin observers feel a coup is already taking place. "The army is abusing its position to settle scores with the Montenegrin government," said Dragan Soc, Montenegro's justice minister, who has three times refused to respond to call-up papers. "They have no need for extra soldiers, since they don't even have the means to keep them in the army. They are just throwing their weight around to demonstrate their influence and power," he said. Military press gangs are mobilising young men indiscriminately in the streets, military courts have begun prosecuting draft dodgers, and the Yugoslav Army has stepped up its public criticism of key politicians and other leading figures in Montenegrin society. One target of the Yugoslav army's wrath is Novak Kilibarda, Montenegro's deputy prime minister, whom it accuses of "intending to weaken the country's defences". On the eve of NATO's bombing campaign, Killibarda said that NATO could not be an aggressor because it was an alliance. Moreover, in the event of war, Montenegro would remain neutral, declare independence from Serbia and prevent the Yugoslav Army in Montenegro from activating its defences. Obradovic has set up his own television station in a building belonging to the Yugoslav Army with equipment brought from Belgrade. The output of this station is very similar to that of Serbian television, whose headquarters in Belgrade were targeted Thursday night by NATO bombing. NATO is systematically referred to as "fascists" or "aggressors". The terminology used on the military station contrasts with that of Montenegrin television, which the Yugoslav Army accuses of bias. The Yugoslav Army is also impeding the work of foreign journalists, whom the Montenegrin government allows to operate freely. The army has confiscated equipment and detained reporters. "The Yugoslav Army is intimidating foreign journalists to show them the impotence of the government and the absence of security guarantees. They hope that the journalists will go away so that they can stage a coup in Montenegro," asserts Soc. A series of meetings between Obradovic and Montenegro's prime minister, president and its parliament's speaker have failed to ease tensions. Geneneral Obradovic, nevertheless, succeeded in pressurising Montenegrin television into broadcasting every night a 30-minute programme entitled "Defending the Homeland", a move which has upset Montenegro's independent media. "The Yugoslav Army's aim in Montenegro is not to defend the homeland from aggressors, as they say, but to silence Milosevic's opposition in Montenegro, that is the government and independent media," the independent daily newspaper Vijesti said in an editorial. A day later, military police entered the newspaper's offices and threatened to "stop this view being printed" in the future. "The Yugoslav army is supposed to be the army of Serbia and Montenegro, but instead it's Milosevic's tool to impose his political views on Montenegro," said Miodrag Perovic, the founder and publisher of the weekly magazine MONITOR. He urges the Montenegrin government to seize control of army barracks and units in their republic. "This could be achieved by forming a Republican Ministry of Defence and the republican parliament voting to give Montenegro's prime minister complete control of the army in his jurisdiction," Perovic says. Tension soared most recently when the Yugoslav Army fired a surface-to-air missile at a NATO plane from a naval ship anchored in the port of Bar. Petrasin Kasalica, director of the port, immediately protested the "abuse of the port's hospitality" to the Yugoslav Army. "If you wish to defend the homeland from NATO planes, then I advise you to move your ships from the port," he said. "If your provocation is returned and NATO planes start bombing, then our future will be doomed and everything that we have now will be destroyed." Zeljko Ivanovic is founder and director of Vijesti, the only independent daily newspaper in Montenegro. TROOPS COME TO PREVLAKA Since 1992, this disputed peninsula has remained quiet, but effectively blocked, and talks got nowhere--leaving Milosevic another card to play against Croatia and Montenegro. This week, he checked his hand. By Mark Thompson Yugoslav soldiers entered a demilitarised zone separating Croatia and Montenegro on Tuesday, April 20--demonstrating that Belgrade still has plenty of potential to cause trouble away from the main theatre of Kosovo. Since October 1992, Prevlaka, Croatia's southern-most peninsula, has been closed to everyone except 28 UN monitors. While Croatia's ambassador to the UN, Ivan Simonovic, has complained to the Security Council that up to 300 Yugoslav troops had moved into the DMZ, the UN monitors themselves numbered only 20. This southern-most tip of Croatia lies about 40 kilometres south of Dubrovnik and only 2 kilometres from the border with Montenegro. A couple of kilometres in length and half a kilometre wide, Prevlaka projects part way across the mouth of the Kotor Bay, Yugoslavia's principal deep-water harbour. Prevlaka had been a military base for decades before Croatia won its independence, and the Montenegrin headland on the opposite, southern side of the bay is riddled with military installations--allegedly including missile sites. When Yugoslav forces withdrew from Croatia in 1992, they refused to abandon Prevlaka and its hinterland before they had secured an agreement to keep the area demilitarised, under UN supervision, until the two parties reached a final settlement to ensure security between Dubrovnik and Kotor. The wider demilitarised zone agreed in 1992 stretches to a depth of 5 kilometres on either side of the Croatian-Yugoslav border, which extends for some 79 kilometres between Kotor Bay and the border with Bosnia and Herzegovina. In practice, neither side fully respects the DMZ. Yugoslav troops have never withdrawn from positions near the Bosnian border, while Croatian "special police" occupy bunkers beside Prevlaka, where they have no business being. Both sides retain heavy weapons near the border. Nevertheless, the area has remained remarkably stable for a long time. Despite occasional minor incidents or provocations, no shot has been fired since 1995. Every six months, the Security Council reviews the situation for two or three minutes before authorising a further extension of the UN monitors' mandate there. The main responsibility for the failure to resolve the issue lies with Belgrade, which has resorted to a variety of time-wasting tactics to forestall serious talks. Presumably, it has done so to retain potential leverage against both Croatia and Montenegro which is may be seeking to call upon now. Belgrade insists that Prevlaka is a territorial dispute to be solved by changing the international border--a position rejected by Croatia and the rest of the international community. For its part, Zagreb has kept fairly quite on the issue. This is partly because President Franjo Tudjman has previously entertained a possible land deal exchanging Prevlaka for territory in Herzegovina, behind Dubrovnik. But by putting paid to any such schemes to change Bosnia's border, the Dayton Peace Agreement effectively opened the way to serious bilateral negotiations. Despite this, Zagreb and Belgrade have agreed a statement in 1996 on normalising relations, but nothing more on the issue. Meanwhile the border remained closed. This balance was disturbed by Montenegro's election results in 1998, which installed a leadership keen to rebuild commercial relations with Croatia. Late in 1998, encouraged by Podgorica's positive signals and pushed by US diplomacy, Zagreb tabled a proposal to settle the disputed issue through bilateral demilitarisation. The Security Council commended the move. Podgorica and Zagreb then agreed to open the main border-crossing, despite Belgrade's objections. Belgrade responded by excluding Podgorica from the Yugoslav team in the on-going Prevlaka talks. This was how matters stood until earlier this week when Yugoslav troops took up positions on the last road junction before the border-crossing, close to the peninsula but still within Montenegro. Croatia promptly complained to the Security Council that 200 to 300 soldiers had moved into the DMZ. It is more than likely that the incursion is indeed intended only as a signal that Milosevic could indeed make trouble in this little-regarded corner of the Balkans should he chose to do so. But sideshow or not, great vigilance should be shown by Croatia, by NATO, and above all by Montenegro, if Belgrade's symbolic act is not to result in a general heightening of tensions on all sides. Mark Thompson, author of The Paper House: The Ending of Yugoslavia (Vintage, 1992) and Forging War: The Media in Serbia, Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina (Article 19, 1994), was part of the UN mission to Prevlaka until December 1997. ON HOLD IN RS Whatever the outcome, the repercussions from the NATO bombing will be huge for Republika Srpska--where pragmatic politicians are trying to keep their options open. Igor Gajic in Banja Luka Republika Srspka lacks a president, is unsure whether it has a prime minister and government, and its population feels as much under attack from NATO's bombs as Serbia itself. In effect, life is on hold until the war next door comes to a conclusion. The NATO bombing campaign has dominated the news and distracted attention from Republika Srpska's internal political squabbling and the failure to form a government in the seven months since the September 1998 elections. The air strikes followed soon after the March dismissal of the President of Republika Srpska, Nikola Poplasen, by High Representative Carlos Westendorp and the final arbitration award on Brcko which effectively took territory in that strategic town away from Republika Srpska. While ordinary Serbs in Republika Srpska have responded with similar defiance to the Serbs of Serbia proper, the political elite, especially those politicians who have been built up and promoted by the West, has been more cautious. Having themselves been on the receiving end of NATO bombs in 1995, Serbs in Republika Srpska naturally sympathise with the plight of their ethnic kin across the border. Indeed, most feel as if Republika Srpska is itself again under attack. The threat of the bombing campaign to Serb national interests everywhere has generated an outpouring of national anger which has manifested itself in a series of protest meetings and minor incidents. As a result, international agencies and diplomatic missions have reduced their presence in Republika Srpska to a minimum. In addition, in a manner reminiscent of 1991, patriotic associations for the defence of Serbdom have sprung up all over Republika Srpska. These are usually headed by former members of the Serbian Democratic Party (SDS), the party which used to be dominated by indicted war criminal Radovan Karadzic, and accuse their peers of betraying Serb national interests. While the restructured SDS has been comparatively restrained, the Serbian Radical Party (SRS), now headed by Mirko Blagojevic, has attempted to make political capital out of the current situation. In effect, the bombing campaign has been welcomed both by Blagojevic and Vojislav Seselj, his political master in Belgrade. It appears to vindicate their position, namely that there is a global conspiracy against the Serbs. Interestingly, Poplasen, the Serb Radical leader who was elected president of Republika Srpska in September, has been marginalised for allegedly being too soft. Leaders of the many Serb political parties meet up on a regular basis to discuss the on-going bombing campaign. While they have issued joint declarations formally condemning the bombing and expressing solidarity with the Serbs of Yugoslavia, the more pragmatic among them are keeping their options open, waiting to see how the situation evolves and who--whether Slobodan Milosevic or NATO--emerges victorious, before definitively committing themselves. Meantime, the March dismissal of Poplasen as president of Republika Srpska has failed to break the political deadlock and, despite sustained international pressure, parliament is yet to agree a prime minister. Milorad Dodik, the West's preferred candidate for prime minister, attempted to broker a deal with the international community and the SDS and SRS by which Poplasen would be reinstated as president and the SDS and SRS given key ministries. However, the SDS and SRS rejected the offer. Dodik remains prime minister by default in the absence of a new government. But his star has been falling since the beginning of the bombing campaign. He is perceived as being excessively mercenary and pro-Western. And Mladen Ivanic, another moderate candidate, has also failed to obtain sufficient support to form a government as a result of overt Western support. Zivko Radisic, Serb member and president of the three-member Bosnian Presidency, continuously changes his position. Having officially suspended participation in the Presidency, Radisic, nevertheless, visits Sarajevo. As the bombing campaign appears to be cementing Milosevic's hold on power in Serbia, Radisic is also eager to improve relations with Belgrade. While the politicians bicker, living conditions for the majority of the population deteriorate. Inflation is taking off and companies whose business is dependent on Yugoslavia, i.e. the majority, have lost their markets. Serbs in Republika Srpska are also worried about possible repercussions of the war against Yugoslavia for Bosnia. Defeat for Serbia, they fear, may lead to revision of the Dayton Peace Agreement and force them into a closer relationship with the (Muslim-Croat) Federation on unfavourable terms. Igor Gajic is a journalist with Reporter in Banja Luka. --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl