vesti.1226hercog,
-> #1210, dizel(*> Realnost ti je srednje ime? :)
Ovo 100.000 za studente nisam mislio da su svi studenti. Bilo je
dosta ljudi koji su se pridružili studetnskoj koloni, a da nisu
studenti...
Sale
vesti.1227corto,
Zbog obilja vesti, Odraz ide u malo duzim porukama. Izvinjavam se
citaocima, mozda se teze prati, ali ima stanovitih problema sa mojom
postom (ne, nisam paranoicna ;), pa je tu i malo zakasnjenje....
vesti.1228corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 14 sati, 24. decembar 1996.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Svi tekstovi su Copyright 1996 Radija B92. SVA PRAVA ZADRZANA.
------------------------------------------------------------------
NAPETO I DALJE
------------------------------------------------------------------
JEDNO LICE POVREDJENO
Prema izvestajima sa beogradskih ulica, u Knez Mihajlovoj ulici
doslo je do incidenta. Nakon pucnja iz grupe demonstranata iz
Vrbasa sa slikama Slobodana Milosevica, jedan stariji covek je
ranjen.
JAVLJANJA REPORTERA RADIJA B92
Posle jedan sat, na Terazijama je doslo do vise manjih tuca, a
obezbedjenje koalicije ,,Zajedno'' smiruje situaciju, jer policije
nema na ulicama. Zoran Djindjic je sam dosao na Terazije i pozvao
pristalice koalicije da predju na Trg Republike. Studentska kolona
je blokirala nekoliko autobusa sa pristalicama Slobodana
Milosevica kod francuske ambasade. Jedan vozac autobusa je krenuo
kroz masu studenata i zakacio jednog mladica. Okupljeni ljudi su
jedni na druge bacali motke, jaja, flase sa vodom, luk i limun.
Centar Beograda ori se od vike i zvizduka.
DRASKOVIC POZIVA NA MUDROST
Predsednik Srpskog pokreta obnove Vuk Draskovic u danasnjoj poruci
gradjanima pozvao je na mudrost. Draskovic je, u izjavi Radiju
B92, ujedno pozvao pristalice Koalicije ,,Zajedno'' da u 15 casova
u sto vecem broju dodju na Trg Republike i u okolne ulice u centru
Beograda, odakle bi se krenulo u uobicajeni protestni mars.
Draskovic je naglasio da marsuta kojom ce se kretati ucesnici
protesta nece biti unapred objavljena, ali je porucio gradjanima
da ce biti onemogucen svaki fizicki kontakt sa, kako je rekao,
,,ovim nesrecnim narodom, robovima, koje je pohvatao Slobodan
Milosevic da bi podrzali njegovu izbornu kradju''.
MINISTAR POLICIJE NE OCEKUJE SUKOBE
Bivsi ministar policije Radmilo Bogdanovic rekao je danas da je
,,vreme da prestanu protesti gradjana u Beogradu i velikim
gradovima Srbije''. ,,To je jedan broj ljudi koji je nasao
zabavu'', rekao je Bogdanovic. On je kazao da ne ocekuje sukobe
demonstranata na ulicama Beograda jer ,,da su hteli da se
sukobljavaju do sad bi se sukobili''. ,,Socijalisti nemaju razloga
za sukob. Oni su dosli da iskazu svoje vidjenje sadasnjeg trenutka
i da podrze napore vlasti i predsednika Milosevica da se krene u
obnovu zemlje. Trenutak je da pocnemo da radimo ozbiljno'',
napomenuo je Bogdanovic.
IZVINJENJE BK SISTEMU
U jucerasnjem Odrazu B92, objavili smo elektronsko pismo Dragana
Marica o navodnim problemima, koje je on imao kao korisnik
Interneta BK Sistema. Ovom prilikom, nakon provere i kontakta sa
ljudima iz BK MR Sistema, ustanovili smo da EUnet funkcionise
sasvim normalno i da je doslo samo do kratkog prekida na
medjunadordnim vezama. Radio B92 nije tendenciozno objavio pismo
Dragana Marica i izvinjava se kolegama iz BK Sistema ako im je
naneta ikakva poslovna steta.
Pripremio(la): Zoran Penevski
vesti.1229corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 13 sati, 24. decembar 1996.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Svi tekstovi su Copyright 1996 Radija B92. SVA PRAVA ZADRZANA.
------------------------------------------------------------------
NAPETO
------------------------------------------------------------------
SUP: SPS SAZIVAC MITINGA
Informativna sluzba Sekretarijata unutrasnjih poslova u Beogradu
potvrdila je danas da je Gradski odbor Socijalisticke partije
Srbije prijavio miting podrske politici Slobodana Milosevica na
Terazijama. U jutrosnjem odgovoru predstavnicima Studentskog
protesta '96, na njihovo interesovanje da li ce biti nekih
problema sa studentskim okupljanjima, s obzirom na za danas
zakazani miting Milosevicevih pristalica, Informativna sluzba
gradskog SUP-a je u svojoj telefaks poruci precizirala: ,,Obzirom
da Vi niste prijavili javni skup za 24. 12. 1996. godine, to sa
stanovista Zakona o okupljenju gradjana nemate status sazivaca
javnog skupa''. ,,S tim u vezi, neosnovano je vase interesovanje o
mestu i vremenu odrzavanja javnog skupa, koji je blagovremeno i u
skladu sa Zakonom o okupljanju gradjana prijavio drugi sazivac (u
konkretnom slucaju Socijalisticka partija Srbije -- Gradski odbor
Beograd)'', istice se u odgovoru SUP-a Beograda. Nezavisno od
toga, danas se na platou ispred Filozofskog fakulteta, kao i
prethodna 32 dana, okupilo se vise hiljada studenata.
POCELO STUDENTSKO OKUPLJANJE
Studentsko protesno okupljanje pocelo je danas nesto pre 12 casova
na platou ispred Filosofskog fakulteta. Na Platou se okupilo vec
nekoliko hiljada studenata, a ocekuje se da im se pridruze
profesori i gradjani koji su do sada ucestvovali na studentskom
protestu. Danasnja studentska setnja odigrace se u ,,krugu
dvojke'', simbolisuci kradju u drugom krugu lokalnih izbora.
Namera studentskog protesta je, kako se navodi u Inicijativnom
odboru, da pokaze da studenti nisu za gradjanski rat i prolivanje
krvi.
DJINDJIC: NECEMO NASESTI PROVOKACIJAMA
Predsednik Demokratske stranke Zoran Djindjic izjavio je da
danasnji kontramiting pristalica Slobodana Milosevica u centru
Beograda ,,predstavlja jednu misterioznu stvar, jer mu se ne zna
ni organizator, niti koji su mu ciljevi''. Ocigledno je, ipak,
smatra Djindjic, da je Milosevic ,,izgubio zivce'' i da namerava
da podstakne vanredne okolnosti, kako bi se zaboravila izborna
kradja. ,,Mi, medjutim, dobijamo ovu igru'', rekao je Djindjic
Radiju B92, ,,jer nema razloga da se upecamo na provokacije, niti
da pomazemo vlastima u pokusaju da stvore uslove za vanredne
okolnosti''. Posto pristalice socijalista nameravaju da odrze skup
na Terazijama, Djindjic je najavio da ce se pobornici Koalicije
,,Zajedno'' okupiti na Trgu Republike. Djindjic je pozvao gradjane
da na miting Koalicije Zajedno danas dodju u sto vecem broju i
napomenuo da se jos ne zna kojom ce se trasom kretati protestna
povorka. On je zakljucio da kolona, medjutim, nece dolaziti u
dodir sa Milosevicevim pristalicama.
RAZMENA UVREDA
Nekoliko hiljada ucesnika za danas najavljenog mitinga podrske
politici Slobodana Milosevica okupilo se oko podneva na Trgu
Republike, okruzeno Beogradjanima, sa kojima su razmenjivali
uvrede, ali zasad bez incidenata. Saobracaj na ulici Srpskih
vladara prekinut je jos od jutros, kada je na Terazijama pocelo
montiranje bine za govornike mitinga, koji bi trebalo da pocne u
15.00 sati. Pored bine su vec postavljena reporterska kola RTS-a.
Prvi ucesnici mitinga pristigli su sa Kosova, iz Peci, Urosevca i
Strbaca, i okupili se oko spomenika knezu Mihailu na Trgu
Republike, ,,opremljeni'' slikama Slobodana Milosevica i
transparentima kojima upucuju podrsku predsedniku Srbije.
Saobracaj je blokiran i u Vasinoj ulici, koja od Trga Republike
vodi ka platou sa koga redovno krecu studentska protestna
okupljanja. Sa krova zgrade u kojoj je sediste Demokratske
stranke, na Terazijama, prolaznici se zasipaju lecima koalicije
,,Zajedno''. Manji incident zabelezen je na Terazijama, gde je
otet jedan transparent sa Milosevicevom slikom, koji je zatim
spaljen. Oko jedan sat, doslo je do manjih provokacija i
medjusobnog gadjanja limunovima, lukom, bacanje petardi i
zvizdanje. Prema recima Vuka Draskovica, grupa razbojnika je upala
u knjizaru ,,Srpske reci''.
vesti.1230corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 13 sati, 24. decembar 1996.
PRITISCI NA ZAPOSLENE DA DODJU NA MITING
Direktor osnovne skole ,,Vuk Karadzic'' u Beogradu poslao je
jutros decu kuci sa nastave i naredio im da dodju na miting
podrske politici Slobodana Milosevica, saopstila je informativna
sluzba koalicije ,,Zajedno''. Kako se navodi u saopstenju,
Izbornom stabu koalicije postari javljaju da je generalni direktor
PTT Srbije Milorad Jaksic naredio svim zaposlenima da krenu
organizovano na miting. Zaposlenima u organima republicke uprave i
u ,,Progresu'', kao se navodi, isto naredjenje izdao je Mirko
Marjanovic, zaposlenima na carini Mihalj Kertes, i u drugim
drzavnim firmama. ,,Gradjani tvrde da direktori prete zaposlenima
da ce, ukoliko ne budu evidentirani da su prisustvovali mitingu,
dobiti otkaz'', stoji u saopstenju.
VUKSANOVIC: IZBEGAVACEMO SVAKI KONTAKT
Predstavnik za stampu Demokratske stranke Slobodan Vuksanovic
izjavio je danas za Radio B92 da je poruka svim gradjanima koji se
35 dana okupljaju u centru Beograda da ,,izbegavaju svaki
kontakt'' sa ljudima koji ce na Terazijama prisustvovati mitingu
podrske politici Slobodana Milosevica. ,,Izgradnja bine na
Terazijama je poslednji i najjaci dokaz da socijalisti zele tucu i
haos u centru grada'', rekao je Vuksanovic. Izmedju hotela Moskva
i Balkan na Terazijama tokom jutra podignuta je bina za miting,
koji organizuje takozvani ,,Odbor mitinga Za Srbiju''. Vuksanovic
je takodje napomenuo da bi eventualni neredi u Beogradu posluzili
da se zabasuri predstojeci izvestaj misije OEBS i iznadju formalni
razlozi za uvodjenje vanrednog stanja. ,,Nista se nece dogoditi,
jer smo mi mirni ljudi i pokazali smo da mozemo mirno da
protestujemo. Ne zelimo tucu i izbegavacemo svaki kontakt sa
prisutnima na mitingu na Terazijama'', zakljucio je Slobodan
Vuksanovic u izjavio za Radio B92.
SAD UPOZORAVAJU BEOGRAD
SAD su sinoc ponovile upozorenje Beogradu da se prema
neistomisljenicima Slobodana Milosevica, koji zahtevaju postovanje
rezultata lokalnih izbora, ne primeni sila, javlja Rojter.
,,Pozivamo vlasti da se usredsrede na resavanje politicke krize
izazvane ponistavanjem opozicione pobede na lokalnim izborima 17.
decembra. One bi trebalo da se bave time, a ne da ohrabruju akcije
koje mogu da dovedu do sukoba na ulicama'', rekao je predstavnik
Stejt dipartmenta Glin Dejvis. ,,U vise navrata smo upozorili
srpsku vladu da bi bilo kakva akcija protiv demonstranata imala
ozbiljne posledice i da bi vodila daljoj izolaciji Srbije'', dodao
je on. Dejvis je ujedno osudio kontra-mitinge koje organizuje
vladajuca partija u Srbiji uz pomoc, kako je rekao, ,,iznajmljene
gomile''.
Pripremio(la): Zoran Penevski
vesti.1231corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 15 sati, 24. decembar 1996.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Svi tekstovi su Copyright 1996 Radija B92. SVA PRAVA ZADRZANA.
------------------------------------------------------------------
MITINZI POCELI
------------------------------------------------------------------
POLICIJA NA TERAZIJAMA
Na Terazijama, u centru Beograda, gde je za danas u 15.00 sati
zakazan miting podrske Slobodanu Milosevicu, dalji sukobi ucesnika
skupa i Beogradjana spreceni su pojavljivanjem visestrukim
kordonom policije. I pored komesanja mase i cestih tuca u kojima
su od ucesnika mitinga otimane i gazene Miloseviceve slike, na
Terazijama se dugo nije primecivalo prisustvo policije, koja se
zatim postavila izmedju dve grupe. Kako izvestava Radio B92,
redari obe strane pokusavaju da smire ljude, ali letve i dalje
lete preko glava policajaca. Zakazivanje kontramitinga
Milosevicevih pristalica na ucesnike protesta u Beogradu, koji
traju vec vise od mesec dana, delovalo je kao provokacija.
Beogradski studenti su u svoju protestnu setnju u 13.00 krenuli u
rekordnom broju. Za 15.00 zakazan je protestni skup pristalica
koalicije ,,Zajedno'', na Trgu Republike, nekoliko stotina metara
od Terazija. Radio-Beograd u 15 casova javlja da je atmosfera na
mitingu podrske Slobodanu Milosevicu velicanstvena i da se okupilo
oko 200.000 ljudi iz Srbije i Beograda. Trg Republike u isto vreme
ne moze da primi sve pristalice koalicije ,,Zajedno''.
INCIDENTI U BEOGRADU
Ozbiljniji incident izbegnut je danas oko 13 casova ispred zgrade
Skupstine Srbije, kada je doslo do bliskog kontakta izmedju dve
kolone -- pristalica predsednika Srbije Slobodana Milosevica i
clanova Ujedinjenog granskog sindikata ,,Nezavisnost''. Posto su
razmenjene uvrede izmedju nekoliko stotina ljudi sa obe strane,
redari ,,Nezavisnosti'' su sprecili sukob, uz pomoc nekoliko
policajaca. Istovremeno je na Terazijama okupljeno nekoliko
desetina hiljada pristalica Milosevica i koalicije ,,Zajedno''.
Doslo je do vise kracih tuca, a obe strane bacaju jedna na drugu
jaja, letve i delove transparenata.
VULIN: MISLILO SE DA NECE BITI INCIDENATA
Portparol Jugoslovenske levice Aleksandar Vulin izjavio je Radiju
B92 oko 14 casova da pripadnika policije nema na Terazijama jer
se, kako je rekao, verovatno mislilo da nece biti incidenata.
Vulin je izjavio da se nada da ce policija razdvojiti dve grupe --
pristalice predsednika Srbije Slobodana Milosevica i koalicije
,,Zajedno''. Govoreci o incidentima na Terazijama, Vulin je rekao:
,,Ukoliko postoji zelja za demokratijom, na tome treba ostati, jer
sve drugo vodi u gradjanski rat''. Vulin je izjavio da
organizatori mitinga podrske Milosevicu, zakazanog za 15 casova,
ne razmisljaju o njegovom otkazivanju.
BOGDANOVIC: PAMETNE LJUDE POLICIJA NE RAZDVAJA
Narodni poslanik Socijalisticke partije Srbije Radmilo Bodganovic
izjavio je danas da odrzavanje mitinga podrske Slobodanu
Milosevicu, na mestu i u vreme gde su se prethodnih mesec dana
odrzavali protestni skupovi koalicije ,,Zajedno'', nije opasno.
,,Zasto bi bilo opasno. Zasto bi bilo problema, ni mi njih nismo
uznemiravali kada su setali'', izjavio je bivsi ministar policije
za Radio B92. Na pitanje da li bi policija trebalo da razdvaja dve
grupe gradjana, Bogdanovic je rekao da ,,pametne ljude policija ne
razdvaja''. On je ocenio da ce ,,sve to dobro da se zavrsi''.
RADOVAN RADOVIC: BOLJE BI BILO DA ,,ZAJEDNO'' NESTANE
Poslanik Socijalisticke partije Srbije u skupstini Srbije Radovan
Raka Radovic potvrdio je danas beogradskom Radiju B92 da je
organizator danasnjeg mitinga podrske politici Slobodana
Milosevica SPS i da bi bolje bilo da Koalicija ,,Zajedno''
jednostavno nestane. ,,Organizator je SPS. Nasa organizacija je
veca, jer imamo i veci broj clanova'', rekao je Radovic. ,,Bolje
bi bilo da Koalicija Zajedno jednostavno nestane, da je nigde
nema'', dodao je on. Na pitanje reportera da li bi moglo doci do
otkazivanja mitinga podrske Milosevicu, Radovic je odgovorio da to
ne dolazi u obzir. ,,Trebalo bi mi da ga otkazemo (miting) da bi
ste vi setali'', rekao je on. Prema njegovim recima, istovremeno
odrzavanje mitinga pristalica Milosevica i Koalicije Zajedno ,,ne
mora da bude opasno, jer sa nase strane su pametni ljudi''.
Pripremio(la): Zoran Penevski
vesti.1232corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 18 sati, 24. decembar 1996.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Svi tekstovi su Copyright 1996 Radija B92. SVA PRAVA ZADRZANA.
------------------------------------------------------------------
MALO I SUZA
------------------------------------------------------------------
RANJENIK JE ZIV DOPREMLJEN U URGENTNI CENTAR
Dr Rade Vasilic iz Dezurne sluzbe Urgentnog centra u Beogradu
izjavio je da je covek, koji je ranjen u danasnjem incidentu u
Knez Mihailovoj ulici, dopremljen ziv u Urgentni centar. Dr
Vasilic nije imao podatke o identitetu ranjenog. Na direktno
pitanje novinara da li je ranjeni ziv, dr Vasilic je ponovio da je
on ,,dopremljen ziv u Urgentni centar''. On je dodao da je u
Urgentni centar prevezeno jos nekoliko gradjana koji su povredjeni
u danasnjim incidentima na ulicama Beograda i da je u toku
dijagnosticiranje njihovih ozleda. Prema izjavama ocevidaca, jedna
osoba je ranjena danas iza podneva u Knez Mihailovoj ulici, kada
su se licem u lice nasle jedna grupa pristigla na miting podrske
politici Slobodana Milosevica i pristalice Koalicije ,,Zajedno''.
Ocevici kazu da se pucanj zacuo u momentu kada su pristalice
,,Zajedno'' preprecile put grupi koja je isla na miting ,,Za
Srbiju''.
MITINZI
Na mitingu na Terazijama, koje RTS direktno prenosi, nalazi se
vise desetina hiljada ljudi. RTS prenosi da ih ima preko 500.000.
Pored ostalih, govorio je i predsednik Srbije. Mitingu koalicije
,,Zajedno'' prisustvuje preko 200.000 gradjana. Pre polaska u
setnju, gradjanima se obratio predsednik Srpskog pokreta obnove
Vuk Draskovic, koji je optuzio Srbije Slobodana Milosevica da
,,trazi gradjanski rat u Srbiji'' i prokleo ga ,,zbog krvi koju
nije prezao da prolije''. ,,Ne damo rat u Srbiji'', rekao je
Draskovic. Predsednik Demokratske stranke Zoran Djindjic rekao je
da ,,onima koji su izgubili nista ne pomaze kuku i motiku da
dovedu'', naglasavajuci da vlasti pokusavaju da ,,skrenu temu'' sa
izborne kradje. ,,Neka nam odgovore ko je ukrao glasove'', rekao
je Djindjic. On je istakao da pristalice koalicije ,,Zajedno''
,,nemaju nikakvog razloga za bilo kakve kontakte'' sa ucesnicima
,,kontramitinga'' na Terazijama. Na svim prilazima Terazijama
postavljeni su kordoni specijalnih policijskih snaga.
MILOSEVIC NA TERAZIJAMA: NIKO NECE DESTABILIZOVATI SRBIJU
Predsednik Srbije Slobodan Milosevic izjavio je danas na mitingu
podrske njegovoj politici da ,,jaka Srbija nije po volji mnogih
mocnika izvan nase zemlje''. ,,Zato su oni'', kako je rekao, ,,u
sprezi sa petom kolonom, koju formiraju ovde pokusali da nasu
zemlju destabilizuju, da je oslabe''. ,,Naravno, da to necemo
dozvoliti'', naglasio je Milosevic pred vise desetina hiljada
gradjana na Terazijama, na mitingu za koji je predsednik Srbije
rekao da je posvecen ,,idealima mira, slobode, nezavisnosti nase
zemlje i dostojanstva naseg naroda''. Posto su gradjani na reci
Milosevica uzvratili skandiranjem ,,Mi smo Slobini, Slobo je nas''
i ,,Izdajice napolje'', predsednik Srbije je ocenio da je cilj
demonstracija da se ,,uspori ekonomski razvoj i da se oslabimo
toliko da se ugrozi integritet sadasnje Jugoslavije i sadasnje
Srbije''. ,,Niko nece Srbiju deliti'', porucio je Milosevic i
napomenuo da zeli da izuzme ,,one mlade ljude koji traze da se
otklone nepravilnosti iz ovih lokalnih izbora''. On je podsetio da
je studentima obecao pomoc kako bi se utvrdila puna istina, ali
,,u institucijama naseg sistema'', koje, kako je rekao, nisu gore
od institucija u drugim zemljama. ,,Kad je vec rec o pravdi i
nepravdi, najveca nepravda su nasilje i rat, a najveca pravda su
mir i sloboda'', napomenuo je Milosevic. Posle ovih reci, otpocelo
je skandiranje ,,Slobo mi te volimo'', na sta je Milosevic
uzvratio: ,,Volim i ja vas''. ,,Ali, mi zelimo i mnoge druge
pravde'', precizirao je on i objasnio da su to: da fabrike rade,
da su zaposleni na radnim mestima, da dobro zaradjuju, da su
seljaci na vreme isplaceni, da roditelji spokojno docekuju decu iz
skola, kao i da gradjani Beograda mogu nesmetano da se krecu kroz
grad. Ponavljajuci da ,,nece niko destabilizovati Srbiju'',
Milosevic je rekao: ,,Pravo da vam kazem, kada bi ti koji
pokusavaju da je destabiliziju, zaista mogli da je destabilizuju,
ne bi Srbija nista vredela. Ali, oni to ne mogu''. ,,Oni su svi, i
spoljni i unutrasnji, u sprezi hteli da nas oslabe, a ja vam
kazem: iz tih njihovih pokusaja izaci cemo, ne slabiji, nego
jaci'', porucio je Milosevic. Na te njegove reci okupljeni su
odgovorili skandiranjem ,,Uhapsite Vuka''. ,,Pod pretnjama i
pritiscima Srbija se uvek ujedini cvrsce i snaznije'', naglasio je
Milosevic. ,,Niko nece da je deli, niti ce da pristane da bude
tudji sluga'', istakao je Milosevic i dodao da su i Beograd i svi
drugi gradovi -- Srbija. ,,Ona je jedna i ona je nedeljiva i tako
ce i biti'', rekao je Milosevic. ,,Nas je narod ujedinjen oko te
politike mira i slobode i mi zelimo da gradimo razvijenu zemlju,
koja ce biti dostojna svoga naroda, a narod svoje zemlje'', rekao
je Milosevic i govor zavrsio recima ,,Zivela Srbija, Zivela
Jugoslavija''. Milosevicevim govorom oko 16.30 casova zavrsen je
miting podrske politici predsednika Srbije.
POLICIJA UPOTREBILA SUZAVAC
Nakon zavrsenog mitinga na Terazijama, ljudi su se brzo razisli,
ali su kordoni milicije ostali. U dodiru sa demonstrantima, koji
su na Trgu Republike cekali kolonu, koja je iz setnje dosla posle
17 casova, policija je upotrebila nekoliko suzavaca da bi odbacila
demonstrante, koji su prisli Terazijama.
Pripremio(la): Zoran Penevski
vesti.1233corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 19 sati, 24. decembar 1996.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Svi tekstovi su Copyright 1996 Radija B92. SVA PRAVA ZADRZANA.
------------------------------------------------------------------
PROTESTI SE PRIVODE KRAJU, POLICIJA SE RAZILAZI
------------------------------------------------------------------
IVICA LAZIC JE ZIV
Covek, koji je danas u Knez Mihajlovoj ulici ranjen, zove se Ivica
Lazic i clan je SPO-a. Kako Radio B92 saznaje u sedistu Srpskog
pokreta obnove, Lazic je u poslepodnevnim satima operisan u
Urgentnom centru, a informacija o postoperativnom stanju jos nisu
poznate. Ivica Lazic je iz Boljevca i ima 42 godine.
STUDENTSKE SETNJE UZ INCIDENTE
Danasnja studentska protesna setnja trajala je skoro tri sata, uz
brojne incidente. Vec na pocetku Pariske ulice studentska kolona
zaustavila je tri autobusa iz Backe Palanke u kojima su se
nalazile pristalice Slobodana Milosevica. Studenti su vikali,
lupali o stakla i gadjali autobuse jajima. Obezbedjenje
studentskog protesta odlucilo je da promeni marsutu kako se
studenti vise ne bi susretali sa Milosevicevim pristalicama iz
unutrasnjosti. Blizak susret studenata i pristalica Slobodana
Milosevica desio se ponovo u ulici Narodnog fronta kod pijace
Zeleni venac. Studenti su vikali: ,,Vratite se kuci'', a zatim su
oteli par transparenata, koje su pocepali i izgazili. Iz Narodnog
fronta studentska kolona krenula je niz Balkansku ulicu gde se na
raskrsnici sa Admirala Geprata kolona razjedinila iz nepoznatih
razloga. Organizovanje i ,,trazenje'' jednog dela kolone trajalo
je oko 45 minuta da bi se vise od 50.000 studenata uputilo prema
Slaviji, a zatim Beogradskom do Pravnog fakulteta. Tu su se
studenti opet susreli sa pristalicama Slobodana Milosevica, koje
je jedan deo kolone okruzio i zasuo pogrdnim recima. Drugi deo
kolone nastavio je Beogradskom, Starine Novaka i Cvijicevom da bi
mu se u 29. novembra prikljucio zakasneli deo studenata. Studenti
su se, zatim, preko Trga republike vratili na Plato oko 16 casova
i 30 minuta.
JOS MALO O SETNJI
Nakon Djindjicevog poziva da ,,ne nasedaju na pokusaje da se tema
skrene sa lopovluka i kradje'', a uz skandiranje ,,Ne damo
pobedu'', kolona je posla Makedonskom ulicom. Tamo su, sa zgrade
,,Politike'', radnici te novinske kuce, burno pozdravljeni,
zasipali demonstrante komadima papira od iscepanih primeraka
,,Politika''. Kolona se zatim, ulicom Lole Ribara spustila u
Takovsku, prema ulici 29. novembra, gde su sreli zacelje
studentske kolone, koja je dva sata ranije krenula u svoju
protestnu setnju. U ulici Djure Djakovica, kada je kolona
prolazila pored prostorija JUL-a, sa razglasa je pustena pesma
,,Baba Jula'', a dok su prolazili pored crkve Aleksandra Nevskog,
ucesnike protesta pozdravila su crkvena zvona. Kolona, u cijoj
setnji nije bilo incidenata, zavrsila krug uspinjuci se prema Trgu
Republike, gde se odrzao miting koalicije ,,Zajedno''.
POLICIJA BLOKIRALA TERAZIJE
Snazne policijske snage danas su gotovo potpuno blokirale
beogradske Terazije, gde je pred vise desetina hiljada ljudi
odrzan miting podrske predsedniku Srbije Slobodanu Milosevicu.
Vise kordona policajaca, opremljenih slemovima, stitovima,
zastitnim prslucima i dugim palicama, onemogucili su pred pocetak
mitinga prilaz Terazijama sa svih strana, osim sa Trga Nikole
Pasica i iz Ulice Srpskih vladara. Tako je jedan deo Milosevicevih
pristalica ostao u Nusicevoj i Prizrenskoj ulici, dok je veci broj
sipmatizera koalicije ,,Zajedno'' bio ,,zarobljen'' na Terazijama,
gde su govore sa bine pratili zvizducima i negodovanjem.
UKRATKO
Vise od 80 autobusa koji prevoze ucesnike danasnjeg mitinga
podrske predsedniku Srbije Slobodanu Milosevicu proslo je veceras
posle 17 casova preko Slavije prema autoputu Beograd -- Nis.
Predsednik Srbije Slobodan Milosevic, danas je prepesacio deo
Ulice srpskih vladara od mesta gde je odrzao govor na Terazijama,
do Skupstine grada, okruzen svojim pristalicama.
Oko 17.30 pristalice opozicije i specijalne jedinice policije
ponovo su se sukobili na pocetku Terazija.
MARJANOVIC: PRESTATI SA PODRSKOM KVISLINSKOJ KOALICIJI ,,ZAJEDNO''
Predsednik Vlade Srbije Mirko Marjanovic pozvao je danas u
Skupstini SRJ sve medije u Srbiji na objektivnije pisanje, posebno
oko aktivnosti ,,izdajnicke i kvislinske'' koalicije ,,Zajedno''.
On je mnogobrojnim novinarima u Skupstini Srbije rekao da ta
koalicija ,,vodi Srbiju u propast'' i da je spremna na jos vecu
izdaju, samo da bi dosla na vlast. ,,Vi ste mladi ljudi i zar ne
vidite da koalicija 'Zajedno' vodi na kvislinski put, nosi nemacke
zastave, trazi vracanje sankcija Srbiji i SR Jugoslaviji i zahteva
da se Kosovu i Vojvodini vrati Ustav iz 1974'', naglasio je
Marjanovic. On je zakljucio da gleda sve tv programe koji ,,nisu
losi'', ali ,,licno najvise veruje drzavnoj televiziji, mada nisu
neobjektivni ni Karici, Studio B i mnogi drugi tv centri''.
Marjanovic je u pauzi sednice Skupstine Srbije rekao novinarima da
je od samog pocetka bilo sasvim jasno da je Tijanic bio
,,prijatelj desnice''.
POLICIJA SE RAZILAZI
Prema reporterima Radija B92, policija je sa Terazija pocela da se
razilazi nesto pre 19 casova.
Pripremio(la): Zoran Penevski
d
vesti.1234corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 24. decembar 1996.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Svi tekstovi su Copyright 1996 Radija B92. SVA PRAVA ZADRZANA.
------------------------------------------------------------------
KRAJ BURNOG DANA
------------------------------------------------------------------
RADIO B92: KRATAK PREGLED DANASNJIH ZBIVANJA U BEOGRADU
ALEKSANDAR VASOVIC, Radio B92, reporter na licu mesta: U Beogradu
je danas za dlaku izbegnut sukob sirokih razmera sa nesagledivim
posledicama. Naime, pristalice SPS-a su u 15 casova organizovale
miting podrske predsedniku Srbije Slobodana Milosevica, dok je u
isto vreme odrzana i 35. protestna setnja Beogradjana i pristalica
koalicije ZAJEDNO. Medjutim, tenzije su pocele jos tokom
prepodneva, kada su pristalice SPS-a u oko 1.000 autobusa iz
unutrasnjosti Srbije pocele da pristizu u jugoslovensku
prestonicu. Gradjani Beograda su ih sve vreme docekivali pogrdama,
zvizdanjem, bacana su jaja i petarde. U jednom momentu, na
Terazijama, gde je trebalo da otpocne miting vladajuce stranke,
nasle su se suprotstavljene grupa od dvadesetak hiljada
socijalista i cetrdesetak hiljada pristalica koalicije ZAJEDNO.
Sporadicni sukobi poceli su da izbijaju vec oko podneva. Obracuni
motkama, gadjanje tvrdim predmetima i petardama, trajali su sve do
pred sam pocetak mitinga podrske Slobodana Milosevica, kada je
kordon od desetak redova policajaca potisnuo pristalice koalicije
ZAJEDNO ka Trgu Republike. Ove carke okoncane su sa po nekoliko
razbijenih glava sa obe strane.
Prvi ozbiljan incident dogodio se u Knez Mihajlovoj ulici oko 14
casova, kada je jedan od pristalica SPS-a, pred nekoliko
fotoreportera i televizijskih kamera, iz pistolja pucao na jednog
od gradjana i pogodio ga u glavu. Povredjeni Ivica Lazovic, clan
SPO-a iz Boljevca, je u ozbiljnom stanju prebacen u Urgentni
centar, gde se i dalje nalazi. U medjuvremenu je na Terazijama
otpoceo miting socijalista na kome je govorio i Slobodan
Milosevic. Predsednik Srbije je, upadljivo nervozan, u, na mahove
rastrzanom govoru pred oko sedamdesetak hiljada svojih pristalica,
ocenio da su ciljevi demonstracija ekonomsko slabljenje i
ugrozavanje integriteta Srbije i Jugoslavije i dodao da niko nece
destabilizovati Srbiju. Mitingu ,,Za Srbiju'', kako su ga nazvali
socijalisti, prisustvovali su i Miloseviceva supruga Mira
Markovic, predsednik Jugoslavije Zoran Lilic, brojni funkcioneri
SPS-a i clanovi vlade. Pristalice predsednika Srbije su pre 17
casova napustile Terazije.
Za to vreme, na Trgu Republike, koji je blokiralo nekoliko hiljada
policajaca, okupilo se vise od 250.000 Beogradjana i pristalica
koalicije ZAJEDNO. Oni su nesto oko 16 casova krenuli u protestnu
setnju ulicama Beograda, kako bi se smanjile tenzije i
socijalistima dalo vremena da okoncaju svoj miting. Oko 17 casova,
policija je bacila suzavac na demonstrante u centru grada, u
trenutku kada su pristalice opozicije sa Trga Republike pokusale
da se kroz Kolarcevu ulicu probiju prema Terazijama. Iako je
policija upotrebila pendreke i povredila nekoliko ljudi, situacija
se ubrzo smirila. Lideri opozicije pozvali su gradjane da ostanu
pribrani i da izbegavaju sukobe sa policijom. Situacija se konacno
smirila oko 19 casova kada su se i policija, ali i gradjani
Beograda povukli sa ulica. Nova protestna setnja koalicije ZAJEDNO
najavljena je i za sutra.
Oko 50.000 beogradskih studenata i danas se, 31. dan za redom,
prosetalo beogradskim ulicama. Zbog kontramitinga Socijalisticke
partije Srbije na Terazijama, studenti su krenuli u drugom pravcu,
ka Pariskoj ulici. Neki saobracajni milicioneri danas nisu krili
da su uz studente pa je tako, na primer, jedan saobracajac izvadio
pistaljku kakvu nose demonstranti i zvizdao sa studentima. Jedan
saobracajac, koji je svih 31 dan ,,vezan'' za studentski protest,
bio je danas revnosniji nego svih prethodnih dana u zatvaranju
saobracaja da bi studenti mogli da prodju. Tokom setnje, studenti
su nekoliko puta susretali manje grupe pristalica SPS, koji su iz
raznih krajeva Srbije dosli u Beograd, ali su zahvaljujuci velikim
naporima studentskog obezbedjenja izbegnuti veci incidenti.
DRASKOVIC: MILOSEVIC POKUSAO DA IZAZOVE GRADJANSKI RAT
Nakon setnje vise od 250.000 gradjana, predsednik Srpskog pokreta
obnove Vuk Draskovic rekao je na Trgu Republike da je ,,Slobodan
Milosevic za danas bio zakazao krvoprolice i pocetak gradjanskog
rata u Beogradu'', dodajuci da ,,samo covek poremecenog uma moze
da dovodi pijane najamnicke horde sa unapred datim zadatkom da
potece krv ovom zemljom i ovim gradom''. Prema njegovim recima,
danas oko 13 casova, ,,Milosevicevi pijani placenici iz Vrbasa
dobili su direktan nalog da upadnu u prostorije SPO i da naprave
kasapnicu''. ,,Ispred Stranke je stajala grupa od 10--15 mladica.
Kamera Si En En je zabelezila kako Milosevicev placenik iz Vrbasa
vadi pistolj i hladnokrvno puca u potiljak Ivici Lazovicu, ocu
cetvoro dece'', rekao je Draskovic, precizirajuci da se lekari u
Urgentnom centru bore za zivot Lazovica. ,,Ne nasedajmo na
Milosevicevu krvavu nameru da Srbiju pretvori u Vukovar, Sarajevo,
Krajinu'', porucio je lider SPO, zakljucujuci da predsednik Srbije
zbog toga ,,mora da ode''.
Predsednica Gradjanskog saveza Srbije Vesna Pesic rekla je da je
,,danasnji 35. dan protesta istorijski, zbog toga sto su oni
nesrecnici na celu sa tiraninom i tirankom porazeni u Beogradu''.
,,Oni su pali, a nova demokratska Srbija je pobedila'', ocenila je
Pesic, isticuci da ,,ako vladar Srbije planira gradjanski rat i
podelu Srbije, mi vise nemamo nikakvog razloga da smatramo da on
pripada ovde''. ,,To nije tudja, nego tudjinska ruka. Nema naroda
koji zasluzuje takvu vlast'', istakla je Pesic. Ona je policajce i
vojnike pozvala na neposlusnost, naglasavajuci da oni ne moraju da
,,slusaju naredjenja onoga, koji izaziva gradjanski rat u
Srbiji''. ,,Onaj ko izaziva gradjanski rat ne moze da vlada
Srbijom. On je pao'', zakljucila je Pesic.
Predsednik Demokratske stranke Zoran Djindjic rekao je da je danas
,,jadnim misevima'', koji su ,,dosli da podrze lopove i izbornu
kradju u Srbiji'', govorio ,,uplaseni i zbunjeni'' ,,veliki crveni
mis'', ,,sto vec pet godina nikome nista nema da kaze''.
Komentarisuci reci predsednika Milosevica o teskom zivotu zbog
sankcija i demonstracija, Djindjic je upitao ,,jesu li sankcije i
demonstranti iznosili pare na Kipar, punili vase crvene sefove,
svercovali naftu i cigarete''. ,,Gde su pare i glasovi ovog naroda
-- na Kipru, u Ujedinjenim nacijama ili u tvojoj misjoj rupi'',
pitao je Djindjic. Ocenjujuci da ,,nema vise nikakve tajne u
Srbiji'' i ,,da su sve maske pale'', Djindjic je podsetio da su
proteklih 35 dana demonstracije bile mirne, a da je na dan ,,kada
se on pojavio'' doslo do nasilja i krvoprolica. ,,Ko je faktor
nestabilnosti? On. Ko izaziva nerede? On'', istakao je Djindjic,
zakljucujuci da je faktor stabilnosti u Srbiji koalicija
,,Zajedno''. Ucesnicima vecerasnjeg mitinga kratko su govorili i
glumci Dragan Nikolic, Dragan Bjelogrlic, Bane Vidakovic, Tanasije
Uzunovic, Branislav Lecic, zatim reditelj Srdjan Dragojevic i
dramski pisac Dusan Kovacevic.
vesti.1235corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 24. decembar 1996.
TALBOT: SAD SMATRAJU DA JE MILOSEVIC ODGOVORAN ZA NASILJE
Vrsilac duznosti americkog drzavnog sekretara Stroub Talbot izdao
je veceras saopstenje u kojem se kaze da SAD predsednika Srbije
Slobodana Milosevica ,,smatraju odgovornim'' za nasilje do kojeg
je danas doslo na ulicama Beograda, javlja Rojter. ,,SAD smatraju
da su srpska vlada i predsednik Srbije Slobodan Milosevic
odgovorni za nasilne akcije demonstranata'', naglasava se u
Talbotovom saopstenju. ,,Umesto da ucine gest dobre volje u
pokusaju da razrese politicku krizu -- izazvanu ponistavanjem
pobeda opozicije na izborima 17. novembra -- srpske vlasti su
flagrantno i provokativno izabrale da povecaju napetosti,
dovodjenjem hiljada ljudi u Beograd da bi se suprotstavili mirnim
demonstracijama opozicije'', istice Talbot. Talbot na kraju
precizira da se sef misije SAD u Beogradu Ricard Majls danas sreo
sa jugoslovenskim sefom diplomatije Milanom Milutinovicem i pozvao
srpsku vladu da izbegne dalje nasilje, kao i da je slicna poruka
upucena opoziciji.
SAOPSTENJE STEJT DIPARTMENTA O SRBIJI
Americka vlada objavila je danas saopstenje, povodom zaostravanja
krize u Srbiji, u kojem se naglasava zabrinutost zbog sukoba u
Beogradu uz poziv obema stranama na maksimalnu uzdrzanost i
izbegavanje daljih konfrontacija, javlja za FoNet dopisnik ,,Nase
Borbe'' Slobodan Pavlovic. Vlada Sjedinjenih Drzava smatra vladu
Srbije i predsednika Srbije Slobodana Milosevica odgovornim za
nasilne akcije demonstranata. Umesto da resavaju krizu mirnim
sredstvima srpske vlasti izabrale su da povecaju napetost
dovodjenjem hiljada ljudi u Beograd da bi ih konfrontirale sa
mirnim demonstrantima, receno je u saopstenju Stejt dipartmenta,
uz osudu ovog, kako je konstatovano, neodgovornog ponasanja vlasti
u Beogradu. Ponovljeni su i ranije izneti americki zahtevi
Milosevicu da prizna legitimne rezultate opstinskih izbora od 17.
novembra, da otvori dijalog sa demokratskom opozicijom, da se
uzdrzi od svih daljih akcija, koje bi podsticale nemire kao i da
obezbedi oslobadjanje medije od sadasnje drzavne kontrole. Amerika
vlada je i u danasnjem saopstenju, kao sto je to vec bilo ucinjeno
juce, posebno upozorila vlasti u Beogradu da ce upotreba sile
protiv mirnih demonstranata imati ozbiljne posledice i neminovno
voditi ka daljoj izolaciji Srbije iz medjunarodne zajednice.
MOSKOVSKI MEDIJI O ZBIVANJIMA U BEOGRADU
Prvi put za pet nedelja od pocetka masovnih anti-vladinih protesta
u Srbiji na ulicama Beograda pojavile su se pristalice predsednika
Srbije Slobodana Milosevica i, kao sto se moglo predvideti, izbili
su sukobi, koji lako mogu da prerastu u gradjanski rat, javila je
veceras najpopularnija moskovska televizijska mreza NTV. Kako
javlja dopisnik FoNeta Branko Stosic, u udarnom izvestaju, svoje
najgledanije informativne emisije ,,Sevodnja'', NTV istice da se
policija umesala da bi razdvojila Milosevicevce i anti-
Milosevicevce, tek kad je sukob dostigao vrhunac. I ostale
moskovske televizijske i radio stanice javile su, u prvim
popodnevnim vestima, o sukobima dveju demonstranskih struja u
Beogradu. One su kasnije javile da se njihove prve informacije da
ima i poginulih medju demonstrantima opozicije, srecom, nisu
potvrdile. U tim izvestajima navodi se da se ne zna ko je poceo,
ali se istice da je kobni pucanj odjeknuo iz redova pristalica
Milosevica. NTV u zakljucku izvestaja iz Beograd kaze da lideri
opozicije mogu biti pohapseni i podvlaci da nije iskljuceno da ce
vlada proglasiti vanredno stanje i uvesti policijski cas navodno
radi sredjivanja situacije.
KINKELOVA ZABRINUTOST I PORUKA MILOSEVICU
Nemacki ministar inostranih poslova Klaus Kinkel izrazio je danas
zabrinutost zbog nasilja u Beogradu i pozvao sve strane da se
uzdrze od sukoba, javlja Rojter. ,,Pozivam sve strane da rade na
sprecavanju da politicki sukob preraste u nasilje'', porucio je
Kinkel. ,,Unutrasnja kriza u Jugoslaviji moze biti resena samo
putem demokratskog dijaloga, a ne kroz konfrontaciju'', navodi se
u Kinkelovom saopstenju i dodaje da ceo svet pazljivo prati
zbivanja u Jugoslaviji. Predsedniku Srbije Slobodanu Milosevicu
Kinkel je porucio da bi dalje nasilje bilo pogubno za njegove
napore da sagradi mostove povratka u Evropu. ,,Sustinsko pitanje
na koje tek treba da se dobije odgovor jeste da li ce Beograd naci
svoj put povratka u zajednicu slobodnih i demokratskih drzava ili
ce taj put biti zaustavljen zbog krsenja osnovnih ljudskih
prava'', naglasava Kinkel. ,,Danasnje demonstracije su razlog za
veliku zabrinutost'', istakao je Kinkel, dodajuci da se ne sme
dozvoliti da ,,sukobi izmedju Milosevicevih pristalica i opozicije
prerastu u spiralu nasilja''.
15 LICA U URGENTNOM CENTRU
U beogradskom urgentnom centru danas je, zbog povreda nastalih u
sukobima pristalica Slobodana Milosevica i koalicije ,,Zajedno'',
primljeno 15 lica, od kojih su dva zadrzana. Kako prenosi
Televizija Studio B, doktor Rade Vasilic iz Urgentnog centra je
rekao da je Ivica Lazovic (42), koji je dopremljen zbog rane
nanete vatrenim oruzjem, nakon uspesne operacije zadrzan na daljem
lecenju. Prema Vasilicevim recima, Stevo Marjanovic (44) je ostao
u centru zbog preloma noge. Ostalih 13 lica pusteno kucama zbog
laksih povreda, dodao je on.
vesti.1236corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 24. decembar 1996.
,,NARODNA SLOGA'' TUZI PREDSEDNIKA BULATOVICA
Celnici opozicione koalicije ,,Narodna Sloga'' u Crnoj Gori Novak
Kilibarda i Slavko Perovic, na danasnjoj konferenciji za stampu,
novinare su upoznali sa otvorenim pismom, koje su poslali
koaliciji ,,Zajedno'', kao i o svojoj odluci da tuze sudu
predsednika Republike Crne Gore Momira Bulatovica, javlja Montena
faks. ,,Mozda je koincidentno sto bas danas govorimo o ovom pismu,
na dan kada se u Srbiji odrzavaju demonstracije za podrsku
postojecoj vlasti'', rekao je Novak Kilibarda, dodajuci da je
jedan od najznacajnijih razloga sto upucuju to pismo taj sto
,,Momir Bulatovic, shodno svojoj politici i navici, zbunjuje
svojim dvosmislenim izjavama, ne samo nasu, vec i svjetsku
javnost''. ,,Mi smo pronasli recept da testiramo gospodina
Bulatovica i predlozili ga koaliciji 'Zajedno'. Naime, predlazemo
predsjedniku Bulatovicu, kao sefu DPS-a, formiranje demokratskog
bloka u saveznom parlamentu, koji nece podrzati vladu koju upravo
formira Milosevic. Ako gospodin Bulatovic nekim cudom pristane,
onda se nece moci formirati vlada bez precutne ili izricite
podrske Vojislava Seselja, a ta vlada se preko Vijeca republika
lako moze blokirati. Ako DPS, zaista, podrzava demokratsku Srbiju
prihvatice predlog, sto ce za posljedicu imati prijevremene
izbore, pod mnogo boljim uslovima: sa oslabljenim Milosevicem i
preporodjenim Bulatovicem'', istakli su lideri ,,Narodne sloge''.
Oni su izrazili uverenje da je to pismo u interesu Srbije i Crne
Gore, koje svoje odnose treba da uspostave na demokratskoj osnovi,
uspostavljanjem demokratske osovine ,,Zajedno -- Narodna sloga'',
koji ce se suprotstaviti totalitaristickoj osovini Milosevic-
Bulatovic. Novak Kilibarda i danas je ponovio ranije postavljeno
pitanje Ministarstvu policije: da li i koliko pomazu policijom
Milosevicu u ,,nemirnim'' gradovima Srbije, jer opozicija i narod
imaju pravo da to znaju, pa je pozvao predsednika Bulatovica da se
obrati narodu i iznese stav o dogadjajima u Srbiji, kao i kakvo je
aktuelno stanje u vojsci.
DJUKANOVIC: ,,PREDSTOJE GODINE INTENZIVNE TRANZICIJE''
Predsednik vlade Crne Gore Milo Djukanovic, danas je pred
crnogorskim parlamentom podneo ekspoze o dosadasnjim rezultatima i
najvaznijim pravcima delovanja Vlade u narednom mandatnom periodu,
javlja Montena faks. ,,Ostvarenje stabilnog privrednog razvoja,
brzi rast drustvenog proizvoda, unapredjenje standarda
stanovnistva i uspostavljanje svih segmenata trzisnog privrednog
sistema, osnova su djelovanja Vlade na unutrasnjem planu'', rekao
je Milo Djukanovic, dodajuci da ce, ,,u susret takvim ciljevima
biti prilagodjene sve mjere i instrumenti tekuce ekonomske
politike: restriktivna monetarno-kreditna politika, budzetska
ravnoteza i ocuvanje stabilnosti domace valute''. ,,Imajuci u vidu
da se s pojedinim rjesenjima na saveznom nivou kasni, kao i da su
pojedini elementi procesa tranzicije u Srbiji usporeni, Vlada ce
se beskompromisno zalagati za odrzanje kursa trzisne ekonomije,
kao izraza kontinuiteta politike koju su afirmisale i prethodne
dvije Vlade DPS-a'', naglasio je Djukanovic, najavljujuci
,,intenziviranje procesa privatizacije, u funkciji brzog
poboljsanja efikasnosti privredjivanja''.
U tom pravcu, prema recima premijera Djukanovica, Vlada planira
sledece poteze: ,,privatizaciju i prestrukturiranje velikih
sistema, razvoj malih i srednjih privatnih preduzeca i na toj
osnovi otvaranje novih radnih mjesta, a vec u sljedecoj godini
pocetak sanacije i rekonstrukcije bankarskog i finansijskog
sistema, jer je to osnovna pretpostavka za ubrzanje procesa
privatizacije i unapredjenja ekonomskih odnosa sa inostranstvom.
Posebna paznja bice posvecena povratku povjerenja u bankarski
sistem, prije svega pocetku rjesavanje problema stare devizne
stednje i stimulisanju nove i njene racionalne upotrebe na osnovu
trzisnih mehanizama''. Djukanovic je, takodje, ukazao i da ce vec
u narednoj godini zapoceti reforma poreskog sistema. Priotiteti,
inace, i dalje ostaju turizam, pomorstvo, poljoprivreda i
tehnicko-tehnoloska obnova strateskih industrija, zatim nastavak
programa javnih radova, uz visoko vrednovanje komponenti ekoloskog
razvoja, rekao je Djukanovic.
SUSAK: ULAZAK HRVATSKE U ISTOCNU SLAVONIJU JE GOTOVA STVAR
Hrvatski ministar odbrane Gojko Susak izjavio je danas da svi
pokazatelji govore da se Hrvatska vojska nece angazovati u
istocnoj Slavoniji. ,,To je svrsen cin i za medjunarodnu
zajednicu, a shvatila su to i gospoda u Beogradu. Nas dolazak u
Podunavlje u prolece za mene je realnost'', rekao je Susak u
intervjuu zagrebackom ,,Vecernjem listu''.
OTKAZANA PREDSTAVA U JDP-U
Vecerasnja predstava Jugoslovenskog dramskog pozorista ,,Gospodja
ministarka'' otkazana je, jer je nosilac glavne uloge, glumica
Mirjana Karanovic, odbila da igra u njoj. ,,Ne zelim da igram zato
sto u toj predstavi glumim zenu, koja ne preza ni od cega da bi
ostala na vlasti'', izjavila je Radiju B92 Mirjana Karanovic, ciju
su odluku podrzale i njene kolege. Napominjuci da ona licno
veceras obavestava gledaoce o otkazivanju predstave Mirjana
Karanovic nam je rekla i da se, zbog poslednjih dogadjaja u
Beogradu, ni sutra nece igrati ,,Gospodja ministarka''. ,,O
sudbini ostalih predstava u JDP odlucice glumci koji u njima
igraju'', rekla je na kraju Mirjana Karanovic.
Pripremio(la): Zoran Penevski
vesti.1237dizel,
-> #1215, junior** Ja ne znam i da li ima 100k studenata na Beogradskom
** Univerzitetu. :)
Mislim da studenata u Beogradu ima oko 65000, tako da je
40000 fenomenalan broj (to je skoro dve trećine, zamislite
kad bi dve trećine Srbije izašlo na ulice). :)
vesti.1238dizel,
-> #1217, junior** To nije ni važno. Važno je pitanje - da li je uhvaćen?
Onaj koji je pucao u čovek ja uhapšen odmah i nije se opirao.
Priveden je još jedan koji je bio sa njim, više kao svedok.
vesti.1239vitez.koja,
-> #1192, junior#=> PS. Danas:
#=> 1. Socijalisti - 200-250 hiljada
#=> 2. Zajedno - 150-200 hiljada
#=> 3. Studenti - 50 hiljada
#=> 4. Murija - 10 hiljada
Ovaj, jesi li ti bio tamo?
sk
vesti.1240corto,
Preuzeto sa Pro-a:
================================
Forum, Mediji.1278, drakce
(6.1278) Sre 25/12/1996 02:03, 3936 chr, +cnn2412.mov 957k
:: CNN
----------------------------------------------------------------
Milosevic supporters, foes clash in Belgrade
<Picture: protest>
U.S. condemns government provocation
December 24, 1996
Web posted at: 3:00 p.m. EST (2000 GMT)
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (CNN) -- Supporters of Serbian President Sloboban
Milosevic -- some of them bused into Belgrade from the countryside --
fired shots at opponents on Tuesday during clashes on the streets of
Belgrade.
<Picture: movie icon> ( 988K/22 sec. QuickTime movie)
Rival demonstrators also beat each other with sticks and metal pipes in
the first bloodshed since the opposition began peaceful protests 35 days
ago against vote-rigging by the ruling Socialists.
At least one person was hit by gunfire. Witnesses said at least three
other opposition demonstrators were wounded.
A man emerged from a crowd of pro-government supporters, pulled a gun
and fired into a crowd of opposition demonstrators, hitting one man in
the head, CNN's Peter Arnett reported live from Belgrade.
<Picture: icon> (199K/18 sec. AIFF or WAV sound, report from CNN's Peter
Arnett)
U.S. response
The United States said Milosevic and his government would be held
responsible for any "violent actions" by their demonstrators.
"The Serbian authorities have flagrantly and provocatively chosen to
heighten tensions by bringing thousands of people into Belgrade to
confront the peaceful demonstrations by the opposition," Deputy
Secretary of State Strobe Talbott said in a statement.
According to journalists in Belgrade, Milosevic's opponents produced a
turnout of almost 200,000 people, more than twice the number who rallied
in support of the president.
'Bleeding profusely'
The wounded man was "bleeding profusely" on the street as the gunman
disappeared back into the crowd of government supporters, Arnett
reported.
Later, however, doctors said later the man's head wound was not
life-threatening. Witnesses said police detained the gunman.
At first, no police were in sight, apparently allowing protesters from
both sides to "fight it out," Arnett said.
<Picture: icon> (306K/30 sec.AIFF or WAV sound, report from CNN's Peter
Arnett)
But riot police eventually appeared, firing teargas and making baton
charges. The police pushed back both government supporters and
opposition demonstrators.
<Picture: icon> (224K/18 sec. AIFF or WAV sound, report from CNN's Steve
Harrigan)
Milosevic's supporters convened in Belgrade's Republic Square, where the
opposition has demonstrated for more than a month demanding that their
victories in local elections be recognized. Earlier in the month, the
demonstrations reached a peak of more than 200,000 people.
Opposition leaders said they were considering calling off their
supporters after learning that many of the government supporters were
carrying arms.
Demonstrators bused in
Hundreds of buses carrying Milosevic's supporters -- mostly blue-collar
workers and elderly people -- arrived in Belgrade earlier Tuesday. Some
workers said they had been forced to board the buses under threat of
dismissal.
<Picture: milosevic>
"I had no choice," a worker from the Kosovo province town of Prizren
said, identifying himself only as Ljuba. "We were told either we board
the buses, or we lose our jobs."
The pro-Milosevic rally was planned for the same time and place as the
daily opposition rallies.
Clashes between pro- and anti-Milosevic protesters would give Serbia's
president an excuse to ban all demonstrations and use force against his
opponents, whose protests so far have been peaceful.
In his first public appearance since the crisis began, Milosevic warned:
"No one will be allowed to destabilize Serbia."
Correspondents Peter Arnett and Steve Harrigan in Belgrade and Reuters
contributed to this report.
(c) 1996 Cable News Network, Inc.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1278 --
vesti.1241corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1279, drakce
(6.1279) Sre 25/12/1996 02:03, 4066 chr
:: Associated Press
----------------------------------------------------------------
Serbian Riot Police on Alert
By JULIJANA MOJSILOVIC
Associated Press Writer
Tuesday, December 24, 1996 6:56 am EST
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Riot police were on the highest state of
alert Tuesday as die-hard supporters of Serbia's president -- and
apparently some unwilling workers -- arrived in the capital for a rally
the opposition warned could lead to bloodshed.
Several hundred supporters of President Slobodan Milosevic traded
insults with members of the opposition in downtown Belgrade. Before the
planned rally, at least one banner was torn up by Milosevic's foes.
Opposition leaders appealed to their supporters to remain calm and
``avoid any contact'' with Milosevic's supporters later Tuesday, when
both sides were to demonstrate in the same part of the city.
``The Socialists want to trigger a fight and chaos in the center of
Belgrade in order to have an excuse to impose police rule and a state of
emergency,'' said opposition spokesman Slobodan Vuksanovic.
But on Belgrade's main Republic Square, several hundred opposition
supporters chanted ``Thieves'' and ``Red Bandits'' at Milosevic's
supporters. They responded by shouting ``Traitors! Traitors!'' Police
were not visible.
Government sources said riot police were on the highest state of alert
as hundreds of buses arrived in the city bringing Milosevic's
pro-Communist supporters -- mostly blue-collar workers and elderly
people.
Some who attended said they were threatened with dismissal from their
work if they refused to board the buses.
``I had no choice,'' said a worker from the Kosovo province town of
Prizren, who identified himself only as Ljuba. ``We were told either we
board the buses, or we lose our jobs.''
The orchestrated pro-Milosevic event was planned for the same time and
place as opposition rallies held during the past month. Organizers said
they wanted ``to show the world what real Serbia is.''
About 80,000 pro-democracy supporters turned out in heavy rain Monday to
demonstrate against Milosevic in Belgrade for the 34th consecutive day.
Their leaders vowed to continue protests, and warned that Milosevic may
be planning to instigate violence to justify a crackdown while the world
is distracted by Christmas.
The government bused about 600 riot police into Belgrade on Monday,
deploying them on the outskirts of the capital. A huge force --
including armored anti-riot vehicles -- has been stationed there since
the opposition protests started.
``We don't want violence, but if it happens, it will wipe the two of
them away,'' said opposition leader Vuk Draskovic, referring to
Milosevic and his powerful pro-Communist wife, Mirjana Markovic.
The rallies have polarized Serbia and mark the biggest challenge to
Milosevic's autocratic rule since he rose to power nine years ago.
A clash between pro- and anti-Milosevic protesters would give Serbia's
president an excuse to ban all demonstrations and use force against his
opponents, whose protests so far have been peaceful.
The opposition coalition, Zajedno, contends Milosevic will try to
provoke clashes by disguising police as civilian supporters, who will
then intervene against pro-democracy demonstrators.
Several small pro-Milosevic rallies were held in Serbia on Monday,
including one in the volatile Kosovo province where Milosevic rose to
power in 1987. About 1,000 Serbs in this overwhelmingly ethnic Albanian
province accused opposition leaders of selling out the region to the
Albanians.
In Kraljevo, a central Serbian town, a cordon of police prevented pro-
and anti-Milosevic groups from attacking each other, but couldn't stop
them from hurling insults and jeers at one another.
More than 50,000 opposition supporters gathered in Nis, where they have
protested since the ballot results were announced.
In Pozarevac, Milosevic's hometown, police for the first time prevented
an opposition protest march, but there were no reports of violence.
(c) Copyright 1996 The Associated Press
------------------------------------------------- 6.1279 --
vesti.1242corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1280, drakce
(6.1280) Sre 25/12/1996 02:03, 5777 chr
:: Associated Press
----------------------------------------------------------------
Shots Are Fired in Belgrade
By JULIJANA MOJSILOVIC
Associated Press Writer
Tuesday, December 24, 1996 1:45 pm EST
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- A gunman in a crowd of pro-government
supporters fired on opponents of Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic
Tuesday during street clashes in which demonstrators hurled mud and
sticks at each other and police clubbed protesters.
One man was shot in the head, according to doctors who said his wound
was not life-threatening. A witness, Zlatko Mihajlovic, told The
Associated Press a woman also was wounded. No information about her was
available.
Witnesses said police detained the gunman.
Elsewhere in the city, two opposition demonstrators were stabbed and
wounded, witnesses said. There were no details.
Though the violence appeared to be ebbing by early evening, the clashes
dramatically escalated tensions in what had been more than four weeks of
relatively peaceful demonstrations against Milosevic and his annulment
of Nov. 17 local elections won by the opposition.
Milosevic, in a speech to his supporters Tuesday, accused opposition
leaders of being foreign lackeys intent on destroying Serbia.
``Strong Serbia is not at the liking of some powers abroad, and that's
why they are trying to break it up,'' he said. ``We, of course, won't
let it happen.''
In Washington, Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott said Milosevic
and his government would be held responsible for any ``violent actions''
by their supporters.
``The Serbian authorities have flagrantly and provocatively chosen to
heighten tensions by bringing thousands of people into Belgrade to
confront the peaceful demonstrations by the opposition,'' Talbott said
in a statement.
The gunfire came earlier Tuesday when witnesses said anti-Milosevic
activists cornered a smaller group of Milosevic supporters on Belgrade's
main Knez Mihajlova street. Radio Index said at least two shots were
fired. Several people were injured in the ensuing melee.
Hundreds of helmeted riot police intervened and separated the
demonstrators. After appeals from their leaders, most opposition
protesters moved away.
Police also tried to keep opposition crowds away from tens of thousands
of Milosevic supporters rallying on Terazije Square -- only 500 yards
away from Republic Square, where the opposition was gathering Tuesday
for a 35th straight day of protests against Milosevic.
The opposition demonstrators shouted, ``Fascists, fascists'' at the
police.
In one clash, thousands of unarmed opposition protesters charged a
police cordon. Police counter-charged and beat the demonstrators with
clubs, sending at least two to the ground.
Riot police beat at least four news photographers, including three
working for the AP. Other photographers were injured in clashes, though
none were hurt seriously.
Police lobbed tear gas at anti-Milosevic demonstrators in Republic
Square. An estimated 300,000 people -- the largest pro-democracy
demonstration so far -- converged under chilly sleet and temperatures in
the low 40s.
The nearby Milosevic rally numbered about 50,000 people -- although
state media said the figure was 500,000. The demonstration was briefly
disrupted when someone lobbed tear gas canisters, sending hundreds
running from the square.
State television, which carried the rally live, showed people chanting:
``We won't give up Slobo,'' ``Traitors, Traitors,'' and ``This Is
Serbia.''
Speakers blasted the opposition as ``vandals and terrorists.''
Earlier Tuesday, tens of thousands of student opposition demonstrators
charged at Milosevic supporters with sticks and hurled mud at them.
Several exchanged blows before the pro-government demonstrators
retreated.
The opponents tore up a Milosevic banner and set his picture on fire.
Thousands of people threw eggs, cabbages, apples and empty plastic
bottles at each other in Republic Square. Independent radio stations
reported at least one fight in a side street to the square.
Opposition protesters blew whistles and chanted ``Let's go, all-out
attack.''
Opposition leader Zoran Djindjic urged his people to be calm.
``We are stronger, and there is no reason to use force against them,''
he told a crowd from the balcony of his Democratic Party headquarters.
``That is exactly what dictator Milosevic wants.''
Hundreds of buses carrying Milosevic's supporters -- mostly blue-collar
workers and elderly people -- arrived in Belgrade earlier Tuesday. Some
workers said they had been forced to board the buses under threat of
dismissal.
``I had no choice,'' a worker from the Kosovo province town of Prizren
said, identifying himself only as Ljuba. ``We were told either we board
the buses, or we lose our jobs.''
Organizers of Tuesday's pro-government rally said they wanted ``to show
the world what real Serbia is.''
Opposition spokesman Slobodan Vuksanovic accused Milosevic's Socialist
Party supporters of trying to trigger a fight ``to have an excuse to
impose police rule and a state of emergency.''
The government bused about 600 riot police into Belgrade on Monday,
deploying them on the outskirts of the capital. A huge force --
including armored anti-riot vehicles -- has been stationed there since
the opposition protests started.
Opposition leaders have warned that Milosevic may be planning to
instigate violence to justify a crackdown while the world is distracted
by Christmas celebrations.
``We don't want violence, but if it happens, it will wipe the two of
them away,'' opposition leader Vuk Draskovic said, referring to
Milosevic and his powerful pro-Communist wife, Mirjana Markovic.
(c) Copyright 1996 The Associated Press
------------------------------------------------- 6.1280 --
vesti.1243corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1281, drakce
(6.1281) Sre 25/12/1996 02:03, 5140 chr
:: Associated Press
----------------------------------------------------------------
Guns, Clubs in Belgrade Clash
By DUSAN STOJANOVIC
Associated Press Writer
Tuesday, December 24, 1996 4:47 pm EST
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- The scene of peaceful protests for weeks,
the streets of Belgrade suddenly turned violent and bloody Tuesday: The
demonstrators traded blows with supporters of President Slobodan
Milosevic, and then were clubbed by riot police.
At least one person was shot by a gunman standing in a crowd of
Milosevic backers. Two people were stabbed, and several others injured.
The clashes, which ended at nightfall, dramatically escalated tensions
after four weeks of what have been relatively peaceful opposition
demonstrations against Milosevic and his annulment of Nov. 17 local
elections in places where his Socialists lost.
Milosevic had all but programmed Tuesday's street battle by urging
government supporters to rally at the same site where the opposition has
been protesting daily for more than a month.
In Washington, Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott said Milosevic
and his government were to blame for the violence.
``The Serbian authorities have flagrantly and provocatively chosen to
heighten tensions by bringing thousands of people into Belgrade to
confront the peaceful demonstrations by the opposition,'' Talbott said
in a statement.
He urged Milosevic to respect the opposition election victories and
warned that violence against anti-government demonstrators would have
serious consequences.
The government's attempt to counter the opposition will test the ability
of anti-government protesters to maintain momentum for peaceful change
without being drawn into violence.
Opposition leader Zoran Djindjic warned that Milosevic ``is seeking
chaos on Belgrade streets so he can find an excuse to impose police rule
and a state of emergency.''
Heavily armed forces intervened numerous times against opposition
supporters flooding downtown Belgrade, near where Milosevic supporters
had gathered for their rally.
Riot police beat at least four news photographers, including three
working for The Associated Press. Other photographers were injured in
the clashes, but none were hurt seriously.
Swinging clubs, police waded into the crowds, separating anti- and
pro-government groups and shielding Milosevic supporters. Although state
news media said 500,000 attended the pro-government gathering,
independent estimates put the crowd at no more than 50,000 -- some true
supporters, others coerced into coming by threats of losing their jobs.
Most of the Milosevic supporters -- villagers, elderly and blue-collar
workers bused into the capital from provincial towns -- appeared stunned
by the level of opposition support in the capital. Most of them have
only received news from Serbia's state-run TV, which has created a
distorted picture of the opposition and their demands.
``This is terrible,'' opposition supporter Vanja Misic said, sobbing as
she watched organized groups of bewildered Milosevic supporters march
silently through sleet-drenched streets, carrying portraits of the
Serbian leader. ``The dictator is using these poor people for his deadly
goal: splitting Serbs just to stay in power.''
State television repeated coverage of Milosevic's address Tuesday and
called his rally ``glorious.'' It made no mention of the opposition
protest or the clashes.
Milosevic has virtually ignored the opposition protests -- the largest
since he came to power in 1987. But he appeared at his rally to accuse
opposition leaders of being foreign lackeys intent on Serbia's breakup.
``Strong Serbia is not to the liking of some powers abroad, and that's
why they are trying to break it up with the help of the domestic
traitors,'' he said. ``We, of course, won't let it happen.''
The crowd chanted, ``We love you Slobo.'' He responded: ``I love you,
too.''
More than 300,000 Milosevic foes later marched through Belgrade. Though
leaders appealed for calm, about 10,000 opposition activists split from
the crowd and moved on the cordon of heavily-armed police. Police hurled
tear gas and clubbed protesters.
The opposition supporters chanted ``Thieves!'' and ``Red Bandits!'' at
the pro-Milosevic demonstrators. They shouted back: ``Traitors!
Traitors!''
Opposition leader Vesna Pesic told the rally that ``Milosevic's
supporters were defeated in Belgrade today.''
``He wants to divide Serbia,'' Pesic said.
In an earlier skirmish, a gunman in a crowd of Milosevic supporters
fired on opposition activists, shooting one man. Doctors identified the
victim as Ivica Lazovic and said his wound was not life-threatening.
Witnesses said police detained the gunman. Witnesses also reported that
a woman had been wounded by gunfire. No other information was available.
Several other people were injured, including two who suffered stab
wounds, when opposition supporters hurled eggs, sticks, mud and
firecrackers at Milosevic's supporters in downtown Terazije Square. At
least 15 people were treated for injuries.
(c) Copyright 1996 The Associated Press
------------------------------------------------- 6.1281 --
vesti.1244corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1282, drakce
(6.1282) Sre 25/12/1996 02:03, 3363 chr
:: Reuter
----------------------------------------------------------------
Tuesday December 24 7:35 AM EST
Serbian Socialist Rally at Opposition Site
BELGRADE (Reuter) - Serbian authorities staging a mass demonstration in
support of President Slobodan Milosevic built a speaking platform
Tuesday at the central Belgrade site where an opposition protest was
planned for the same time.
The prospect of several hundred thousand political foes mingled together
raised tensions after a warning from the Serbian Orthodox Patriarch
Pavle that five weeks of political conflict in Serbia could turn into
armed confrontation.
The protests, each with their own speakers, were due to start at 11 a.m.
EST outside the offices of the opposition Zajedno (Together) coalition.
which accused Milosivic of cheating it of victory in local elections on
November 17.
Zajedno was told the socialists had mobilised 10,000 buses around Serbia
to bring demonstrators including factory workers for "a spontaneous
assembly of supporters of the peaceful and consistent policy of
President Milosevic."
The opposition demonstration has consistently drawn 100,000 people to
street marches and anti-Milosevic speeches at Zajedno headquarters.
Although the opposition rallies in Belgrade and other towns have been
peaceful, the news agency BETA reported scuffles between pro and
anti-government demonstrators on Monday in Valjevo, 40 km (25 miles)
southwest of Belgrade.
BETA said fist-fights erupted when around 20,000 Zajedno activists took
to the streets in response to a socialist rally.
"A large fist fight broke out between the citizens of Valjevo and these
outsiders, in which SPS sympathizers fared very poorly, and six of the
buses that had brought them to the rally...were demolished," the
Belgrade agency said.
Orthodox Patriarch Pavle urged Zajedno to suspend its protest to avoid
the risk of clashes and said both sides should resist confrontation,
"especially members of the ruling parties behind whom stand the armed
forces of the present order."
Zajedno feared police provocateurs would be planted in the protests to
foment trouble and give riot police an excuse to intervene for the first
time since the crisis began.
But it refused to halt its own demonstration despite concerns that
Milosevic might be looking for a pretext to declare a state of
emergency.
The last political street violence seen in Serbia was in 1991 when
Milosevic use tanks to drive protesters off the streets and two lives
were lost.
There were no immediate reports that the Independent Farmers Union had
carried out a threat to blockade Serbian roads which would have
jeopardized the socialist plan to bring supporters by bus from the
provinces.
Scores of empty buses were brought to the capital overnight to avoid any
blockade which would have prevented them carrying workers from suburban
factories to the city centre.
Union leaders staged a symbolic blockade of a road between the northern
towns of Novi Sad and Zrenjanin on Monday. They said the action was
non-political and in demand for money the government owes farmers.
Workers have mostly ignored the intelligentsia-led marches. Opposition
sources said factory hands were threatened with reprisals, including the
withdrawal of lay-off pay, if they refused to attend the socialist
rally.
Copyright (c) 1996 Reuters Limited.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1282 --
vesti.1245corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1283, drakce
(6.1283) Sre 25/12/1996 02:03, 4044 chr
:: Reuter
----------------------------------------------------------------
Tuesday December 24 10:45 AM EST
Milosevic Foes, Supporters Clash in Serbia
BELGRADE (Reuter) - Riot police separated opponents and supporters of
embattled Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic on Tuesday after fierce
street battles in which a man was shot in the head.
It was the first violence after more than a month of anti-government
protests.
A witnesses who saw the incident said the man was hit by a demonstrator
who fired from a group of socialist supporters of Milosevic. He
collapsed with blood streaming from a head wound but an independent
radio report said he was alive.
The intervention of police in riot armor stopped fighting between rival
groups who battered each other with sticks and iron bars while crowds
from both camps converged on the headquarters of the opposition Zajedno
(Together) coalition.
The violence was the first in 35 days of Zajedno protests against
election fraud by Milosevic's ruling Socialist party (SPS).
The SPS brought thousands of supporters under police escort from all
over Serbia to stage a show of support outside the Zajedno offices where
the opposition holds its daily protests.
Opposition spokesmen described the choice of venue was a clear
provocation. There were fears the authorities would use the violence as
an excuse to ban future demonstrations or even to declare a state of
emergency.
Milosevic, under threat of Western reprisals, had not previously used
his police against the demonstrations, the biggest since 1992 when he
used tanks to quell unrest.
Radio reports said the police beat people as they pushed the opposition
crowd back to creat a buffer zone and allow the socialists to reach the
site of their rally.
An SPS official told Beta news agency before the violence erupted that
Milosevic might address his supporters "if there were sufficient
people."
Zajedno, backed by the United States and other Western countries, is
trying to force Milosevic to admit its victories in Belgrade and 14
other towns at local elections on November 17, breaking half a century
of socialist rule.
Its demonstrations, which reached a peak of 250,000 people, have grown
into the worst crisis the authoritarian Milosevic has faced in nine
years of power.
Zajedno spokesman Slobodan Vuksanovic told Reuters: "(Milosevic) is out
of his mind. He has brought thousands of people to Belgrade, people who
are not informed about this situation ... I am afraid it could be the
beginning of civil war in Serbia and all responsibility is on
Milosevic's side."
Vuksanovic said an SPS crowd shouting outside Zajedno's headquarters
three hours before the demonstration was due to begin were from Pec, a
hardline nationalist redoubt in the southern republic of Kosovo.
Kosovo Serbs were the shock troops who brought Milosevic to power on a
tide of nationalism that set off the disintegration of former Yugoslavia
in 1991-92.
Other pro-Milosevic demonstrators milled in nearby Republic Square in
case Zajedno switched its protest there.
As the atmosphere of intimidation grew during the morning, the SPO party
-- a Zajedno partner -- said its Belgrade bookshop was attacked by a
group of unidentified men, at least three of them armed.
Zajedno earlier rejected an appeal by Serbian Orthodox Patriarch Pavle
to suspend its demonstration after he warned that the conflict risked
turning into an armed confrontation.
In a swipe at Milosevic, he coupled his plea with praise for the
opposition's restraint during the campaign of protests.
Zajedno was told the SPS mobilised 10,000 buses to bring demonstrators
including factory workers for "a spontaneous assembly of supporters of
the peaceful and consistent policy of President Milosevic."
Workers have mostly ignored the intelligentsia-led marches. Opposition
sources said factory hands were threatened with reprisals, including the
withdrawal of lay-off pay, if they refused to attend the socialist
rally.
Copyright (c) 1996 Reuters Limited.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1283 --
vesti.1246corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1284, drakce
(6.1284) Sre 25/12/1996 02:03, 4034 chr
:: Reuter
----------------------------------------------------------------
Tuesday December 24 5:26 PM EST
Violence in Belgrade, West Blames Milosevic
BELGRADE (Reuter) - Serbian government supporters fought running street
battles with opposition rivals in Belgrade on Tuesday as weeks of tense
protests over disputed elections descended into violence.
One man was shot in the head by a supporter of the ruling Socialist
Party (SPS) and badly injured.
Thousands of SPS supporters were bussed into the capital by Serbian
President Slobodan Milosevic in what the opposition and Western
countries condemned as a deliberate provocation.
The clashes began as groups converged on the city centre for rival
rallies and battled with sticks and iron bars.
Independent media reported at least seven people were treated for knife
wounds and several police were hurt.
Milosevic chose to rally his own supporters on streets that have been
packed with anti-government demonstrators every day since mid-November
elections which the opposition says the Socialists stole by fraud.
Western states condemned Milosevic's decision to stage his rally at the
same time and place as the regular Zajedno (Together) opposition
coalition meetings.
Acting U.S. Secretary of State Strobe Talbott said the move was largely
responsible for the violence.
"The Serbian authorities have flagrantly and provocatively chosen to
heighten tensions by bringing thousands of people into Belgrade to
confront the peaceful demonstrations by the opposition," he said.
France also blamed Milosevic for provoking the clashes, while Germany
expressed grave concern at the lack of dialogue between the two sides.
After the initial clashes police separated the demonstrators but took an
hour to push Zajedno supporters 100 metres (yards) from the stand
erected for Milosevic's speech.
In his first public appearance since the crisis began, Milosevic warned:
"Noone will be allowed to destabilise Serbia."
Calm prevailed while the 40,000 strong pro-Milosevic rally took place in
a central square and more than 200,000 rival protesters marched through
the surrounding streets, but trouble erupted again in darkness after the
march ended.
Riot police fired teargas and made baton charges against pro-Zajedno
demonstrators who pelted them with sticks and fireworks, but witnesses
said the police appeared to be acting with relative restraint.
Only 40,000 SPS supporters, a fraction of those expected, turned out for
the pro-government rally, a blow to Milosevic's attempts to intimidate
Zajedno into abandoning its lengthy protest against alleged election
fraud.
The autocratic president's supporters were ferried in from outlying
towns under police escort. Zajedno backers stoned buses leaving the city
in the evening, carrying SPS demonstrators back to their homes in the
countryside.
Milosevic, under threat of Western reprisals, had not previously used
his police against the demonstrations, the biggest since 1992 when he
used tanks to quell unrest.
Opposition sources said the troublemakers were from Pec, a hardline
nationalist redoubt in the southern republic of Kosovo.
Kosovo Serbs were the shock troops who brought Milosevic to power on a
tide of nationalism that set off the disintegration of former Yugoslavia
in 1991-92.
There were fears the authorities would use the violence as an excuse to
ban future demonstrations or even to declare a state of emergency.
Zajedno leader Zoran Djindjic told supporters: "Milosevic has clearly
turned full circle and has gone back to provoking disturbances. Belgrade
was quiet until he brought his supporters here. The minute they came,
the shooting began."
Opposition spokesman Slobodan Vuksanovic told Reuters: "(Milosevic) is
out of his mind. He has brought thousands of people to Belgrade, people
who are not informed about this situation ... I am afraid it could be
the beginning of civil war in Serbia and all responsibility is on
Milosevic's side."
Copyright (c) 1996 Reuters Limited.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1284 --
vesti.1247corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1288, drakce
(6.1288) Sre 25/12/1996 04:48, 6665 chr
:: Los Angeles Times
----------------------------------------------------------------
Tuesday, December 24, 1996
Embattled Serbian Leader Stages Demonstrations for Himself
<Picture> Balkans: Pro-Milosevic rallies occur daily in small
cities. Today one is scheduled for the capital, where many
fear potential violence.
By TRACY WILKINSON, Times Staff Writer
SMEDEREVO, Yugoslavia--When the rally here ended, the workers carefully
took down the posters of Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic, folding
the pieces of tape so as not to spoil the edges. After all, the posters,
as well as the banners and the red, white and blue Serbian flags, would
be reused at the next such event in the next town.
"We want to show we are always ready to support President Milosevic,"
declared Slavica Misic, vice president of the local Socialist Party of
Serbia branch, as loudspeakers were loaded into cars and rain-chilled
demonstrators piled into buses.
Milosevic's latest tactic to undermine an unprecedented wave of
opposition protests against his regime is to stage pro-government
counterdemonstrations in small cities around the country. Supporters are
bused in; the camera angles are kept tight so the crowds appear to be
big in nightly reports on state television.
And today, Milosevic moves the show to Belgrade, the Serbian and
Yugoslav capital. Thousands of his supporters from all over the country
are being ordered to converge on a downtown plaza at the same hour the
opposition stages its daily rally. Many here fear that the result will
be the first major violence in the series of protests triggered 36 days
ago by Milosevic's decision to annul opposition election victories.
In a significant gesture, the head of the Serbian Orthodox Church lent
support to the anti-Milosevic cause Monday, praising students for their
"dignified commitment to nonviolence" and "truly democratic freedoms."
Patriarch Pavle also urged the opposition to cancel today's rally to
avoid "possible armed clashes."
But opposition leaders, addressing another huge demonstration here
Monday night, vowed to go ahead.
"Please don't allow them to provoke any incidents," said Vesna Pesic,
one of three leaders of the coalition known as Together. "That is his
[Milosevic's] intention. His intention is to threaten and provoke us."
Until now, dueling demonstrations have been marred by little more than
egg-throwing and the trading of insults. But because of the sheer number
of people expected today, any encounter can be expected to be volatile.
On Monday, independent B-92 Radio quoted travel agencies as saying their
drivers had been ordered by the government to report at 3 a.m. to
assorted cities, to pick up pro-Milosevic demonstrators for transport to
Belgrade. Other transportation was being marshaled, and hundreds of
police reinforcements were reported arriving in the capital.
Legions of people can be obliged to attend government rallies because
they rely on the state for their jobs and the scant benefits they
receive. Milosevic also continues to enjoy support among peasants,
workers and less sophisticated voters who have no access to independent
media. All television and most radio broadcasting is controlled by
Milosevic or his allies.
As part of what diplomats have called the media campaign to discredit
the opposition, Milosevic's influential wife, Mirjana Markovic, warned
in her weekly magazine column last week that political rivals were
pushing Serbia--which, with tiny Montenegro, makes up the rump
Yugoslavia--to civil war.
Milosevic told an American visitor earlier this month that he was
holding back his own supporters who were eager to rally to his defense.
He suggested that allowing supporters from areas like Kosovo, home to
many extreme Serbian nationalists, to take to the streets would create a
dangerous mix.
But with the opposition showing no sign of giving up, Milosevic
evidently opted for holding as many as half a dozen rallies every day in
assorted towns and cities.
"We want to show the foreign media and the world that there is another
Serbia," an official of the ruling party said. "We have to show the
world that this has been too much fuss about nothing."
The counterdemonstrations are reminiscent of rallies Milosevic used from
1987 to 1989 to exploit anti-Albanian sentiment and drum up simmering
nationalism as he rose to and then solidified power. That fervor then
inspired Serbs to wage savage wars in neighboring Croatia and
Bosnia-Herzegovina that finally ended a year ago.
Now as then, the demonstrations follow an old-style Communist formula.
Protesters are bused in and given matching placards, with uniform
pictures of Milosevic. Those in attendance tend to be the elderly,
factory workers and party faithful. State TV, which until recently
ignored the opposition demonstrations, gives ample coverage to the much
smaller government rallies.
In Smederevo, a down-and-out steel mill town about 25 miles southeast of
Belgrade, barely 1,000 people huddled under umbrellas to hear party
officials extol Milosevic's virtue as the guarantor of peace and
stability. Speakers included a student, a peasant and a worker, and were
followed by women in wool overcoats dancing to Serbian folk songs.
Dragan Glisic, a local Socialist official, followed the party line in
portraying the opposition as violent anarchists sponsored by dark
foreign forces. He quoted Milosevic's warning that "no foreign hand
shall rule Serbia."
"They are demonstrating under foreign flags," Glisic shouted to the
crowd. "They make chaos and destroy normal life. They don't care about
Serbia. They want to rule us under the same flags that destroyed us in
World War II. . . . Everyone who doesn't believe in Serbia can leave."
"Traitors, out!" the crowd called back, followed by chants of "Slobo!
Slobo!"
In fact, some participants in the opposition marches have hoisted
German, American and British flags--as a salute, they said, to the
Western-style democracy they seek. But Serbia remains a quickly
xenophobic place, where memories of the World War II slaughter of Serbs
are still fresh, and Milosevic has exploited the flag-waving, which
opposition officials now recognize was a mistake.
Goran, a 27-year-old Socialist official who runs a gymnasium and was
bused in from the nearby town of Smederevska Palanka, was typical of
Milosevic's supporters at the Smederevo rally Sunday. The little
security he has is due to the party.
"The opposition has no program. The government just needs a chance to
give us a better life," said Goran.
Copyright Los Angeles Times
------------------------------------------------- 6.1288 --
vesti.1248corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1289, drakce
(6.1289) Sre 25/12/1996 04:49, 3585 chr
:: Wall Street Journal
----------------------------------------------------------------
December 24, 1996
Milosevic Orchestrated Protest
That Turned Violent, U.S. Says
Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic drew a bitter
condemnation from the U.S. Tuesday, which accused him of staging
demonstrations in Belgrade to undermine a wave of opposition protests
against his regime.
Thousands of Mr. Milosevic's supporters from all over the country
converged on a plaza in downtown Belgrade where they clashed with
opponents of the government. The opposition demonstrators had been
holding peaceful protests for more than a month against Mr. Milosevic's
annulment of Nov. 17 local elections won by the opposition.
Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott said Mr. Milosevic and his
government were responsible for the latest clashes. "The Serbian
authorities have flagrantly and provocatively chosen to heighten
tensions by bringing thousands of people into Belgrade to confront the
peaceful demonstrations by the opposition," Mr. Talbott said in a
statement.
He called again on Mr. Milosevic to respect the results of elections
held in November that challenged his rule, and warned that violence
against anti-government demonstrators would have serious consequences.
Mr. Milosevic, the ardent nationalist, was courted last year by the
State Department to help in negotiations to end war in
Bosnia-Herzegovina. He had told his supporters the opposition leaders
were foreign lackeys trying to break up Serbia.
"Strong Serbia is not at the liking of some powers abroad, and that's
why they are trying to break it up," he told them. "We, of course, won't
let it happen."
Despite Mr. Milosevic's arming of rebel Serbs in Bosnia during the war,
he was rewarded last year for his help in promoting peace with an easing
of economic sanctions against Serbia.
But earlier this month, Secretary of State Warren Christopher, who is on
vacation in California, threatened to reimpose the trade penalties and
gained the endorsement of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization at the
alliance's winter meeting in Brussels, Belgium.
Mr. Milosevic's refusal to respect local election results, his refusal
to meet with opposition leaders and his closing of two popular radio
stations contributed to rising U.S. irritation.
Strains are developing also in U.S. relations with Croatian President
Franjo Tudjman, another key player in Balkans peacemaking, and Iran's
assistance to Bosnia's Muslim-led government has come under
congressional scrutiny.
All the while, the Clinton administration hopes peace in Bosnia will be
maintained and that rival ethnic groups will cooperate with each other.
The United States and its allies have a peacekeeping force in Bosnia and
another is likely to be sent there next year.
The ranking U.S. diplomat in Belgrade, Richard Miles, met Tuesday with
Serbian Foreign Minister Milan Milutinovic in Belgrade to urge the
government to avoid further violence.
Mr. Talbott said a similar message was given to the opposition. However,
his statement concentrated U.S. criticism on Mr. Milosevic and
progovernment demonstrators.
"The U.S. government condemns violence by pro-Milosevic demonstrators in
Belgrade," the statement said. "We call on all sides to exercise maximum
restraint and avoid further confrontation."
Mr. Milosevic could have made a goodwill effort to resolve the political
crisis caused by the annulment of the opposition's election victories,
Mr. Talbott said.
Copyright c 1996 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1289 --
vesti.1249corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1290, drakce
(6.1290) Sre 25/12/1996 04:49, 2078 chr
:: Wall Street Journal
----------------------------------------------------------------
Dow Jones Business News
-- December 24, 1996
U.S. Accuses Yugoslavia Government Of Provoking Tensions
AP-Dow Jones News Service
WASHINGTON -- Serb President Slobodan Milosevic came under sharp U.S.
attack Tuesday for staging demonstrations in Belgrade to undermine a
wave of opposition protests against his regime.
Condemning the move, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott said
Milosevic and his government would be held responsible for any 'violent
actions' by their demonstrators.
'The Serbian authorities have flagrantly and provocatively chosen to
heighten tensions by bringing thousands of people into Belgrade to
confront the peaceful demonstrations by the opposition,' Talbott said in
a statement.
He called again on Milosevic to respect the results of elections held in
November that challenged his rule and warned that violence against
anti-government demonstrators would have serious consequences.
Earlier this month, U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher, who is
on vacation in California, threatened to reimpose the economic sanctions
on Serbia that were lifted when Milosevic cooperated in last year's
Dayton Accords to end ethnic warfare in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Limited sanctions remain in effect, including U.S. opposition to
international bank loans.
Talbott's statement was issued shortly after State Department officials
monitoring the situation said the confrontation in Belgrade between
Milosevic and anti-government demonstrators appeared to be subsiding.
The officials said the U.S. would hold Milosevic responsible if there
were bloodshed or casualties, and that he should consent to respect the
results of elections held last month.
'I don't think calling for counter-demonstrations is helpful in any
way,' said one official, who decline to be identified. But the
demonstrators appeared to be leaving the area, he added. And 'it doesn't
look like there is going to be any more direct confrontation,' he said.
Copyright (c) 1996 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1290 --
vesti.1250malex,
-> #1240, corto>< Picture: movie icon> ( 988K/22 sec. QuickTime movie)
Ajde ako te ne mrzi pošalji ovo.
vesti.1251corto,
-> #1213, skorpion> BK je privilegija Vas Bg-djana, a ja se javljam iz Zrenjanina,
Jadna nam priviliegija :(((
vesti.1252corto,
-> #1237, dizel> Mislim da studenata u Beogradu ima oko 65000, tako da je
I zvanicno kazu negde oko 60.000. A profesora i saradnika oko 2.500.
vesti.1253bceklic,
-> #1219, mpavlo> Lave, pogledaj malo bolje - tip je vitlao pistoljem a zatim
> opalio pravo u glavu onom jadniku (lepo se vidi kako mu je
> odletela kapa - ili je kosava malo jace zaduvala ;) :( ),
> sekund pre nego sto je neki slucajni prolaznik zaklonio kameru.
> Snimak je definitivno autentican.
Upravo ispred sebe drzim sliku na kojoj je prikazan stariji
covek (>50) u kaputu sa pistoljem u ruci uperenim ka osobi koja se
ne vidi na slici. Slika je napravljena sa nekih 2-3 metra i oni
koji se razumeju u pistolje lako bi mogli da prepoznaju o kom je
modelu rec. Ovaj covek sigurno nije onaj koji je prikazan na BK
televiziji ali je onaj koji je pucao. Slika je inace objavljena u
danasnjem Platonu.
vesti.1255corto,
-> #1250, malex> Ajde ako te ne mrzi posalji ovo.
Poruke su preuzete sa Pro-a, nema slika.
vesti.1256corto,
Sa Pro-a:
================================
Forum, Mediji.1300, dejanr
(6.1300) Sre 25/12/1996 15:07, 4370 chr
----------------------------------------------------------------
REU0495 3 OVR 702 ( RWS CSA AFA EEU YU BA HR DIP NEWS ) J2500499
BC-YUGOSLAVIA-MILOSEVIC (SCHEDULED)
Events conspire against weakening Milosevic
By Donald Forbes
BELGRADE, Dec 25 (Reuter) - The harder Slobodan Molosevic
tries to shore up the credibility of his socialists as a party
ruling Serbia by popular consent, the more events conspire to
prove him wrong.
Another fig leaf was peeled away on Tuesday when the
Socialist Party (SPS) rallied only 40,000 supporters in
Belgrade, under police protection, after boasting it would
mobilise half a million.
The Zajedno (Together) coalition of opposition parties who
have demonstrated for five weeks against SPS election fraud were
supported on the streets of the capital by well over 200,000
people.
Every day, Zajedno leaders taunt Milosevic with the
accusation that he rules a one-party state with stolen votes.
Despite fierce street battles between rival groups of
demonstrators on Tuesday, the police treated even violent
opposition protestors with unusual restraint.
Diplomats who have watched the SPS commit a series of
blunders that strengthened Zajedno's support now believe
Milosevic no longer has the resources to solve the crisis on his
own.
The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe
(OSCE), which was given proof by Zajedno that the November 17
local elections were rigged, may offer a last escape route.
It is expected to urge Milosevic to surrender control of
Belgrade and 14 other big towns to Zajedno, even if he tries to
regain them almost immediately through fresh elections.
The price will undoubtedly be concessions -- press freedom
and transparent election laws -- that would herald the end of
the socialists' 50-year monopoly of power.
Political sources said rejection of an OSCE compromise would
push Serbia further into the uncharted waters where it is now
adrift, even if Zajedno's talk of civil war is considered
fanciful.
There is speculation for the first time that Milosevic's own
future is endangered, with the possibility that SPS hardliners
could sacrifice him to try to save their own power.
The parallel with Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceasescu,
overthrown with his wife in 1989 in an internal party coup
disguised as a popular revolution, has become increasingly apt
in Belgrade.
The analogy needs to be kept in proportion but Milosevic and
his unpopular marxist wife Mira looked isolated on the platform
of the SPS rally, surrounded by only a fraction of the promised
turnout of party faithful.
He is reported to be considering declaring a state of
emergency or a ban on all demonstrations to clear the streets
while he re-asserts his authority. But there is no guarantee he
could make either stick.
Signs have grown that his his political touch and his grip
on the party and state machine, once considered total, have
slipped.
In the past, he quickly unleashed riot police and the army
to crush occasional challenges to his rule.
His ability to use force now has been virtually vetoed by
U.S.-led Western threats of reprisals and also by hints of
reluctance on the part of the security forces to get too
involved.
Monitors listening to police radios during the clashes on
Tuesday heard commanders ordering their men to use minimum
force, even when they or SPS supporters were taking a beating
from Zajedno activists.
Like everyone else who works for the Serbian state, the
police are paid only when the government can find the cash and
therefore have less interest in preserving it in a showdown.
The army, which used tanks to save Milosevic and quell
anti-government protests that cost two lives in 1991, has stayed
silently on the sidelines in 1997.
The idea that the SPS might ditch Milosevic rests on the
theory that the thousands of party members who hold every
worthwhile job in the state apparat and the economy, have too
much to lose to relinquish power.
Their wealth has been milked from the labour and looted from
the bank accounts of ordinary Serbs, as Zajedno never tires of
telling its supporters.
Out of power, they would be held accountable for the
destruction of former Yugoslavia and the wars in Croatia and
Bosnia which have reduced Serbia's people to economic ruin.
REUTER
------------------------------------------------- 6.1300 --
vesti.1257corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 15 sati, 25. decembar 1996.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Svi tekstovi su Copyright 1996 Radija B92. SVA PRAVA ZADRZANA.
------------------------------------------------------------------
SRECAN BOZIC
------------------------------------------------------------------
IVICA LAZOVIC I DALJE U VEOMA TESKOM STANJU
Doktor Rade Vasilic iz Urgentnog medicinskog centra u Beogradu
izjavio je danas FoNetu da je u Urgentni centar do sada primljeno
58 osoba povredjenih u jucerasnjim demonstracijama i da je Ivica
Lazovic, koji je zadobio prostrelnu ranu u glavu i dalje u veoma
teskom stanju. ,,Od 58 povredjenih, petoro je zadrzano u Urgentnom
centru, a ostalima je pruzena pomoc i pusteni su kucama'', rekao
je Vasilic. ,,Medju osobama koje su zadrzane na lecenju, Ivica
Lazovic, koji je juce hitno operisan i dalje je u veoma, veoma
teskom stanju'', rekao je doktor Vasilic. On je dodao da su, od
petoro zadrzanih u Urgentnom centru, tri lica sa povredama
ekstremiteta (nogu i ruku) i da je jedna osoba zadobila povrede na
glavi, ali da se ne nalazi u teskom stanju, te da ce uskoro, kako
se nada, biti sasvim dobro. Doktor Vasilic je rekao da su prvi
povredjeni demonstranti juce u Urgentni centar poceli da stizu
izmedju 12 i 13 casova, a poslednji oko 23 casa. Nije, medjutim,
iskljuceno da ce se javiti jos povredjenih jer, kako je objasnio,
bolovi pocinju obicno jace da se osecaju kada se rane ohlade.
MILOSEVICEVOM INICIJATIVOM BEOGRAD NA IVICI GRADJANSKOG RATA
Inicijativni odbor Beogradskog univerziteta za odbranu demokratije
uputio je otvoreno pismo predsedniku Srbije Slobodanu Milosevicu,
u kome se kaze da je danas ,,na Vasu inicijativu, Beograd dospeo
na ivicu gradjanskog rata''. ,,Posle vise od mesec dana mirnih
demonstracije, Vasa odluka da dovedete pristalice i odrzite zbor u
isto vreme i na istom mestu na kojem se redovno okupljaju gradjani
Beograda, dovela je do nasilja, pa i do krvoprolica. Samo uz
maksimalno samoobuzdavanje gradjana i uz mnogo srece, izbegnuta je
katastrofa'', istice se u pismu Odbora. Odbor, potom, konstatuje
da javna izjava predsednika Milosevica da politicke
neistomisljenike smatra ,,petom kolonom'' predstavlja ,,poziv na
linc''. ,,Takav odnos prema onima koji drukcije misle vodi sve
dubljim raskolima u nasoj zemlji, koji mogu dovesti do tragicnog
ishoda. Kao osoba s najvecim ovlascenjima, za takav ishod
iskljucivo cete Vi biti odgovorni'', upozorava Odbor, zahtevajuci
od Milosevica ,,da se ponasa kao predsednik svih gradjana
Srbije''.
vesti.1258corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 15 sati, 25. decembar 1996.
POKUSAJ DA SE OBEZVREDI IZVESTAJ OEBS-A
Dramaticna zbivanja u Beogradu su udarna vest u danasnjim
programima svih evropskih televizijskih i radio stanica, javio je
sinoc za FoNet dopisnik ,,Nase Borbe'' Mirko Klarin. Umesto o
,,spontano okupljenim pristalicama'', evropske televizijske i
radio stanice javljaju o ,,iznajmljenoj masi'' ili ,,Milosevicevim
nevoljnim mitingasima'', koji su dovedeni u situaciju da biraju
izmedju ucesca na mitingu i gubitka radnog mesta. Objavljuju se
izjave desetina ucesnika mitinga koji, ponekad sa imenom i
prezimenom, ali najcesce anonimno -- tvrde da nisu imali izbora,
te da im je pod pretnjom gubitka posla naredjeno da udju u
autobuse i putuju za Beograd. Opisujuci organizovani dolazak
stotina autobusa pod policijskom pratnjom, zapadni izvestaci
procenjuju da se radi o ,,najvecoj logistickoj operaciji koja je
na balkanskim prostorima vidjena od evakuacije Muslimana iz
Srebrenice'', koju je general Mladic organizovao u julu prosle
godine.
Posebna tema evropskih analiza je Milosevicev ,,tajming'', odnosno
zasto se upravo danas opredelio za ulicnu konfrontaciju sa
pristalicama opozicije. Na to pitanje daju se dva odgovora. Prvi
je da Milosevic racuna da ce zapadnu diplomatiju, koja ga je
proteklih dana ostro upozoravala protiv primene nasilja, zateci na
spavanju, odnosno na bozicnim praznicima. Drugo objasnjenje je da
je takvim izborom vremena konfrontacije, Milosevic zeleo da
predupredi i unapred obezvredi nalaze i preporuke misije
Organizacije za evropsku bezbednost i saradnju. Ti nalazi i
preporuke trebalo bi da budu objavljeni do kraja ove sedmice, ali
je vec sada izvesno da nece biti veoma povoljni za vladajucu
stranku, buduci da ce se zahtevati postovanje originalnih
rezultata lokalnih izbora od 17. novembra.
RUSKO MINISTARSTVO INOSTRANIH POSLOVA O SRBIJI
Rusko ministarstvo inostranih poslova izrazilo je danas ,,ozbiljnu
zabrinutost'' zbog sukoba u Srbiji izmedju pristalica vlasti i
opozicije, pozivajuci ih na hitan dijalog, javila je agencija
Interfaks. Kako izvestava AFP, a prenosi FoNet, ovo je prvo
zvanicno rusko saopstenje o vise od mesec dana dugoj politickoj
krizi u Srbiji. ,,Sadasnja kriza moze i mora biti prevazidjena sto
je brze moguce politickim dijalogom svih demokratskih snaga u
zemlji'', kaze se u saopstenju i dodaje da mora biti iskljucena
,,bilo kakva upotreba sile, bilo koja akcija, koja nosi veliku
opasnost od sukoba i konfrontacije''. Istovremeno, Moskva poziva
medjunarodnu zajednicu da ,,pomogne Saveznoj Republici Jugoslaviji
da prevazidje teske posledice rata u regionu, sankcija i
izolacije'', uz napomenu da je Rusija ,,spremna da aktivno
doprinese stabilnosti i demokratskom razvoju'' zemlje.
FRANCUSKA OSUDJUJE UPOTREBU SILE
Francuska je danas osudila vlasti Srbiji zbog upotrebe sile na
beogradskim ulicama tokom paralelnih demonstracija, pozivajuci obe
strane da iskazu maksimum uzdrzanosti, javlja Rojter, a prenosi
FoNet. ,,Primecujemo da su demonstracije u glavnom gradu
Jugoslavije proticale mirno mesec dana i da se situacija iznenada
pogorsala tokom kontra-demonstracija, koje je organizovala
vlada'', kaze se u saopstenju francuskog ministarstva inostranih
poslova. ,,Pozivamo na hitno obustavljanje ulicnih sukoba i
preporucujemo jugoslovenskim vlastima da ispolje najvecu
uzdrzanost. Pozivamo sve one koji ucestvuju da iskazu mir i
umerenost, kao sto je to cinila opozicija do sada''. Najzad od
vlasti u Beogradu se trazi da ucine ,,gest priblizavanja'' prema
opoziciji.
KINEZI PREKINULI CUTANJE O DOGADJAJIMA U SRBIJI
Kineska televizija je danas u udarnoj emisiji vesti prikazala
nekoliko scena sa mitinga na kome je govorio predsednik Srbije
Slobodan Milosevic, prekinuvsi time 35-dnevno cutanje o
dramaticnim dogadjajima u Beogradu i drugim gradovima Srbije,
posle ponistavanja rezultata drugog kruga lokalnih izbora. Kako
javlja dopisnik FoNeta Aleksandar Novacic, moguce je da ce, posle
televizije, i kineska stampa sada moci da pise o dogadjajima u
Beogradu. Kneska televizija, inace, nije prikazala snimke o
sukobima medju demonstrantima niti intervenciju milicije. Agencija
Hsinhua, medjutim, u svojim emisijama namenjenim inostranstvu
emitovala je tri celovite storije o jucerasnjim dogadjajima u
Beogradu i prenela u sirokim izvodima govor predsednika
Milosevica. U prvi plan kineska agencija istakla je njegove reci o
tome da Srbiju niko nece deliti pod stranim pritiscima, da je niko
nece destabilizovati i da Srbija nikada nece biti sluga stranim
silama. Hsinhua je prenela i ocenu predsednika vlade Srbije Mirka
Marjanovica da je u toku ,,velika bitka protiv Jugoslavije i
posebno Srbije'' i da tu bitku vodi koalicija ,,Zajedno'' i
jugoslovenski neprijatelji u inostranstvu, da je podrzavaju
albanski separatisti na Kosovu i druge partije i pojedinci poznati
po svom anti-srpskom i anti-jugoslovenskom delovanju.
vesti.1259corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 15 sati, 25. decembar 1996.
DINI: MILOSEVIC MI JE OBECAO DA NECE UPOTREBITI SILU
Italijanski ministar inostranih poslova Lamberto Dini osudio je
danas upotrebu sile u sukobima medju demonstrantima u Beogradu,
podsecajuci da mu je predsednik Srbije Slobodan Milosevic obecao
da ce njegov spor sa opozicijom ostati miran, javlja Rojter, a
prenosi FoNet. Iz Dinijevog kabineta izdato je saopstenje u kome
se navodi: ,,Ministar inostranih poslova, u svojoj nedavnoj
misiji... je dobio precizna i ponovljena uveravanja da nece biti
nikakve upotrebe sile u odnosu vlade i opozicije''. ,,Nadali smo
se da ce biti ustanovljen okrugli sto na kojem bi se utvrdila
zajednicka pravila kako bi se osiguralo da izbori u 1997. godini
budu demokratski'', dodaje se u Dinijevom saopstenju i istice da
je dijalog izmedju vlasti i opozicije kljucan za demokratske
promene u Jugoslaviji. ,,Najzad, pozivamo obe strane da izbegnu
bilo kakve akcije koje bi to (promene) mogle da sprece'', navodi
se u saopstenju.
RUMUNSKI PREDSEDNIK POZIVA NA RAZUM U SRBIJI
Rumunski predsednik Emil Konstantinesku osudio je danas jucerasnje
nasilje na beogradskim ulicama pozivajuci da se sukob ,,resi na
demokratski nacin'', javlja AFP, a prenosi FoNet. U saopstenju
njegove sluzbe za stampu, Konstantinesku upozorava da ,,corsokak
koji sprecava uspostavljanje demokratskih institucija u susednoj
zemlji stetiti koliko Jugoslaviji toliko i njenim prijateljima u
regionu''. ,,Gospodin Konstantinesku je zabrinut zbog cinjenice da
je sukob izmedju vlasti i opozicije usao u fazu opasne
eskalacije'', navodi se u saopstenju i dodaje: ,,Pozivamo srpske
vlasti da iskazu mir i ne pribegavaju sili zato sto nijedno
resenje zasnovano na sili ne moze biti trajno''. Rumunski
predsednik, najzad, izrazava nadu da ce ,,razum, mir i dobra volja
prevladati i da ce nasi srpski prijatelji biti postedjeni zestokih
sukoba, koji su suvise cesto bili sudbina ovog regiona''.
vesti.1260corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 15 sati, 25. decembar 1996.
KOSTUNICA: MILOSEVIC DOZIVEO FIJASKO
Predsednik Demokratske stranke Srbije Vojislav Kostunica ocenio je
danas da je doziveo fijasko jucerasnji pokusaj predsednika Srbije
Slobodana Milosevica da organizovanjem mitinga svojih pristalica u
Beogradu pokaze kako ima veliku podrsku u narodu. ,,Milosevic je
pokusao da demonstrira moc, a pokazao je nemoc. Na skup su dosli
samo oni koji su morali. Zato se postavlja pitanje koliko stvarno
Miloseviceva stranka ima clanova, ako je na skupu u Beogradu prema
svim realnim procenama bilo izmedju 40.000 i 50.000 ljudi'',
izjavio je Kostunica na konferenciji za novinare. Prema
Kostunicinim recima, cilj mitinga Milosevicevih pristalica bio je
i zataskavanje i prikrivanje ,,izborne kradje'', dok se ocekuje
preporuka delegacije Orgazniacije za evropsku bezbednost i
saradnju. Kostunica je naglasio da ce delegacija OEBS ,,potvrditi
izborne rezultate od 17. novembra'' i da je Milosevic, ,,ocekujuci
tu neprijatnu vest, posegao za kontra-mitinzima, cija je kruna
trebalo da bude u Beogradu''. ,,Takvim skupovima se, medjutim,
izborni poraz ne moze pretvoriti u pobedu'', ocenio je Kostunica.
On je istakao da svetska i domaca javnost za jucerasnje nasilje na
ulicama glavnog grada okrivljuje srpski rezim i izjavio da
,,najmucniji'' utisak ostavlja cinjenica da su ,,Miloseviceve
ideje, retorika i sredstva borbe ostali tamo gde su bili na Osmoj
sednici'' Centralnog komiteta Saveza komunista Srbije.
Konstatujuci da se Milosevic oslanja na telegrame i mitinge
podrske, Kostunica je rekao: ,,Zna se kako su Srbi u Jugoslaviji
sa njima prosli, a slicno bi moglo da zadesi i Srbe u Srbiji''.
Kostunica je ocenio da postoji mogucnost da Milosevic, na
preporuku OEBS, prihvati ,,stvarne'' rezultate izbora od 17.
decembra, ,,pokusavajuci da taj poraz delimicno ublazi tvrdnjom da
to nije ucinio zbog pritiska spolja, vec unutar institucija
sistema''. Naglasivsi da postoji mogucnost i ponavljanja izbora,
Kostunica je rekao: ,,Drugi Milosevicev put je posezanje za
represivnim sredstvima, kao sto su zabrana okupljanja, vanredno
stanje. Ali, u svakom slucaju ce on izgubiti''. Kostunica je
ocenio da jucerasnje izjave crnogorskog premijera Mila Djukanovica
o nuznosti reintegracije Crne Gore u medjunarodne institucije
stavljaju tu republiku ,,u poziciju Slovenije 1990. godine, u
vreme njene secesije''. ,,Mogu se razumeti takvi stavovi
crnogorskog rukovodstva... Oni su isprovocirani politikom Beograda
i predstavljaju pokusaj da se spase sta se spasti moze'', izjavio
je Kostunica.
,,SESTA KOLONA'' MARSIRALA BEOGRADOM
,,Onom koji je pokusao da nas podeli na pet kolona, pokazacemo da
ce Beogradom danas marsirati sesta kolona, koja ce to ciniti i
sutra i narednih dana sve do ispunjenja nasih zahteva'', rekao je
clan Glavnog odbora studentskog protesta Cedomir Jovanovic,
najavljujuci danasnju protestnu setnju okupljenim studentima i
gradjanima na Platou ispred Filozofskog fakulteta. Vise hiljada
studenata, profesora i gradjana okupilo se i danas na platou
ispred Filozofskog fakulteta, protestvujuci zbog ponistavanja
drugog kruga lokalnih izbora u Srbiji. Studentima su se danas
obratili profesor Ivan Djuric, glumica Ljiljana Blagojevic,
profesor Medicinskog fakulteta Slobodan Marinkovic i svestenik
Vladimir Zamahajev. Procitana su pisma podrske studentskom
protestu Nacionalnog udruzenja studenata iz Francuske, grupe
profesora i studenata iz Alzasa, Fakulteta za politicke i
drustvene nauke iz Njujorka i poznatih americkih rok grupa R.E.M i
,,Nirvana''. Nakon programa na Platou studenti su krenuli u
protestnu setnju, ciji je danasnji cilj ,,dekontaminacija prostora
na kome je odrzan miting 'Za Srbiju'''. Studenti su prosli Vasinom
do Trga Republike, Srpskih vladara pored Studija B, Generala
Zdanova, Bulevarom revolucije, Kneza Milosa i Takovskom pored
zgrade RTS-a, zatim Lole Ribara pored zgrade Radio-Beograda i
Makedonskom nazad do Platoa.
vesti.1261corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 15 sati, 25. decembar 1996.
,,PODUDARANJE STAVOVA'' MAROVICA I BEOGRADSKIH STUDENATA
Delegacija Studentskog protesta 96. razgovarala je danas u
Podgorici sa predsednikom Skupstine Crne Gore Svetozarom
Marovicem, saopstila je Informativna sluzba Studentskog protesta.
U saopstenju se precizira da su studenti ,,naisli na razumevanje i
podudaranje stavova kakvom se nisu mogli nadati''. ,,Obostrano je
ocenjeno da nepostovanje izborne volje gradjana, iskazane na
izborima, moze i na duzi rok da zaustavi reintegraciju Jugoslavije
u medjunarodnu zajednicu, kao i da moze ugroziti samo
funkcionisanje Federacije'', naglasava se u saopstenju. Delegacija
Studentskog protesta srela se i sa rektorom Univerziteta Crne Gore
Ratkom Djukanovicem i studentom-prorektorom Goranom Jevricem, koji
su podrzali ,,pravedne zahteve'' svojih beogradskih kolega.
DJUKANOVIC: BICEMO U MEDJUNARODNOJ ZAJEDNICI
,,Ukoliko ne bude efikasnog reagovanja drzavnih organa Srbije i
kooperativnosti da radimo vrlo azurno na reintergaciji u
medjunarodnu zajednicu, iskoristicu ustavna ovlascenja i zastititi
drzavne interese Crne Gore'', rekao je sinoc crnogorski premijer
Milo Djukanovic, u zavrsnoj reci pred parlamentom, nakon ponovnog
izbora za premijera, javlja danas Montena faks, a prenosi FoNet.
Odgovarajuci na prigovore opozicije o tome da li Crna Gora moze
sama kontaktirati sa medjunarodnom zajednicom Djukanovic je
naglasio da ,,valjda niko ne moze osporiti da visoki drzavni
predstavnici Crne Gore kontaktiraju gotovo na svim mjestima na
svjetskoj mapi od politicke vaznosti''. ,,Spoljnji zid sankcija
nije problem Crne Gore, vec druge federalne jedinice, sto,
naravno, i nas tangira i o cemu cemo, zajedno sa Srbijom, pokusati
da radimo da se ispravi, kako bi se SRJ oslobodila tog balasta''.
,,Spoljna politika je u podijeljenoj nadleznosti savezne i
republickih drzava, koje imaju pravo i ingerencije u spoljnoj
politici. Cak i pravo da sklapaju medjunarodne ugovore. To je taj
ustavni kapacitet na koji racunam, ukoliko ne bude efikasnog
reagovanja od strane drzavnih organa Srbije i kooperativnosti da
radimo vrlo azurno, ne gubeci ni jednog dana na ostvarenju
kljucnog drzavnog prioriteta, a to je puna reintegracija u
medjunarodnu zajednicu. Valjda je potpuno prirodno da cu, kao
covjek zaduzen Ustavom da stiti interes Crne Gore, pokusati i
drugim putem, koristeci ustavne nadleznosti, te interese i
zastititi. Necu to raditi sam, vec sa svojom Vladom i u punoj
kooperaciji sa Predsjednikom Republike i ovim parlamentom'', rekao
je Djukanovic. Odgovarajuci na kritike opozicionih poslanika zbog
iznosenja drzavnih deviza na privatne racune u inostrane banke
crnogorski premijer je rekao: ,,Odgovorno tvrdim da niko u Vladi,
pa ni ministar finansija, nije krsio Ustav i zakone''. On je dodao
da se ,,dio deviznih sredstava Crne Gore nalazi na racunima u
inostranstvu i ta su sredstva, u jednom periodu, bila prenesena na
racune koji su glasili na ime odgovornih ljudi u ovoj drzavi. Time
nije prekrsen niti Ustav, niti zakoni''.
Prema njegovim recima, ,,u Ustavu Crne Gore drzavnim organima su
data posebna ovlascenja da u specificnim situacijama mogu
zastititi interes drzave Crne Gore''. ,,Saglasno tome Vlada Crne
Gore je donijela pravni akt kojim je, tada, kada su zaprijetile
sankcije i apsolutna blokada drzavnih sredstava Crne Gore na ino-
racunima, ovlastila ministra finansija Predraga Goranovica da ta
sredstva moze prenijeti na racun, prividno, privatnog lica
ministra finansija, i da ih moze trositi samo saglasno odlukama
Vlade''. Prema rijecima premijera, ,,danom skidanja sankcija
stvoreni su uslovi da se ta sredstva vrate na devizni racun Vlade
Crne Gore u inostranstvu'', sto je, kako je kazao, ,,praksa svake
drzave da u ino-bankama drzi dio sojih deviza''. Djukanovic je,
takodje, rekao da su ,,apsolutno neistinite tvrdnje da se bilo
budzet, bilo Fond penzijsko-invalidskog osiguranja, napajaju iz
nekih tajnih prljavih i mafijaskih izvora'', predlazuci da se
,,preko bilo koje institucije sistema u Republici organizuje
kontrola finansijskog poslovanja Fonda PIO'' i nudeci svoju
ostavku ,,ukoliko se ustanovi da je makar i jedan dinar u Fond PIO
usao iz tih izvora, o kojima je govorila opozicija''.
PROSLAVA BOZICA U BOKI KOTORSKOJ
Vernici rimokatolicke vere, u svim zupama kotorske biskupije,
proslavljaju bozicne praznike uz masovno ucesce na misama, ne samo
slavljenika nego i ostalih zitelja sa podrucja biskupije, javlja
danas Montena-faks, a prenosi FoNet. U svim zupnim crkvama odrzane
su ponocnice i bozicne mise, a najsvecanije je bilo, kako je to
uobicajeno, u Kotoru, u sredistu biskupije, koja postoji jos od
sedmog veka. U crkvi Svetog Antona -- posto se katedrala Svetog
Tripuna jos uvek obnavlja -- ponocnu koncelebracionu misu sluzio
je monsinjor Ilija Janjic, biskup kotorski, sa vise svestenika.
vesti.1262corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 15 sati, 25. decembar 1996.
,,NASA BORBA'': GONSALESOV IZVESTAJ 27. DECEMBRA
Felipe Gonsales, kao sef komisije Organizacije za evropsku
bezbednost i saradnju, koja je krajem prosle sedmice boravila u
Jugoslaviji, objavice 27. decembra izvestaj o toku lokalnih izbora
u Srbiji i navodnim neregularnostima u izbornom procesu, pise
danas ,,Nasa Borba'', pozivajuci se na diplomatske krugove u
Beogradu. U izvestaju ce biti potvrdjeni dosadasnji kriticki
stavovi OEBS-a i zemalja Evropske unije, a od srpskih vlasti ce se
zahtevati ponistavanje prekrajanja izbora i sira demokratizacija,
rekao je jedan visoki zapadni diplomata akreditovan u nasoj
zemlji, prenosi ,,Nasa Borba''.
PETICIJA ALBANSKIH STUDENATA SA KOSOVA
Albanski studenti na Kosovu pozvali su Ibrahima Rugovu da pojaca
otpor vladavini predsednika Srbije Slobodana Milosevica, javlja
AFP, a prenosi FoNet. Oko sest stotina albanskih studenata
potpisalo je peticiju u kojoj se trazi hitno zasedanje
samoproklamovanog albanskog parlamenta na Kosovu i poziva novi
lider Parlamentarne partije Kosova Adem Demaci da se ukljuci u te
razgovore. Trazi se i da srpske vlasti prekinu cenzuru nad
stampom, koja izlazi na albanskom jeziku na Kosovu. Istovremeno,
studenti pozivaju Rugovu da naredi zauzimanje svih obrazovnih
institucija u pokrajini. Milosevic i Rugova su u septembru
potpisali dogovor o vracanju albanskih djaka u skole, ali je to
dosad ostalo mrtvo slovo na papiru, posto nije postignut sporazum
kako da se to primeni.
Pripremio(la): Zoran Penevski
vesti.1263corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 18 sati, 25. decembar 1996.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Svi tekstovi su Copyright 1996 Radija B92. SVA PRAVA ZADRZANA.
------------------------------------------------------------------
PANEL NAKON MITINGA
------------------------------------------------------------------
ZA VECERAS ZAKAZAN PANEL
Poslanicka grupa SPS u Skupstini Srbije zakazala je za veceras u
19 casova panel raspravu o iskustvima proteklih izbora, pitanjima
od znacaja za naredne izbore i o ulozi medija. Skupstina Srbije
prihvatila je na sednici od 17. decembra predlog SPS o
organizovanju panel raprave. Prema predlogu SPS, panel rasprava ce
biti organizovana na paritetnom principu i na njoj mogu
ucestvovati po jedan predstavnik poslanickih grupa i po jedan
poslanik na svakih dvadeset poslanika iz svake parlamentarne
stranke. Panel bi trebalo da bude otvoren za javnost i sredstva
informisanja. Lideri koalicije ,,Zajedno'' odbacili su mogucnost
diskusije sa vlastima dok ne budu priznati rezultati drugog kruga
lokalnih izbora od 17. novembra.
DJINDJIC: BEOGRADJANI SU JUCE BRANILI DOSTOJANSTVO SVOG GRADA
Predsednik Demokratske stranke Zoran Djindjic danas je na
vanrednoj konferenciji za stampu koalicije ,,Zajedno'' izjavio da
su Beogradjani juce branili dostojanstvo svoga grada, a da je
vlast pokazala da je faktor nemira, rizika i nestabilnosti. ,,Vec
35 dana odrzavaju se protestne setnje u Beogradu uz stotine
hiljada demonstranata i ocuvan je red, sto jasno govori o
odgovornosti i zrelosti i organizatora tih protesta i o zrelosti
gradjana koji u njima ucestvuju'', rekao je Djindjic. ,,Do sukoba
je doslo kada je vlast i kada je Slobodan Milosevic poceo da
organizuje svoje mitinge. Tada se pokazalo da je upravo vlast u
ovoj zemlji faktor nestabilnosti i rizika i da su oni ti koji su
odgovorni za nered koji su juce napravili ljudi dovedeni u Beograd
na miting podrske Milosevicu'', ocenio je Djindjic. ,,U Beogradu
su ih docekali gradjani, koji su prisebno branili dostojanstvo
svoga grada i nasi mirni protesti ce se nastaviti bez obzira na
odluke vlasti koje ocekujemo'', rekao je predsednik DS i objasnio:
,,Imamo informacije da je Milosevic doneo odluku da zabrani nase
demonstracije''.
,,Mi smo na ulice izasli da odbranimo zakon, istinu i pravdu i
zato cemo nastaviti sa protestima uprkos zabrani'', istakao je
Djindjic. ,,Nisu kaznjeni oni koji su izbore falsifikovali, nisu
priznati izborni rezultati od 17. novembra, mediji su u jos gorem
stanju nego 17. novembra, ukoliko je to uopste moguce, i zato mi
ne mozemo da prekinemo sa demonstracijama, ali garantujemo za
bezbednost i mir tih protesta'', naglasio je Djindjic. On je
podsetio da su i jucerasnje demonstracije pristalica koalicije
,,Zajedno'', koje su pocele u 15 casova, bile mirne, a da je, kako
je rekao, ,,do tada u gradu trajalo divljanje onih koji su dosli
da pobodu svoje parole u Beograd, kao da je Beograd pustinja''.
Predsednica Gradjanskog saveza Srbije Vesna Pesic ocenila je da je
,,zalosno sto je rezim namerno izabrao 24. decembar, Badnji dan za
izazivanje incidenata''. ,,Nasa organizacija je pokazala visoku
samosvest, a i policija, izuzev nekih pojedinacnih slucajeva, u
celini se drzala ovlascenja'', rekla je Pesic. ,,Sramota je to sto
je juce potpuno narusen ugled nase zemlje i sto je zloupotrebom
sirotinje, koja je dovedena na miting podrske Milosevicu, ceo svet
mogao da vidi da je Srbija jedina zemlja u Evropi koja jos nije
zakoracila u demokratiju''. ,,Sa jedne strane je vlast koja
apsolutno nema nikakvu ideju o buducnosti, a sa druge strane su
samosvesni ljudi koji znaju sta rade, imaju svoj cilj i zato je ta
strana juce odnela definitivnu pobedu'', rekla je Pesic i ocenila
da se juce predsednik Srbije ponasao potpuno neodgovorno.
Na novinarsko pitanje kako ocenjuje jucerasnje drzanje policije, s
obzirom na to da je, prema izjavama prisutnih na konferenciji za
stampu, bilo novinara i snimatelja koji su juce dobili batine,
Djindjic je rekao: ,,Policija je imala nalog da ne reaguje, a
demonstrantima koji su dovedeni u Beograd ostavljen je prazan
prostor, uz jasnu podrsku vlasti, da razbiju studentske i nase
demonstracije. Kada je, medjutim, ustanovljeno da je odnos snaga
suprotan od ocekivanog, jer je u Beograd doslo 10 puta manje ljudi
nego sto je bilo predvidjeno, onda je policija, sa zakasnjenjem
dobila nalog da demonstrante razdvoji''. Upitan kako komentarise
procenu RTS da je na mitingu podrske Milosevicu juce bilo 500
hiljada ljudi, Djindjic je rekao da na prostoru na kome je miting
odrzan moze da stane najvise 260 hiljada ljudi, ali da ih toliko
nije bilo. ,,Neka oni kazu i da ih je bilo 500.000, mi znamo da je
nas uvek cetiri puta vise'', rekao je on. Na pitanje da li posle
jucerasnjih incidenata moze biti dijaloga sa predsednikom Srbije,
Djindjic je rekao da dijaloga mora biti, ali tek nakon priznavanja
izbornih rezultata od 17. novembra. Vesna Pesic je objasnila da
Koalicija moze pristati i na nove izbore, ali pod uslovom da se
prvo priznaju rezultati od 17. novembra i otvore mediji, pa onda,
kako je rekla, ,,pod ravnopravnim uslovima mozemo da raspisemo
nove izbore, jer ce situacija biti potpuno drugacija''.
vesti.1264corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 18 sati, 25. decembar 1996.
EKSPLOZIVOM NA SEDISTE SPS-A U NISU
Sekretarijat unutrasnjih poslova u Nisu saopstio je danas, a
prenosi FoNet, da je rano jutros, nesto posle tri sata, bacen
eksploziv na zgradu niskih socijalista. Kako je saopsteno,
nepoznato lice bacilo je eksploziv, koji je ostetio ulaz i deo
portala zgrade Gradskog odbora Socijalisticke partije Srbije.
Receno je da SUP traga za pociniocem kao i da se utvrdjuje vrsta
eksploziva, koji je pogodio zgradu socijalista.
ASNS: DIREKTNO PROTIV SLOBODNE VOLJE NARODA
Asocijacija slobodnih i nezavisnih sindikata u danasnjem
saopstenju kaze: ,,Kontramitingom u Beogradu i 'ratnim' govorom
Slobodana Milosevica, teskim ranjavanjem glasaca koalicije
'Zajedno' i pendrecenjem cetrnaestogodisnjaka, provociranjem tuca
i huskanjem na sukobe medju gradjanima Srbije, SPS pokusava da
programirano izazove gradjanski rat u nasoj zemlji. Time je SPS
direktno preuzeo odgovornost za represiju nad slobodnom voljom
naroda iskazanoj na lokalnim izborima 17. novembra i visenedeljnim
protestima u najvecim gradovima Srbije''.
,,ZAJEDNO'': KONTRAMITING SPS KOSTAO 1.386.000 MARAKA
Koalicija ,,Zajedno'' saopstila je danas da je kontramiting
Socijalisticke partije Srbije u Beogradu kostao 4.575.000 dinara
(1.386.000 nemackih maraka), prema procenama za trosak goriva,
prevoz vozom, dnevnica (u proseku 60 dinara), lanc paketi. U
procenu nisu uracunati troskovi za transparente i drugi
propagandni materijal.
SEDNICA SKUPSTINE SRBIJE
Bez prisustva poslanika stranaka koalicije ,,Zajedno'' i DSS, u
Skupstini Srbije usvojen je u nacelu Zakon o budzetu za 1997.
godinu, dok se o Zakonu o pojedinostima, kao i paketu zakona iz
oblasti socijalne i ekonomske politike, raspravlja u popodnevnom
nastavku sednice. Ministar finansija Srbije Dusan Vlatkovic rekao
je da je predlozeni budzet u iznosu od oko 14 milijardi dinara
,,maksimalno restriktivan'' i da se uklapa u osnove ekonomske
politike Srbije i Jugoslavije u narednoj godini. Radikali, koji su
danas bili jedini opozicioni poslanici, ukazali su, medjutim, da
predlozeni budzetski zakon predvidja izdvajanje od cak 46% za
plate i znatno umanjena izdvajanja za agrar i privredu, kao i da
se najveci deo novca ponovo izdvaja za policiju.
Rasprava o jucerasnjim dogadjajima danas se ipak, vodila i u
Skupstini Srbije iako voljom skupstinske vecine nije uvrstena u
dnevni red. Temu su, ucestvujuci u raspravi o budzetu nametnuli
poslanici SRS. Sef poslanickog kluba radikala Tomislav Nikolic,
tako je, pripisujuci deo odgovornosti i koaliciji ,,Zajedno'',
glavnog krivca video u SPS-u, koja je, kako je rekao, jucerasnjim
mitingom ,,izazvala incidente i svesno stvorila razdor u srpskom
narodu''. To je uzrokovalo seriju replika izmedju Nikolica i sefa
poslanicke grupe SPS, Gorice Gajevic. Nikolic je rekao da su
socijalisti, odrzavanjem svog skupa ,,na istom mestu i u isto
vreme'' gde se preko mesec dana okupljaju pristalice koalicije
,,Zajedno'', ,,namerno stvorili incidentnu situaciju koja je mogla
da se izrodi u krvoprolice''. Nikolic je izvestavanje drzavne
televizije i stampe ,,sa smesnom pricom o pola milona prisutnih'',
istakao kao jos jedan dokaz ,,medijskog bezumlja'', jer su cela
Srbija i svet na tv ekranima jasno mogli videti koliko je stvarno
naroda prisutno.
,,Uspeli ste (socijalisti) u svom cilju, pa smo doziveli da Srbin
puca u Srbina'', rekao je Nikolic i dodao da je predsednik
Skupstine Dragan Tomic ,,tesko povredio poslovnik'', jer je
jednostrano i samovoljno prekinuo jucerasnju sednicu da bi
poslanici SPS mogli da prisustvuju mitingu svoje partije. Gorica
Gajevic koja je rekla da radikali mesaju koaliciju ,,Zajedno''
ciji su pripadnici ,,izdajnici i vandali'' i zele na ulici da
preuzmu vlast sa SPS koja je od svog osnivanja vodila politiku
,,mira, dostojanstva, demokratije i stabilnosti''. ,,Da nije bilo
nas i nase mudre politike na celu sa predsednikom Milosevicem, ne
bi ni bilo Republike Srpske i mira na ovim prostorima'', naglasila
je Gajevic. SPS je organizovao ,,miran i dostojanstven'' miting za
razliku od ,,vandalskih i podanickih'' okupljanja pristalice
koalicije ,,Zajedno''. Gajevic je rekla da je ,,preko pola
miliona'' gradjana Beograda i cele Srbije svojim prisustvom i
ponasanjem potvrdilo ,,popularnost socijalista i levih snaga i
svoju ljubav prema Milosevicu''.
vesti.1265corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 18 sati, 25. decembar 1996.
POZORISTA I DANAS BEZ PREDSTAVA
Juce su, u znak protesta zbog jucerasnjih dogadjaja, otkazane
predstave u Jugoslovenskom dramskom pozoristu, Ateljeu 212 i
Narodnom pozoristu. ,,Smatramo da je fizicko razracunavanje na
ulici poslednji trenutak pred tragediju u kojoj se mozemo naci i
da se takva situacija direktno sukobljava sa principima pozorisnog
zivota... Sugerisemo pozoristima Srbije otkazivanje predstava na
dan 25.12. upravo kao upozorenje da je pozorisni cin na ovaj nacin
najozbiljnije ugrozen'', stoji u danasnjem saopstenju Savez
dramskih umetnika Srbije.
BOGDANOVIC: ,,JA SAMO GLEDAM NASU TELEVIZIJU''
Danas je agenciji Beta bivsi ministar policije Radmilo Bogdanovic
izjavio da ,,nije juce video sukobe na ulicama Beograda''. ,,Ne
gledam CNN. Ja samo gledam nasu televiziju'', rekao je Bogdanovic.
SAVSKI VENAC
Na konstitutivnoj sednici Skupstine opstine Savski venac za
predsednika Skupstine izabran je Zdravko Krstic, a za
potpredsednika Branislav Belic, obojica iz koalicije ,,Zajedno''.
Verifikovano je 35, od ukupno 37 odbornickih mandata, od toga 24
za koaliciju ,,Zajedno'', 7 za SPS, 2 mandata za odbornike grupe
gradjana i po 1 mandat za DSS i SRS. Konstitutivnoj sednici bez
zvanicnog obrazlozenja nisu prisustvovali poslanici SPS.
SUKOB SRBA I HRVATA ISPRED KATOLICKE CRKVE U ILOKU
Srbi su napali hrvatske izbeglice koje su dosle u Ilok da bi u
tamosnjoj katolickoj crkvi proslavili bozicnu misu, javlja danas
hrvatska drzavna agencija HINA. Kako prenosi AFP, te FoNet,
funkcioneri prelazne adminsitracije Ujedinjenih nacija u Istocnoj
Slavoniji (UNTAES) izjavili su da se oko 100 Srba okupilo sinoc
ispred crkve i da su bacali eksplozivne naprave i vredjali oko 50
Hrvata. Posto su se Hrvati nasli u klopci, nakon tri sata
intervenisao je UNTAES. Kada su Hrvati izasli iz crkve, Srbi su
usli u taj verski objekat i porazbijali prozore i ostetili
sakristiju, kaze HINA. Prema portparolu UNTAES-a, Juriju Ciziku,
jedan policajac UN je ranjen u sukobu. Administrator UN Zak Klajn
je na lice mesta doveo dva visa funkcionera lokalnih Srba da bi
ubedili svoje sunarodnike da se razidju. Srpski mediji kazu da su
nasilje isprovocirali Hrvati, koji su nosili postere sa hrvatskim
znamenjima i izvikivali da su Srbi nepozeljni u Hrvatskoj.
Funkcioneri UNTAES-a nisu danas bili na raspolaganju da objasne
incident.
Pripremio(la): Zoran Penevski
vesti.1266corto,
Preuzeto sa Pro-a:
================================
Forum, Mediji.1307, drakce
(6.1307) Sre 25/12/1996 19:02, 3759 chr
:: CNN
----------------------------------------------------------------
Milosevic opponents won't back down, despite shooting
<Picture: demonstrations>
Peaceful protests turn bloody for first time
December 24, 1996
Web posted at: 9:30 p.m. EST (0230 GMT)
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (CNN) -- Hours after a supporter of Serbian
President Slobodan Milosevic shot and wounded an anti-government
protester, an opposition leader said Milosevic had squandered his chance
to negotiate an end to the demonstrations.
<Picture: Draskovic>
"From today, not any chance of dialogue with him. He must resign," said
Vuk Draskovic, a Together coalition leader.
Milosevic supporters, some of them bused into Belgrade from the
countryside, fired shots at opponents Tuesday during clashes on city
streets.
Some demonstrators beat each other with sticks and metal pipes. It was
the first bloodshed since rallies began 35 days ago to protest
Milosevic's decision to annul local elections won by the opposition.
<Picture: movie icon>(988K/22 sec. QuickTime movie)
Riot police break up fighting
<Picture: shooting>
In addition to the man hit by gunfire, two people were stabbed and
several others were wounded.
Before the shooting, a man emerged from a crowd of government
supporters, pulled a gun and fired into a crowd of opposition
demonstrators, hitting the man in the head, CNN's Peter Arnett reported
live from Belgrade. <Picture: icon> (199K/18 sec. AIFF or WAV sound,
report from CNN's Peter Arnett)
Doctors said the head wound was not life-threatening, and witnesses said
police detained the gunman.
According to journalists in Belgrade, Milosevic's opponents produced a
turnout of almost 200,000 people, more than twice the number who rallied
in support of the president.
At first, no police were in sight, apparently allowing protesters from
both sides to "fight it out," Arnett said.
But riot police eventually appeared, firing tear gas and swinging batons
to push back government supporters and opponents.
U.S. response
U.S. officials said Milosevic and his government would be held
responsible for any "violent actions" by their backers.
"The Serbian authorities have flagrantly and provocatively chosen to
heighten tensions by bringing thousands of people into Belgrade to
confront the peaceful demonstrations by the opposition," Deputy
Secretary of State Strobe Talbott said in a statement.
Demonstrators: forced to rally?
<Picture: supporters>
Hundreds of buses carrying Milosevic supporters -- mostly blue-collar
workers and elderly people -- arrived in Belgrade earlier Tuesday. Some
workers said they were forced to board the buses under threat of
dismissal.
"I had no choice," a worker from the Kosovo province town of Prizren
said, identifying himself only as Ljuba. "We were told either we board
the buses or we lose our jobs."
The pro-Milosevic rally was planned for the same time and place as the
daily opposition rallies.
Clashes between supporters and opponents of Milosevic would give
Serbia's president an excuse to ban all demonstrations and use force
against his opponents, whose protests so far have been peaceful.
<Picture: Milosevic>
In his first public appearance since the crisis began, Milosevic warned:
"No one will be allowed to destabilize Serbia."
Opposition leaders said they were considering calling off their
demonstrations, after learning that many of the government supporters
were carrying arms. Yet late Tuesday, Arnett reported that the
opposition, now fully aware of the danger, planned to return to the
streets Wednesday morning.
Correspondents Peter Arnett and Steve Harrigan in Belgrade and Reuters
contributed to this report.
(c) 1996 Cable News Network, Inc.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1307 --
vesti.1267corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1308, drakce
(6.1308) Sre 25/12/1996 19:21, 2151 chr, +staklo.jpg 12k
:: CNN
----------------------------------------------------------------
Protesters return to Belgrade streets after violence
<Picture: Cleanup>
December 25, 1996
Web posted at: 10:45 a.m. EST (1545 GMT)
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (CNN) -- Opposition demonstrators poured into the
streets of Belgrade Christmas Day, continuing their defiance of Serbian
President Slobodan Milosevic a day after violence erupted between his
supporters and opponents.
One opposition demonstrator was shot in the head on Tuesday, and two
others suffered stab wounds. As many as 60 others were hurt as
opposition and pro-government groups clashed in the streets.
For 36 days, opposition demonstrators have filled the streets of
Belgrade -- sometimes with as many as 200,000 people -- to protest a
government decision to overturn a series of November 17 municipal
elections won by the opposition.
<Picture: Shot>
Vuk Draskovic, one of the leaders of the opposition movement Together,
accused Milosevic of deliberately trying to spark a civil war. Tuesday's
counter-demonstrators, he said, were "drunk and armed people Mr.
Milosevic brought ... with the aim of provoking bloodshed."
Even so, Milosevic's Socialist Party mustered only 40,000 people to
support the embattled president after promising half a million.
Milosevic spoke briefly to his supporters Tuesday, accusing the
opposition of being enemies of the state and charging they were agents
of international governments.
<Picture: Clashes>
"They all wanted to weaken us, but I will tell you, out of all their
attempts, we will come out not weaker, but stronger," he said. "And that
is because Serbia always comes united when it is under pressures and
threats. Nobody will divide it and it will never accept becoming
somebody's servant."
The Clinton administration Tuesday accused the Belgrade regime of
provoking violence against opposition demonstrators. The United States
repeated its call for "all sides" in Belgrade to "exercise maximum
restraint" and condemned the violence of pro-Milosevic government
demonstrators.
Correspondent Steve Harrigan andReuters contributed to this report.
(c) 1996 Cable News Network, Inc.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1308 --
vesti.1268corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1309, drakce
(6.1309) Sre 25/12/1996 19:21, 4189 chr
:: Associated Press
----------------------------------------------------------------
Belgrade Protests Turn Bloody
By MISHA SAVIC
Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, December 25, 1996 2:17 am EST
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- The worst outbreak of violence in more than
five years will challenge both Serbia's autocratic president and his
tens of thousands of opponents who have filled the streets daily.
Slobodan Milosevic may find it harder to keep the lid on the daily
protests since gunfire, knives, clubs and fists bloodied the streets of
Belgrade on Tuesday.
And for the opposition, keeping up the momentum until it achieves its
goal -- Milosevic's acceptance of election results in towns his
Socialist Party lost -- could be difficult with the stakes suddenly so
much higher.
Nobody died in Tuesday's confrontations among supporters and opponents
of Milosevic and with police. But the violence marked an end to more
than a month of peaceful opposition protests.
At least 40 people were treated for injuries, including one person who
was shot and two who were stabbed.
Milosevic called the rally of his supporters for the same time and place
that the opposition has been using for its protests in the capital,
virtually ensuring violence.
``Milosevic is seeking chaos on Belgrade streets so he can find an
excuse to impose police rule and a state of emergency,'' opposition
leader Zoran Djindjic said. The opposition called another protest for
today.
In Washington, Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott condemned
Serbian authorities for ``flagrantly and provocatively'' increasing
tension and said Milosevic would be held responsible for violence by his
supporters.
State media said 500,000 people turned out to support Milosevic;
independent estimates put the crowd at no more than 50,000. More than
300,000 opponents also marched.
Milosevic told his supporters -- most of them bused in from the
provinces -- that opposition leaders were intent on breaking up Serbia.
``Strong Serbia is not to the liking of some powers abroad, and that's
why they are trying to break it up with the help of the domestic
traitors,'' he said. ``We, of course, won't let it happen.''
Opposition leaders appealed to their demonstrators not to be provoked
into clashes. But about 10,000 split from the crowd and moved on the
police cordon. Police hurled tear gas and clubbed protesters.
A gunman among a crowd of Milosevic supporters shot an opponent,
identified by doctors as Ivica Lazovic. They said he was shot in the
head, but his condition was not life-threatening.
Another woman apparently was wounded, witnesses said, but her condition
and whereabouts were not known. Police detained the gunman, witnesses
said.
Heavily armed, helmeted riot police intervened often against opposition
supporters flooding downtown Belgrade, shielding the pro-Milosevic
rally.
Earlier Tuesday, fights broke out when opposition supporters hurled
eggs, sticks, mud balls and firecrackers at Milosevic's supporters.
Members of the opposition chanted ``Thieves!'' and ``Red Bandits!'' at
the pro-Milosevic demonstrators. They shouted back: ``Traitors!
Traitors!''
It was the worst burst of violence in the capital since March 1991.
Then, on the eve of the outbreak of war in the former Yugoslavia,
Milosevic used tanks to quell opposition protests. Two people were
killed.
At the time, Milosevic skillfully fanned nationalism as Yugoslavia
careened toward collapse; the opposition was divided and Milosevic had
full backing of the powerful Yugoslav army.
Now, the opposition is united and much stronger. It is not clear whether
Milosevic still maintains the true loyalty of an army he has neglected
in favor of beefing up his police force.
In November, opposition candidates won municipal elections in Belgrade
and other major cities for the first time. And more than a month of
protests against Milosevic's annulment of those results has posed the
greatest challenge to his rule since he came to power in 1987.
Djindjic interprets the Milosevic-organized rally as a sign of
desperation: ``Milosevic is obviously losing his nerves.''
(c) Copyright 1996 The Associated Press
------------------------------------------------- 6.1309 --
vesti.1269corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1310, drakce
(6.1310) Sre 25/12/1996 19:21, 5119 chr
:: Associated Press
----------------------------------------------------------------
Belgrade Clashes Over Leader
By DUSAN STOJANOVIC
Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, December 25, 1996 10:23 am EST
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Thousands of Slobodan Milosevic's foes used
brooms, brushes and detergent today to ``decontaminate'' the site where
a gathering of the Serbian president's supporters prompted bloody
clashes between the two sides.
Tuesday's confrontation -- the worst outbreak of violence in more than
five years -- fueled the hatred between Serbia's autocratic president
and the tens of thousands of opponents who have filled the streets daily
for more than a month to rail against his annulment of local election
results.
Protesters heeding a call by Milosevic to demonstrate in his support
traded blows with opposition supporters, who were then clubbed by riot
police. At least one person was shot in Tuesday's melee by a gunman in a
crowd of Milosevic backers. Fifty-seven others were treated for
injuries.
Today, some 10,000 marching students returned to downtown Terazije
Square, chanting ``We hate you Slobo.''
``We wanted to decontaminate the spot where Milosevic's supporters
brought us mud and dirt,'' said student spokesman Sasa Petrovic, as the
demonstrators swept the pavement with detergent, brooms and brushes.
Later, tens of thousands of opposition supporters, braving cold and
snow, flooded Belgrade streets for their 35th day of protests against
the autocratic Serbian president.
Opposition leaders claimed today that Milosevic was planning to ban the
pro-democracy protests, which until Tuesday had been relatively
peaceful. The government did not confirm that claim.
``We have information that Mr. Milosevic yesterday made the decision to
ban all gatherings and that now his (security) services are looking into
ways to make the ban operational,'' said Zoran Djindjic, an opposition
leader.
Milosevic all but programmed Tuesday's street battle by urging
government supporters to rally at the same site where the opposition has
been protesting regularly since his cancellation of what appeared to be
opposition victories in the Nov. 17 elections.
Protesting students sent a letter to Milosevic today, accusing him of
bringing Belgrade ``to the edge of civil war.''
``Only thanks to the enormous restraint of citizens, and great luck, the
catastrophe was avoided,'' said the letter. ``We demand that you behave
as the president of all citizens of Serbia.''
But a statement from Milosevic supporters, read on state radio, demanded
``tough action'' against the opposition protesters. It said
pro-Milosevic forces had come to the capital ``to save Serbia and
Belgrade'' from the opposition, but were greeted by ``hooligans'' who
hurled stones and eggs.
Heavily armed forces intervened numerous times against 300,000
opposition supporters flooding downtown Belgrade on Tuesday, near where
Milosevic supporters assembled for their rally.
Swinging clubs, police waded into the crowds, separating anti- and
pro-government groups and shielding the Milosevic supporters. Although
state news media said 500,000 attended the pro-government gathering,
independent estimates put the crowd at no more than 50,000 -- some true
supporters, others coerced into coming by threats they would lose their
jobs if they didn't.
Most of the Milosevic supporters -- villagers, elderly and blue-collar
workers bused into the capital from provincial towns -- appeared stunned
by the level of opposition support.
Many have received news only from Serbia's state-run TV, which has
created a distorted picture of the opposition and its demands.
Milosevic has virtually ignored the opposition protests -- the largest
since he came to power in 1987. But he appeared at Tuesday's rally to
accuse opposition leaders of being foreign lackeys intent on Serbia's
breakup.
``Strong Serbia is not to the liking of some powers abroad, and that's
why they are trying to break it up with the help of the domestic
traitors,'' he said. ``We, of course, won't let it happen.''
Members of the opposition chanted ``Thieves!'' and ``Red Bandits!'' at
the pro-Milosevic demonstrators, who shouted back: ``Traitors!
Traitors!''
The shooting victim, Ivica Lazovic, was in critical condition today,
said Rade Vasilic of Belgrade's main Emergency Hospital Center.
Four other injured were hospitalized, three with fractured limbs and one
with a concussion.
The U.S. Embassy in Belgrade said there was an ``incident'' involving
two Americans, but refused to elaborate, citing their right to privacy.
The last comparable violence in the capital was in March 1991, when, on
the eve of the outbreak of war in the former Yugoslavia, Milosevic used
tanks to quell opposition protests. Two people were killed.
At the time, Milosevic skillfully fanned nationalism as Yugoslavia
careened toward collapse; the opposition was divided and Milosevic had
full backing of the powerful Yugoslav army.
The opposition has since grown stronger and more united.
(c) Copyright 1996 The Associated Press
------------------------------------------------- 6.1310 --
vesti.1270corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1311, drakce
(6.1311) Sre 25/12/1996 19:21, 5220 chr
:: Associated Press
----------------------------------------------------------------
100,000 Demonstrate in Belgrade
By DUSAN STOJANOVIC
Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, December 25, 1996 11:27 am EST
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Thousands of Slobodan Milosevic's foes used
brooms, brushes and detergent today to ``decontaminate'' the site where
a gathering of the Serbian president's supporters prompted bloody
clashes between the two sides.
Tuesday's confrontation -- the most violent in more than five years --
fueled the hatred between the autocratic leader and a growing opposition
that has filled the streets daily for more than a month to rail against
his annulment of local election results.
Heeding Milosevic's call to demonstrate in his support, protesters
traded blows with opposition supporters, who were then clubbed by riot
police. At least one person was shot by a gunman in a crowd of Milosevic
backers. Fifty-seven others were treated for injuries.
Today, about 10,000 marching students returned to downtown Terazije
Square, chanting ``We hate you Slobo.''
``We wanted to decontaminate the spot where Milosevic's supporters
brought us mud and dirt,'' said student spokesman Sasa Petrovic, as the
demonstrators swept the pavement with detergent, brooms and brushes.
Later in the day, 100,000 opposition supporters, braving cold and snow,
flooded Belgrade streets for their 35th day of protests against the
Serbian president.
Opposition leaders claimed today that Milosevic was planning to ban the
pro-democracy protests, which until Tuesday had been relatively
peaceful. The government did not confirm that claim.
``We have information that Mr. Milosevic yesterday made the decision to
ban all gatherings and that now his (security) services are looking into
ways to make the ban operational,'' said Zoran Djindjic, an opposition
leader.
Milosevic all but programmed Tuesday's street battle by urging
government supporters to rally at the same site where the opposition has
been protesting regularly since his cancellation of what appeared to be
opposition victories in the Nov. 17 elections.
Protesting students sent a letter to Milosevic today, accusing him of
bringing Belgrade ``to the edge of civil war.''
``Only thanks to the enormous restraint of citizens, and great luck, the
catastrophe was avoided,'' said the letter. ``We demand that you behave
as the president of all citizens of Serbia.''
But a statement from Milosevic supporters, read on state radio, demanded
``tough action'' against the opposition protesters. It said
pro-Milosevic forces had come to the capital ``to save Serbia and
Belgrade'' from the opposition, but were greeted by ``hooligans'' who
hurled stones and eggs.
In a separate statement, carried by the state-run Tanjug news agency,
Milosevic's Socialist Party blasted the opposition for ``terrorist
policy'' and ``armed attacks'' against the Milosevic supporters.
It called for ``the punishment of the perpetrators for their brutal
attacks against peaceful citizens.''
Heavily armed forces intervened numerous times against the 300,000
opposition supporters who flooded downtown Belgrade on Tuesday, near
where Milosevic supporters assembled for their rally.
Swinging clubs, police waded into the crowds, separating anti- and
pro-government groups and shielding the Milosevic supporters. Although
state news media said 500,000 attended the pro-government gathering,
independent estimates put the crowd at no more than 50,000 -- some true
supporters, others coerced into coming by threats they would lose their
jobs if they didn't.
Most of the Milosevic supporters -- elderly and blue-collar workers
bused into the capital from provincial towns -- appeared stunned by the
level of opposition support.
Many have received news only from Serbia's state-run TV, which has
created a distorted picture of the opposition and its demands.
Milosevic has virtually ignored the opposition protests -- the largest
since he came to power in 1987. But he appeared at Tuesday's rally to
accuse opposition leaders of being foreign lackeys intent on Serbia's
breakup.
``Strong Serbia is not to the liking of some powers abroad, and that's
why they are trying to break it up with the help of the domestic
traitors,'' he said. ``We, of course, won't let it happen.''
The shooting victim, Ivica Lazovic, was in critical condition today,
said Rade Vasilic of Belgrade's main Emergency Hospital Center.
Four other injured were hospitalized, three with fractured limbs and one
with a concussion.
The U.S. Embassy in Belgrade said there was an ``incident'' involving
two Americans, but refused to elaborate, citing their right to privacy.
The last comparable violence in the capital was in March 1991, when, on
the eve of the outbreak of war in the former Yugoslavia, Milosevic used
tanks to quell opposition protests. Two people were killed.
At the time, Milosevic skillfully fanned nationalism as Yugoslavia
careened toward collapse; the opposition was divided and Milosevic had
full backing of the powerful Yugoslav army.
The opposition has since swelled and grown increasingly unified.
(c) Copyright 1996 The Associated Press
------------------------------------------------- 6.1311 --
vesti.1271junior,
-> #1242, corto> Opposition protesters blew whistles and chanted ``Let's go,
> all-out attack.''
Možda je bolje "Hi-ho, let's go ..."
vesti.1272mpavlo,
-> #1253, bceklic> modelu rec. Ovaj covek sigurno nije onaj koji je prikazan na BK
> televiziji ali je onaj koji je pucao. Slika je inace objavljena u
A kako znaš da je taj tip o kom pišeš pucao a ne onaj sa snimka, koji je, kako
se lepo vidi, stvarno pucao i što je najgore (a i to se lepo vidi) i upucao?
vesti.1273mpavlo,
-> #1213, skorpion> BK je privilegija Vas Bg-djana, a ja se javljam iz Zrenjanina, a i
Da izvineš, q***c od privilegije. Po meni, oni su gori od RTS-a. Za ove
državne bar znaš da lažu i truju, dok ovi sa BK to, čini mi se, rade
perfidnije. Uvale nam po neku istinu, a zatim prepišu izveštaj sa RTS-a i malo
ga lepše upakuju (mislim na lepše komentatorke i moderniju produkciju). Sve
ostalo se svodi ne satelitske emisije a od informisanja nema ništa. Za RTS čak
postoji i recept - kad god pričaju o politici, ti sve što kažu lepo obrneš i
eto ti istine (ili je bar blizu).
vesti.1274nenad,
-> #1250, malex>> < Picture: movie icon> ( 988K/22 sec. QuickTime movie)
>
> Ajde ako te ne mrzi pošalji ovo.
Evo, preuzeto sa CNN-ovog sajta.
cnn-mov.zipvesti.1275superhik,
-> #1215, junior=:> Ja ne znam i da li ima 100k studenata na Beogradskom
=:> Univerzitetu. :)
Ajde jr. nemoj da k*njaš, dobro znaš da i srednjoškolci i ostala
'raja' idu sa studentima.
vesti.1276superhik,
-> #1206, shimano=:> Uzgred, da li je tačno da je nesrećnom čoveku pucano SA LEĐA
=:> u potiljak?
Skoro sa leđa, naime pogodio ga je između slepoočnice i
potiljka, otprilike - malo po strani.
vesti.1277corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 25. decembar 1996.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Svi tekstovi su Copyright 1996 Radija B92. SVA PRAVA ZADRZANA.
------------------------------------------------------------------
BEOGRAD ODBRANJEN, PANEL PREPUN SAGLASNOSTI
------------------------------------------------------------------
CESTITKA NA ,,ODBRANI BEOGRADA''
Kolona, koja se formirala na Terazijama, ispred sedista
Demokratske stranke, uputila se ulicama Srpskih vladara, Kneza
Milosa, Takovskom, da bi ulicama Lole Ribara i Makedonskom, setnju
zavrsila na Trgu Republike, gde ce se odrzati miting. Dok su
prolazili pored zgrade drzavne televizije u Takovskoj,
demonstranti su je zasuli grudvama snega i razbili prozore na
nizim spratovima. Lideri koalicije ,,Zajedno'' su na danasnjem 36.
protestnom okupljanju na Trgu Repubike, cestitali gradjanima sto
su ,,juce odbranili Beograd'' od ucesnika mitinga podrske
Slobodanu Milosevicu. Oni su pozvali vise desetina hiljada
gradjana, koji su se okupili uprkos hladnoci i snegu, da nastave
sa mirnim demonstracijama dok se ne priznaju rezultati drugog
kruga lokalnih izbora 17. novembra. Predsednik Demokratske stranke
Zoran Djindjic izjavio je da su Beogradjani rekli ,,ne'' pokusaju
organizatora mitinga podrske Slobodanu Milosevicu da ,,svoj
srednji vek predstave kao buducnost Srbije''.
,,Treba da postavimo jedno pitanje: treba li nam predsednik
Srbije, koji nije u stanju da organizuje ljudski miting za svoju
podrsku, sa svim autobusima, fabrikama, policijom i parama koje
ima'', rekao je Djindjic. Za izvestavanje drzavnih medija sa
jucerasnjih dogadjanja u Beogradu, on je ocenio da se radi o
krivicnom delu huskanja, zbog cega bi neki novinari trebalo da
zavrse u zatvoru. Podsecajuci na ponistavanje izborne pobede
opozicije na lokalnim izborima, Djindjic je svoj govor zavrsio
porukom da ,,Srbijom nece upravljati lopovska ruka dok mi zivimo u
Srbiji'', sto je burno pozdravljeno. Okupljenima je receno da je,
prema proracunima koalicije ,,Zajedno'', organizacija jucerasnjeg
mitinga podrske na Terazijama stajala je pet miliona dinara.
Predsednik Srpskog pokreta obnove Vuk Draskovic primetio je da
danas nema policije i ,,placenika koje je rezim dovukao'' pa je
zato opet kolona mirno isla ulicama Beograda. Za jucerasnje sukobe
pristalica Milosevica i koalicije ,,Zajedno'', u kojima je bilo
povredjenih, on je rekao da su svet i Srbija imali prilike da vide
ko nosi oruzje.
Draskovic je cestitao gradjanima sto su juce ,,odbranili Srbiju''
i time, kako je rekao, ,,definitivno otklonili opasnost od
pokretanja gradjanskog rata''. Za Milosevicev jucerasnji govor
lider SPO je rekao da ,,treba da nas zabrine'', jer ,,jos je mnogo
moci i zlih namera u njegovoj glavi''. Milosevic je, prema
njegovim recima, u tom govoru najvio rat zapadnom svetu i
demokratskoj opoziciji, nazivajuci dve trecine gradjana Srbije
petom kolonom. On je, medjutim, pozvao okupljene da nastave sa
protestima, ,,mirno i uporno'', i dodao da se ocekuje da uskoro i
ljudi iz Socijalisticke partije Srbije pocnu da im prilaze.
Draskovic je predsednika Srbije pozvao da prizna rezultate izbora
od 17. novembra i prihvati odgovornost svih koji su krali i pucali
-- ,,ako moze''. ,,Ako ne moze, da se skloni da bi Srbija izasla
na put demokratije, bogatstva, slobode i Evrope'', zakljucio je
lider SPO. Naredni skup koalicije ,,Zajedno'' je zakazan za sutra.
vesti.1278corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 25. decembar 1996.
EVROPSKI MEDIJI O ZBIVANJIMA U BEOGRADU
Katolicka i protestantska Evropa danas proslavlja Bozic, tako da u
vecini zemalja nije izasla dnevna stampa, javlja za FoNet dopisnik
,,Nase Borbe'' Mirko Klarin. Izuzetak je Francuska, ciji vodeci
listovi na naslovnim stranicama javljaju o jucerasnjim dramaticnim
zbivanjima u Beogradu. Prema pariskom ,,Liberasionu'', na
beogradskim su se ulicama juce ,,licem u lice suocile dve Srbije:
jedna mlada i urbana, u traganju za promenama; te druga, isluzena
i seljacka, u odbrani status-kvoa''. Dok je ova druga Srbija
,,zatocenik postojece situacije, svojih renti i svoje mentalne
skleroze nasledjene iz proslosti'', ona prva je ,,vise nego
politikom, vodjena minimalnom potrebom da Srbin u Srbiji ima prava
na elementarno postovanje, koje uziva bilo koji gradjanin bilo
koje demokratske drzave''. Suocenje te ,,dve Srbije'' nije bilo ni
malo nezno, ali je, po oceni francuske stampe, ,,najgore za dlaku
izbegnuto...''
Priznanja za to upucuju se liderima opozicije ,,koji su ucinili
sve da sprece incidente'', kao i samim pristalicama demokratskog
pokreta koji su ,,pazili da ne nasednu na provokacije, kako rezimu
mu ne bi dali izgovor za zabranu javnih skupova''. Medjutim, mada
je najgore izbegnuto, ono sto se u utorak dogodilo na beogradskim
ulicama promenilo je karakter petonedeljnog protesta, koji se nije
odlikovao samo mirom i dostojanstvom, vec i dobrim raspolozenjem i
duhovitoscu njegovih ucesnika. Nakon sto je, medjutim, prolivena
krv... vrag je odneo salu, dobro raspolozenje je zamenjeno strahom
i ulog u igri je znacajno povecan -- konstatuju danas evropski
izvestaci iz Beograda. Strani izvestaci ne kriju da su iznenadjeni
,,neocekivano slabim odzivom Milosevicevih pristalica''. Prema
Rojteru, bilo ih je oko 40.000, Asosijeted pres procenjuje da se
na Terazijama okupilo 50.000 ,,mitingasa'', dok je
,,najizdasnija'' francuska stampa, koja pominje ,,manje od sto
hiljada'' Milosevicevih pristalica, primecujuci da je to dva do
tri puta manje nego sto je na ulice Beograda juce izvela koalicija
,,Zajedno''. Ni zapadne agencije ni francuska stampa, medjutim, ne
propustaju da istaknu kako tako slab odziv ,,nije ni najmanje
smetao drzavnoj televiziji da tvrdi kako je na Terazijama bilo
pola miliona Milosevicevih pristalica''.
PERINA: VLAST U SRBIJI NE POKAZUJE VOLJU ZA MIRNIM RESENJEM
Svi vodeci americki listovi donose jutros na prvim stranama
opsirne izvestaje o jucerasnjim neredima u Beogradu, javlja za
FoNet dopisnik ,,Nase borbe'' Slobodan Pavlovic. ,,Vasington
post'' je sazeo ta reagovanja u konstataciji da je Socijalisticka
partija Srbije ,,naoruzala i dovela u glavni grad zavedene
demonstrante iz unutrasnjosti po istom receptu'', kako je receno,
,,kao sto su to Causeskuovi pokusavali '89. godine u Bukurestu,
pre nego sto im je rumunski narod presudio po kratkom postupku''.
,,Bio je to pravi recept za katastrofu. Dovodjenje na desetine
hiljada demonstranata iz unutrasnjosti zemlje u Beograd i
organizovanje njihovog mitinga u isto vreme i na istom mestu na
kome opozicija mirno protestuje vec vise od mesec dana, potvrdilo
je nase strepnje da vlast u Srbiji ne pokazuje dobru volju da se
na miran nacin razresi kriza izazvana ponistavanjem izbornih
pobeda opozicije od 17. novembra'', izjavio je sinoc za tv mrezu
Si-Bi-Es Rudolf Perina, pomocnik drzavnog podsekretara Dzona
Kornbluma i jedan od glavnih kreatora americke politike prema
Jugoslaviji. Perina je obrazlozio za javnost do sada najostrije
upozorenje, kojim je Klintonova administracija odmah juce
reagovala na tekucu krizu u Srbiji, proglasavajuci predsednika
Srbije Slobodana Milosevica direktno odgovornim za nasilnicko
ponasanje gostujucih demonstranata u Beogradu. U Vasingtonu se od
juce ponovo pominje mogucnost da SAD, pored jednostranih
ekonomskih sanckcija, potpuno prekinu i diplomatske odnose sa
Beogradom, koji su u praksi ionako vec godinama svedeni na
minimum.
TARASOV: U SRPSKOJ KRIZI MORA BITI ISKLJUCENO NASILJE
Ministarstvo inostranih poslova Rusije objavilo je danas
saopstenje povodom jucerasnjih dramaticnih zbivanja u Beogradu, u
kojem se istice da se u Moskvi ispoljava ozbiljna zabrinutost zbog
porasta napetosti u srpskom drustvu, javlja dopisnik FoNeta Branko
Stosic. Prema recima sefa Departmana za stampu i informisanje
Andreja Tarasova, koji je na drzavnoj televiziji procitao
saopstenje Ministarstva, Rusija ocenjuje da sadasnja kriza moze i
mora biti sto brze prevladana kroz politicki dijalog svih
demokratskih snaga u zemlji. ,,U srpskoj krizi mora biti
iskljuceno svako ispoljavanje nasilja, bremenito, inace,
opasnostima sukoba i konfrontacija'', kaze se u saopstenju.
Zvanicna Moskva posebno istice da smatra nedopustivim svako
mesanje spolja u stvari srpskog naroda. ,,Sa svoje strane, Rusija
je spremna da i ubuduce aktivno doprinosi jacanju stabilnosti i
demokratskom razvitku u prijateljskoj Jugoslaviji i oko nje, sto
ce reci na citavom prostoru bivse SFRJ'', rekao je Tarasov.
Istovremeno, on je preneo i stav da Rusija -- u interesu mira na
Balkanu i Evropi -- smatra da bi medjunarodna zajednica morala da
pomogne SR Jugoslaviji da prevlada teske posledice rata u regionu,
sankcija i izolacije.
vesti.1279corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 25. decembar 1996.
EKSPLOZIJA U DVORISTU JUGOSLOVENSKOG KONZULATA
U dvoristu jugoslovenskog konzulata u Sofiji danas je eksplodirala
rucna bomba, javlja Rojter, a prenosi FoNet. U eksploziji nije
bilo povredjenih i nije pricinjena veca materijalna steta. Za sada
se ne zna ko je bacio bombu niti da li je incident u bilo kakvoj
vezi sa tekucim zbivanjima u Srbiji.
BILJANA PLAVSIC O DOGADJAJIMA U SRBIJI
Predsednik Republike Srpske Biljana Plavsic izrazila je
zabrinutost poslednjim dogadjajima u Srbiji, koji su kulminirali
jucerasnjim sukobom pristalica vlasti i opozicije u Beogradu, jer
se to, kako je rekla, ,,tice podjednako svih Srba'', javlja SRNA,
a prenosi FoNet. ,,U RS svi smo strepeli zbog jucerasnjih
dogadjaja na beogradskim ulicama, ali strepelo je i celokupno
srpstvo, ukljucujuci i dijasporu'', izjavila je Plavsic toj
agenciji u Banjaluci, isticuci da se ,,nije smelo desiti da padne
srpska krv, makar i od jednog coveka''. Komentarisuci mirne
demonstracije koje vise od mesec dana traju u svim vecim gradovima
Srbije, Plavsic je ocenila da bi ,,svakoj vlasti trebalo da bude
jasno da ljudi ne izlaze na ulice iz besa ili ideologije''. ,,U
Srbiji je ugrozena demokratija i to Srbi ne mogu da podnesu.
Narodu, koji u svom iskonskom bicu nosi osecaj za demokratiju,
postalo je nepodnosljivo da zivi pod rezimom koji nema veze sa
demokratijom'', dodala je predsednica RS, sugerisuci da bi ,,svako
pametno rukovodstvo moralo da se zamisli nad tim, a ne da, kao
juce, stvara kontra-situaciju''. Te stvari, prema misljenju
Plavsiceve, trebalo bi resiti u Skupstini, ukoliko je ona, kako je
rekla, ,,uopste srpska''. Kao jedan od razloga za sumnju ona je
navela da je Skupstina Srbije odbila da raspravlja o situaciji u
Republici Srpskoj Krajini u toku agresije hrvatske vojske, kao i
da je mnogo puta odbila da raspravlja o situaciji u RS, kada je
srpski narod bio ugrozen. ,,Zato mislim da takva indiferentnost na
ono sto se desava na ulicama, na toliku upornost naroda koji
rukovodstvu pokusava da signalise da treba nesto u osnovi menjati,
dok se rukovodstvo na to oglusuje, bojim se da nagovestava
nastavak nemilih dogadjanja'', istakla je Plavsiceva.
Izrazavajuci zaljenje sto je doslo do politicke inetrvencije iz
vana, jer bi Srbi izmedju sebe trebalo da rese sve probleme,
predsednica RS je napomenula da joj se cini da vlast u Srbiji
uopste nema sluha, sto se jasno vidi iz cinjenice da su uzeli
monopol na vladavinu u Srbiji. Plavsiceva je preporucila da bi
bilo dobro kada bi se u Skupstini Srbije povela ozbiljna rasprava,
,,bez ikakvih namestaljki od strane vlasti'', sto je, prema njenim
recima, ipak malo verovatno, jer ,,aktuelne vlasti ne mogu
promeniti svoj stil rada''. ,,Kao profesor univerziteta, da sam se
nasla u Beogradu, bila bih medju studentima. Ne samo iz
solidarnosti, vec i zbog toga sto su to intelektualci koji ne zele
da Srbija i srpski narod, koji su demokratski opredeljeni, nose
etiketu totalitarnog rezima'', podvukla je Plavsic. Predsednica RS
je podsetila da je status RS u okviru Dejtonskog sporazuma takav
kakav jeste, ali da vizija srpskog naroda i svakog Srbina
pojedinacno ostaje ujedinjenje svih Srba, zbog cega se, kako je
rekla, ,,na desavanja u Srbiji ne moze gledati kao na nesto sto se
desava njima''. ,,Ono sto se desava, desava se svim Srbima i jako
me brine. Opozicija, bez obzira ko je glavni medju njima, a i
studenti -- pokazali su jednu veliku dozu zrelosti i tokom
jucerasnjeg dana'', zakljucila je predsednica Plavsic.
vesti.1280corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 25. decembar 1996.
GRCKI MEDIJI: MILOSEVICEVA POZICIJA NEPREKIDNO SLABI
Grcki mediji zakljucuju da je predsednik Srbije Slobodan Milosevic
pogresio sto je organizovao kontrademonstracije, koje potvrdjuju
da njegova pozicija neprekidno slabi, javlja dopisnik FoNeta
Slobodan Markovic. Dok se beogradska zbivanja podudaraju sa danima
kada najveci deo hriscanskog sveta, kao i Grcka, slavi Bozic, u
Atini nema zvanicnih reakcija ni Vlade, niti stranaka ili drugih
organizacija. Indikativno je da nijedan od grckih medija nije
preneo sadrzinu sinocnjeg Milosevicevog govora, dok su tv stanice
snimke njegovog nastupa pokrile ukazivanjem na odgovornost vlasti
za izbijanje sukoba. Prvi program drzavne grcke televizije danas
je ocenio da izgleda da srpski predsednik nema efikasan nacin za
suprotstavljanje srpskoj opoziciji i ,,rukujuci pitanjima izbornih
rezultata neprekidno pada iz greske u gresku''.
,,Jucerasnje kontrademonstracije, koje je organizovao rezim
pokazale su, ako nista drugo, onda to da Slobodan Milosevic nema
podrsku naroda u meri u kojoj je imao 1991'', konstatuje ova
televizija. U izvestaju drzavne grcke televizije receno je da su
Miloseviceve pristalice juce otisle zabrinute, posto su se uverile
da ideja ,,druge Srbije'', koju zastupa opozicija, ima vise
pristalica nego sto predstavljaju drzavni mediji. ,,Dakle,
Milosevic je na domacem terenu izgubio bitku za stvaranje utiska,
a, sa druge strane, na medjunarodnom nivou je kao opasna osudjena
taktika kontrademonstracija i primene policijske sile'', kaze se u
izvestaju. U izvestaju je, takodje, istaknuto da je sirenje
incidenata izbegnuto zahvaljujuci trezvenosti rukovodstva
opozicije, cime je rezim eksponiran jos jednom. Prema
najgledanijoj grckoj tv stanici ,,Mega'', jucerasnje
kontrademonstracije znace da Milosevic zeli da pripremi javno
mnenje na za njega negativan izvestaj OEBS, kojim ce se potvrditi
da je bilo namestanja rezultata lokalnih izbora.
ODBOR GO SPS O MITINGU ,,ZA SRBIJU''
,,Velicanstveni miting gradjana Srbije potvrdio je da je Srbija
utemeljena na idealima mira, slobode, nezavisnosti i da se protivi
terorizmu'' stoji u danasnjem saopstenju Izvrsnog odbora Glavnog
odbora Socijalisticke partije Srbije, koji su preneli beogradski
mediji. ,,Srbija je dala punu podrsku predsedniku Slobodanu
Milosevicu i jasno porucila da Srbijom nikad nece upravljati
tudjinska ruka'', saopstio je danas taj odbor. ,,Lideri koalicije
Zajedno, komandujuci odredima svojih agresivnih teroristickih
grupa, pokazali su gradjanima Srbije i celom svetu da je njihov
program vlast po svaku cenu, a metod nasilje i teror'', navodi se
u saopstenju. ,,SPS osudjuje nastojanje vodja koalicije Zajedno i
njihovih pristalica da izazovu krvoprolice i sukobe vecih razmera.
SPS se zahvaljuje svim gradjanima, svojim clanovima i
simpatizerima, koji su svojim ucescem i dostojanstvenim drzanjem
pokazali svetu da je Srbija nepokolebljiva u odbrani svojih
interesa i u odbrani politike mira, slobode, nezavisnosti i
dostojanstva naseg naroda'', stoji na kraju ovog saopstenja.
ODBOR MITINGA ,,ZA SRBIJU'' O JUCERASNJEM SKUPU
Beogradski mediji preneli su ocenu Odbora mitinga ,,Za Srbiju'',
koji je danas saopstio da je ,,na velicanstvenom mitingu za
zastitu mira, slobode, dostojanstva, samostalnosti i nezavisnosti
nase zemlje i podrske predsedniku Slobodanu Milosevicu juce ceo
svet video pravo lice Srbije''. ,,U Beogradu je govorila Srbija,
koja je za ravnopravnost sa drugim narodima i drzavama, koja se
zalaze za dostojanstven zivot i rad u miru, koja hoce da sama bira
vlast i put u Evropu i koja je jasno rekla da hoce da je na tom
putu vodi izabrani predsednik Slobodan Milosevic'', navodi se u
saopstenju. ,,Pripadnici koalicije Zajedno takodje su juce
predstavili svoju teroristicku politiku'', tvrdi Odbor.
,,Kamenovanjem, premlacivanjem, napadima iz vatrenog oruzja,
gadjanjem raznim predmetima i otvorenim tucama, oni su izazvali
niz incidenata. Tako su oni pokazali za kakvu se demokratiju
zalazu'', kaze se u saopstenju.
,,Njihove visenedeljne demonstracije koje, maltretiraju gradjane i
paralisu zivot Beograda, prosle su uz punu toleranciju onih koji
imaju drugaciji politicki stav, a kada su se samo jedan dan
skupili gradjani iz citave Srbije, koji se protive njihovoj
politici, oni su napravili pravu atmosferu linca na ulicama
Beograda''. ,,Organizacioni odbor mitinga Za Srbiju osudjuje
divljacko ponasanje ekstremnih i militantnih formacija koalicije
Zajedno. Gradjani su jasno rekli da traze da organi reda kazne
izgrednike za brutalne nasrtaje na mirne gradjane, koji su
prisustvovali mitingu'', stoji u saopstenju. Organizacioni odbor
se zahvalio ,,svim gradjanima Srbije koji su prisustvovali
mitingu'' kao i onima koji su svojim pismima i telegramima
izrazili podrsku tom skupu. Ujedno se na kraju saopstenja
konstatuje da su ,,zahvaljujuci prisebnosti, dostojanstvu i
hrabrom drzanju, gradjani Srbije pokazali da se Srbija ne plasi
par hiljada ekstremista i tako osvetlali obraz Srbije u svetu''.
vesti.1281corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 25. decembar 1996.
STUDENTI UPUTILI PISMO MILOSEVICU
Inicijativni odbor studentskog protesta uputio je pismo
predsedniku republike Slobodanu Milosevicu sledece sadrzine:
,,Gospodine Predsednice, stranka, koju Vi predvodite, organizovala
je miting koji je po vremenu i mestu odrzavanja, rukavica
provokacije i prezira direktno bacena u lice svim gradjanima i
studentima koji vec nedeljama protestuju zbog sramnog prekrajanja
izbornih rezultata. Ozbiljni incidenti do kojih je doslo izmedju
suceljenih grupa demonstranata pretili su da svakog trenutka
predju u sukobe i krvoprolice sirih razmera, te da opravdaju
zavodjenje vanrednog stanja. Manipulisanje neobavestanim
pristalicama i, narocito, policijskim snagama, koje su svojim
(ne)delovanjem direktno usmeravale nasilje na ulicama, trebalo je
da rezultira ponovnim izvodjenjem tenkova na ulice Beograda. Da li
je to jedini nacin na koji ova vlast resava svoje problema? . U
vasem obracanju izdvojili ste nas 'mlade ljude koji traze da se
otklone nepravde'. Mi, studenti beogradskih univerziteta, smatramo
Vas najodgovornijim za rasplet ove sudsko -- politicke farse. Kako
su nasi zahtevi principijelni, mi insistiramo da u okviru Vasih
ustavnih i zakonskih ovlascenja uticete da se oni ispune. Nama ne
trebaju krupne reci i prazna obecanja -- nama treba odlucno
delanje''.
DRASKOVIC: MILOSEVIC ZELEO DA IZAZOVE GRADJANSKI RAT
,,U Evropi nema drzavnika, koji bi mogao da pomisli na ono sto je
Milosevic sproveo u delo. Organizovao je ljude, izmanipulisane
drzavnom televizijom, da dodju u Beograd da skidaju nepostojece
kukaste krstove. Dovozeni su autobusima, deljene su im krvave
dnevnice i alkohol. Gradjane je poslao na gradjane'', rekao je
danas Draskovic na konferenciji za novinare. Konstatujuci da na
jucerasnjem mitingu na Terazijama nije bilo ni par stotina ljudi
iz Beograda, Draskovic je, povodom procene Radio-televizije Srbije
da je bilo okupljeno vise od pola miliona Milosevicevih
pristalica, izjavio: ,,Kako su prebrojali prisutne, tako su
brojali i glasove na izborima. Kako li su od 40.000 napravili
500.000 ljudi?'' ,,Juce je Milosevic sebe promovisao u vodju
drzavnog terora. Doveo je hiljade naoruzanih i pijanih pristalica,
sa namerom da isprovocira pocetak krvorplica u Beogradu'', rekao
je Draskovic. On je izrazio zahvalnost gradjanima Beograda, ,,koji
su juce u najdramaticnijim trenucima poslusali poziv lidera
kolacije 'Zajedno' da krenu u setnju, kako bi izbegli svaki
kontakt'' sa Milosevicevim pristalicama.
Draskovic je ocenio da je Milosevic jucerasnjim govorom ,,najavio
dvostruki rat -- sa zapadnim zemljama i domacim nacionalnim
izdajnicima, odnosno demokratskom koalicijom 'Zajedno', studentima
i gradjanima koji zele radikalne promene i Srbiju u Evropi''. On
je izjavio da Milosevic ,,trazi samoizolaciju Srbije, u cijim
zatvorenim granicama ce Jugoslovenska levica, posto u
Socijalistickoj partiji Srbije ima dosta razumnih ljudi, povesti
teroristicki rat protiv demokratske opozicije''. ,,Bojim se da
Milosevic zatvara sva vrata za priznavanje izbornih rezultata i za
bilo kakav razuman izlazak iz opasne situacije u koju gura
gradjane Srbije'', rekao je Draskovic. On je izjavio da je ,,ceo
scenario'' jucerasnjih dogadjaja mogao da se procita u listu
,,Duga'', u dnevnickim beleskama Miloseviceve supruge i direktorke
JUL-a Mire Markovic. ,,Milosevic je samo fiktivni predsednik SPS,
on je kopredsednik JUL-a... Zeleo bih da se Milosevic otrgne iz
zagrljaja ekstremnog i teroristickog JUL-a i zaboravi na sve sto
je juce u govoru oznacio kao pojam nacionalne nesrece, a po njemu
srece -- rat sa svetom i pokretanje teroristickih akcija protiv
dve trecine stanovnistva Srbije'', rekao je Draskovic.
Draskovic je naglasio da je juce jedan covek iz kolone
Milosevicevih pristalica iz Vrbasa pucao u Knez Mihailovoj ulici u
glavu clana SPO Ivice Lazovica, kome je zivot u opasnosti. ,,Na
fotografijama se vide i drugi ljudi sa oruzjem... Imamo snimke
kako policija tuce petnaestogodisnjeg decaka i Milosevicevih
pristalica sa transparentima na zasiljenim kocevima, koje su
kasnije kao koplja bacali na gradjane Beograda'', izjavio je
Draskovic. Prema njegovim recima, drzavni mediji ne pominju
jucerasnje incidente ,,da se ne bi videlo da su Milosevicevi ljudi
upotrebili oruzje i dosli u Beograd da izazovu krvoprolice''.
Draskovic je izjavio da je Milosevic kontra-mitinge po Srbiji
poceo da organizuje ,,kao odstupnicu za odbijanje nalaza
Organizacije za evropsku bezbednost i saradnju, mada je sam pozvao
OEBS''. Naglasivsi da ce se svakodnevni mirni protesti koalicije
,,Zajedno'' nastaviti, Draskovic je rekao da oni mogu biti
obustavljeni tek po priznavanju rezultata drugog kruga lokalnih
izbora od 17. decembra. ,,Ne verujem da ikada vise Milosevic moze
pokusati ono sto je juce pripremao'', izjavio je Draskovic. Prema
njegovim recima, cilj protesta je i ,,podsticanje masovne pobune u
redovima SPS, jer je veoma veliki broj clanova te stranke uvredjen
cinjenicom da je boljsevicka sekta na celu sa mirom Markovic
spremna da od Srbije napravi Katangu''.
vesti.1282corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 25. decembar 1996.
GIK U NISU I DALJE VERIFIKUJE ODBORNIKE SPS-A
Gradska izborna komisija u Nisu na danasnjoj sednici verifikovala
je 8 novih odbornika SPS, a zatim zbog, kako je saopstila, zamora
clanova komisije prekinula rad. Za Radio B92 potpredsednik
gradskog odbora DS Nisa, Toplica Djordjevic, kaze da je komisija
saopstila da su predsednici birackih odbora u periodu izmedju 11.
i 16. decembra parafima potvrdili prepravke, koje su vrsene na
zapisnicima. ,,Time je tvrdnja predsednika Gradske izborne
komisije u Nisu, gospodina Nesica, koju je on izrekao pred
kolegijumom sudija, da su na birackim mestima prepravljani
rezultati, a ne u izbornoj komisiji, fakticki potvrdjena jednom
kriminalnom radnjom'', dodao je Toplica Djordjevic.
RADIO B92: GORICA I SVETOZAR NA PANELU
DEJAN RADOJEVIC, Radio B92: Predstavnici opozicionih stranaka nisu
se odazvali pozivu na dogovor o radu ucesnika panel diskusije, pa
je taj sastanak veceras protekao je u znaku pune saglasnosti
predstavnika SPS-a i Nove demokratije, Gorice Gajevic i Svetozara
Krstica. Visoki funkcioneri dve vladajuce stranke saglasili su se,
naime, da bi odluke na panelu trebalo da se donose konsenzusom, da
bi predsedavajuci diskusije treba da budu naizmenicno predstavnici
razlicitih stranaka, kao i da se sesije, koje ce se odrzavati
utorkom i cetvrtkom od 20 do 24 sata, direktno prenose na drugom
programu drzavne televizije. Opozicionim strankama je ostavljen
rok da do petka dostave predloge o radu panela i temama o kojima
ce ucesnici razgovarati. Buduci da je Gorica Gajevic odmah po
zavrsetku dogovora zurno spakovala svoje stvari i napustila salu,
odbijajuci da da bilo kakvu izjavu novinarima, odgovor na pitanje,
da li ce panel ako u njemu budu ucestvovale samo dve vladajuce
stranke imati smisla, predstavnik Nove demokratije Svetozar Krstic
je rekao da treba biti strpljiv i sacekati odgovor drugih
stranaka, jer panel ima smisla ako sve parlamentarne stranke
ucestvuju u njegovom radu.
MINISTAR DJUKIC POTVRDIO OSTAVKU
Ministar za privatno preduzetnistvo u Vladi Srbije Radoje Djukic
potvrdio je prekjuce da je podneo ostavku. On je Radiju B92 rekao
da je ostavku podneo 7. novembra, ali da Skupstina Srbije tek
treba da raspravlja o njoj.
vesti.1283corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 25. decembar 1996.
KULTURA
------------------------------------------------------------------
RASPLET U SKZ-U: POTVRDJENI OTKAZI
Glavni odbor Srpske knjizevne zadruge, najvisi organ ove
institucije, na preksinocnoj sednici potvrdio je odluke
Predsednistva i Nadzornog odbora, kojima su dati otkazi: upravniku
Aleksandru Stanojevicu, komercijalnom direktoru Veljku Zikicu,
direktoru marketinga Draganu Jerkovicu, dok je finansijski
direktor Nikola Sindjelic suspendovan. Glavni odbor navodi da je
Nadzorni odbor konstatovao kako su pomenuta cetvorica skrivali od
Nadzornog odbora podatke o finansijskom stanju i rezultatima
poslovanja, da je njihovim radom Zadruga dosla u tesku finansijsku
situaciju, a da su uprkos takvim prilikama sebi isplacivali
posebne stimulanse ne vodeci racuna o poraznim rezultatima
poslovanja. Ovi samozvani direktori, posto su suspendovani,
neovlasceno su napisali resenja o otkazima glavnom uredniku i
tehnickom uredniku, sto je iskljucivo u nadleznosti Predsednistva
i Upravnog odbora.
PREMIJERA ,,KOMEDIJE''
Diplomski rad Ivana M. Lalica iz 1991. godine, ,,Puritanska
komedija'', za koju je dobio i nagradu ,,Branislav Nusic'',
premijerno treba da se izvede na Maloj sceni Narodnog pozorista u
Beogradu. Reditelj je Bozidar Djurovic. U ovom komadu ,,o nasilju
nad sopstvenom prirodom'' igraju Milan Mihailovic, Aleksandra
Nikolic, Gojko Baletic, Dobrila Cirkovic, Ognjanka Ognjanovic
Zutic, Predrag Tasovac... Ovih dana, u Zvezdara teatru, reditelj
Gorcin Stojanovic poceo je probe novog Lalicevog komada.
U CENTRU ,,SAVA'' PREDSTAVICE SE BALETSKI IGRACI I MUZICARI KOJI
SE SKOLUJU U INOSTRANSTVU
Gala koncert u ogranizaciji republickog Ministarstva za kulturu,
koji je odrzan u beogradskom Centru ,,Sava'', predstavio je mlade
i talentovane muzicare i baletske igrace koji se skoluju u
inostranstvu. Jedna od ucesnica je i sedamnaestogodisnja balerina
Tatjana Paunovic, koju je 1992. godine, kao ucenicu baletske skole
,,Lujo Davico'', na ,,Benetonovoj'' smotri baleta u Italiji,
zapazila gospodja Marika Bezobrazova, direktora akademije
klasicnog baleta ,,Princeza Grejs'', u Monte Karlu, i pozvala je u
svoju skolu kao stipendistu. Do sada je tokom skolovanja bila prva
u klasi, a uporedo nastupa i sa ansamblom akademije u predstavama
sirom Evrope.
Pripremio(la): Zoran Penevski
vesti.1284corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1322, drakce
(6.1322) Cet 26/12/1996 03:28, 7047 chr
:: Washington Post
----------------------------------------------------------------
Backers of Milosevic Attack Demonstrators
Serbian Socialists Arm, Pay Rally Participants
By John Pomfret
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, December 25 1996; Page A01
(c) The Washington Post
Fierce street fights erupted throughout downtown Belgrade today as
supporters of President Slobodan Milosevic clashed with his opponents in
an attempt by the Serbian leader to smash the opposition's peaceful
35-day campaign of protests against his nine-year rule.
In a day eerily reminiscent of those leading up to the overthrow of
Romanian Communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu and his execution on
Christmas Day 1989, one opposition supporter was shot in the head by a
man standing in a crowd of Milosevic loyalists, who had been bused into
Belgrade by his Socialist Party of Serbia and supplied with sticks and
metal rods. Doctors told news services that the victim's wound was not
life-threatening. Independent media reported that at least seven other
people were hospitalized with knife wounds and broken bones.
After today's clashes, Milosevic gave his first public address since the
opposition's daily protests began, speaking nervously and belligerently
on a makeshift podium, surrounded by the members of his governing
circle, including his wife, hard-line Marxist Mirjana Markovic.
The violence marked the first significant bloodshed in the 35 days of
marches in Belgrade and other Serbian cities since Milosevic's party
annulled several opposition victories in municipal elections held Nov.
17. The clashes threatened hopes that the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) could work out a compromise between
Milosevic and his political opponents -- a coalition of five opposition
parties called Together that wants its electoral victories restored. The
55-nation OSCE sent a delegation to Serbia on Friday and Saturday and is
expected to release recommendations this Friday.
Serbian analysts said today's events marked a defeat for Milosevic.
Since the start of the protests, he has lurched from one policy to
another as he attempted to quash the most sustained challenge to his
rule. Some analysts said Milosevic had tried to cause enough chaos today
to justify imposing martial law but had failed.
[In Washington, Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott said Milosevic
and his government were responsible for the clashes, news services
reported. "The Serbian authorities have flagrantly and provocatively
chosen to heighten tensions by bringing thousands of people into
Belgrade to confront the peaceful demonstrations by the opposition,"
Talbott declared.]
When the demonstrations began in November, Western diplomats contended
that Milosevic's hold on power could not be challenged. Now, after a
series of concessions to defuse the marches and today's clashes, several
Western officials said they believe Milosevic's position is as weak as
it has ever been.
Milos Vasic, a senior journalist at the respected Belgrade weekly Vreme,
said Milosevic's performance today was "pathetic."
While state-run TV claimed tonight that 500,000 people flocked to hear
the president's speech, for example, no more than 100,000 actually
showed up in Terazije Square in downtown Belgrade. And though his
supporters tried to draw opposition protesters into bigger battles, they
failed -- even though police were conspicuously absent from downtown
streets for more than two hours.
"Despite his great Socialist logistics, all his buses, Milosevic was
unable to muster more people than the opposition gets even on a bad
day," Vasic said. "Then he tried to have them destroy the opposition,
and in the end they were sent running out of town with stones, eggs and
everything else. It was a flop."
Vasic said the use of Socialist Party loyalists to attack the opposition
crowd and Milosevic's subsequent speech -- on a rickety platform planted
between the Hotel Moskva and a McDonald's along the Boulevard of Serbian
Rulers -- evoked the fall of Ceausescu.
"It reminded us of Ceausescu's last rally on Dec. 21," Vasic said. "Like
with this one today, his wife was there and he spouted all the old
slogans. And meanwhile you could hear whistles and shouts and jeers."
According to witnesses, violence erupted in Belgrade around noon today
when Socialist protesters massed near the headquarters of one opposition
group, the Democratic Party, and began jeering its supporters.
Milosevic loyalists had been bused to Belgrade as part of a Socialist
Party plan for a series of "counter-demonstrations" to show that people
in Serbia -- Yugoslavia's dominant republic -- still support the man who
is widely blamed for bringing war to the Balkans and ruining the
Yugoslav economy. Each protester was given a sandwich and the equivalent
of $10. Organizers also passed out sticks and metal rods to the
Socialist protesters, Serbian officials acknowledged.
For more than two hours, police stayed away from downtown Belgrade as
opposition supporters and Milosevic loyalists clashed along the
Boulevard of Serbian Rulers between the Square of the Republic, where
opposition supporters had massed, and Terazije Square, where Milosevic
ultimately would speak.
"The opposition's security people were trying to keep the two crowds
separated, but they were having a hard time because the police just
weren't around," said Dejan Anastasejevic. "People would run from one
side to the other, grab somebody out, beat him for a minute and then run
back."
A little before 3 p.m., hundreds of police officers in full riot gear
poured out of a nearby department store and began separating the crowds,
pushing the opposition protesters back toward the Square of the
Republic.
Milosevic's speech began shortly thereafter, and state-run TV Serbia
carried it live.
The Serbian president reiterated accusations that his opponents are
tools of Western powers intent on overthrowing his government. Milosevic
has seized on the presence of foreign flags at opposition rallies as
proof that they are funded by the United States and Germany.
"No one will destabilize Serbia, not from the inside or out," he
thundered, "and if they try, we will only emerge stronger."
"Slobo, Slobo," the crowd chanted. "We love you, Slobo."
"I love you, too," Milosevic replied.
Shortly after the speech, riot police again poured into the streets and
charged opposition supporters, beating dozens and firing several
canisters of tear gas into the crowd.
Ljubisa Ristic, a Communist and a close ally of Milosevic's wife, was on
the podium when Milosevic spoke. He said he does not view the event as a
defeat for the president.
"Today's demonstration was a very, very strong answer to the
opposition," he said. "It is an answer to their quisling mentality. It
is an answer to all those foreign flags at those horrible rallies. The
Serbian people can stand to be poor, but they can't stand that kind of
humiliation."
------------------------------------------------- 6.1322 --
vesti.1285corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1323, drakce
(6.1323) Cet 26/12/1996 03:28, 2970 chr
:: Washington Post
----------------------------------------------------------------
Citizens of Serbia
Wednesday, December 25 1996; Page A22
(c) The Washington Post
STREET VIOLENCE now threatens to produce a tense new phase in Serbia,
where, day after day, tens and hundreds of thousands of citizens have
been marching in peaceful protest. It is already one of the memorable
expressions of public opinion welling up from below in de-communization.
These citizens have created a possibility that no one expected when they
began demonstrating more than a month ago -- to loosen the grip of the
autocracy run by Slobodan Milosevic and to put Serbia on a path to
democracy. This could transform not only Serbia but the rest of the
former Yugoslavia, too.
The demonstrators seem a bit dazed to find themselves inventing a new
form of protracted peaceful protest and carrying it through with such
discipline and elan. Their immediate goal is to have Mr. Milosevic
reinstate the results of the November municipal elections that he lost
and then revoked. The longer-term goal is to replace the Serbian leader
-- the single person most responsible for the disintegration of
Yugoslavia, the subsequent Balkan wars and the misery that has
overwhelmed most of the region, not least Serbia.
So far the marches have maintained a working unity among resisters of
different persuasions -- nationalistic as well as democratic, members of
opposition parties as well as unattached citizens. The movement's
middle-class character and its felt requirement to maintain
international support appear to be making it more democratic as it goes
along.
At first Mr. Milosevic dismissed the potential and staying power of the
people rallying against him. Recently he was stung enough to launch
counter-demonstrations in the old rent-a-crowd communist mode. His
initial efforts flopped, badly embarrassing a regime whose
anti-democratic character was already firmly established. Yesterday, he
tried harder and bused into Belgrade a larger but still not notable
crowd. Some in the Milosevic circle may be leaning toward making a
tactical accommodation with the demonstrators. Others appear ready to
launch provocations against the opposition and to call in what is, at
80,000 well-armed men, Europe's strongest police force.
Led by the United States, the West is doing what it ought to do. It is
pressing the Belgrade regime hard to keep things peaceful, to permit
full political expression and to loosen its chokehold on the media.
Through the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, it is
searching for a political formula that will give Serbians the public
officials of their democratic choice. The Western countries are asking
Mr. Milosevic not simply to respect his full obligations to the Dayton
peace accords in Bosnia but also to permit a democratic process to
unfold in Serbia. The threat of a renewal and extension of economic
sanctions is being wielded to these elusive but essential ends.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1323 --
vesti.1286corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1324, drakce
(6.1324) Cet 26/12/1996 03:28, 7224 chr
:: Los Angeles Times
----------------------------------------------------------------
Wednesday, December 25, 1996
Blood Shed as Rallies Collide in Yugoslavia
<Picture> Balkans: Pro-democracy protesters clash with crowds
bused in by hard-line leader; one person is shot, others are
beaten. International criticism focuses on Serb president.
By TRACY WILKINSON, Times Staff Writer
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia--Riot police and demonstrators loyal to Serbian
President Slobodan Milosevic clashed with his opponents Tuesday in
running battles in the downtown streets here, shedding the first blood
since anti-government protests began more than a month ago.
The pro-Milosevic demonstration, with supporters bused in from all over
the country, and the violence it provoked appeared to further polarize
Serbian society and make more difficult a peaceful resolution to the
deepest political crisis faced by this regime.
Delivering his first public speech in Serbia in at least three years,
Milosevic addressed tens of thousands of supporters he had brought
together, warning that the generally pro-democracy opposition was a
"fifth column" backed by overseas powers dedicated to Serbia's
destruction.
"No one will split Serbia," Milosevic told the workers, retirees, miners
and farmers as they chanted, "We love you, Slobo." He told them, "Nobody
will destabilize Serbia."
The violence left one opposition supporter shot in the head and dozens
of people, including two Americans, hurt in scuffles or clubbed by
police who also fired tear gas. Until now, opposition demonstrations had
been peaceful.
International condemnation was swift.
"The Serbian authorities have flagrantly and provocatively chosen to
heighten tensions by bringing thousands of people into Belgrade to
confront the peaceful demonstrations by the opposition," U.S. Deputy
Secretary of State Strobe Talbott said in Washington. He placed the
blame for Tuesday's violence squarely on Milosevic and warned of
"serious consequences."
Despite Milosevic's proven ability to command an audience, turn-out for
the rally, billed "For Serbia," fell far below expectations. This raised
questions about Milosevic's next move. He remains vexed by the protests
that have been held every day since he annulled opposition victories in
Nov. 17 municipal elections. His strategy thus far, to simply wait out
his opponents, has not worked.
And opposition leaders also will be forced to face questions about
whether they can sustain the momentum that has propelled huge crowds
into the streets day after day--especially now that Milosevic has
unleashed the heavy hand of the police force.
In concrete terms, the opposition coalition--known as Zajedno, or
Together--has little to show for its efforts.
Tuesday's confrontations in Belgrade--the Yugoslav and Serbian
capital--were completely foreseeable. Supporters of Milosevic's ruling
leftist coalition were ordered to the city, then herded to the downtown
Trazije Square just two blocks from the daily site of anti-government
demonstrations. The pro-Milosevic rally was timed to coincide with the
anti-Milosevic march.
Even before the appointed hour, the fights began. * * *
Small units of Socialists, carrying Serbian flags and Milosevic
pictures, tried to shuffle to their meeting site. But they were blocked
by opposition supporters, who tore away and destroyed their placards.
The rival groups then faced off around an elaborate stage set up for
Milosevic, hurling at each other insults, firecrackers, oranges and
bottles filled with colorful liquids.
"Thieves!" the opposition activists screamed.
"Traitors!" the Milosevic group countered.
Two hours after the first skirmishes, and as a light snow fell, long
lines of helmeted police troops snaked through the crowds, separating
the two sides, then pushing the opposition protesters back from the
Milosevic bandstand. Several people, including four news photographers,
were beaten by police.
Once Milosevic spoke from the brightly lighted stage and his followers
dispersed, police moved on to the opposition rally down the street. They
let loose with tear gas after being taunted by youths; the troops
charged, batons swinging, several times over the ensuing hours.
Opposition leaders, from their fifth-floor balcony overlooking the
clashes, pleaded with their followers to go home. Several weeping older
women begged the police to stop. Police at one point chased people all
the way into the lobby of the opposition's headquarters.
Milosevic clearly hoped to exploit the class differences between the
Belgrade elite heading the opposition demonstrations and their
better-educated followers and his blue-collar, less-sophisticated
supporters bused in from villages and farms.
Most of those who had been transported into the city seemed bewildered
and frightened. Several said they had no idea they would be placed so
near their rivals. With nothing but state television for information,
most probably believed the propaganda that the opposition movement was a
small, violent band of hooligans.
"They say they're fighting for democracy, then they won't let us have
our demonstration," moaned a grizzled, denim-clad worker from a machine
factory in the town of Aleksinace.
By day's end, each side was accusing the other of trying to provoke
civil war.
"Do you know what Milosevic wants?" asked shop clerk Ljiljana Petrovic,
35, who supports the opposition. "He wants the people to fight [so] then
he can impose a kind of martial law. . . . I don't blame these people
who came here today. I only blame Milosevic."
"We are just Belgrade citizens looking for change," said computer
science student Goran Stevanovic, 25. "This shows Milosevic cannot rule
the country without violence. He needs war."
* * *
Milosevic proved he has the state apparatus at his disposal with the
marshaling of buses and the provision of a stage--a professional touch
for such public events.
But his failure to rally more support in Serbia--which with tiny
Montenegro makes up the rump Yugoslavia--must have disappointed
Milosevic.
While state television reported that 500,000 people were present,
Western diplomats estimated Milosevic's crowd at less than 10% of
that--and less than half of what Zajedno gathered.
"He still needs to demonstrate his power before he can demonstrate his
generosity; otherwise, he looks weak," said a Western diplomat. "This is
a guy who looks like he is hunkering down."
While Christmas is not celebrated until next month in Orthodox
Yugoslavia, diplomats suggested that Milosevic planned Tuesday's
violence for a time when most of the Western capitals that would
criticize him would be distracted by their holiday celebrations.
"For the majority of the world, this is a day of peace and
reconciliation," said Miodrag Perisic, vice president of the opposition
Democratic Party. "By choosing to do this today, Milosevic puts himself
outside the rest of the world. If anyone had any illusions about his
role as guarantor of peace and stability, this is a clear message to the
Western world and to the Christian world."
Copyright Los Angeles Times
------------------------------------------------- 6.1324 --
vesti.1287corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1325, drakce
(6.1325) Cet 26/12/1996 03:28, 4717 chr
:: Associated Press
----------------------------------------------------------------
Yugo War of Words Escalates
By JUDITH INGRAM
Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, December 25, 1996 3:55 pm EST
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Slobodan Milosevic's supporters from the
countryside called Wednesday for ``tough action'' against opposition
demonstrators, and the Serbian president's Socialist Party demanded they
be punished.
Opposition leaders and students vowed to keep up their protests, but
many wondered whether Milosevic would use Tuesday's violence as an
excuse to crush the opposition.
The clashes between government supporters and opponents left 58 people
injured, including one man who suffered a gunshot wound. It was the
worst violence in Serbia in five years.
There were no signs of a crackdown Wednesday as 100,000 protesters
marched through Belgrade without incident, their 36th day in the
streets.
Earlier in the day, 10,000 student marchers carried sponges, brooms and
plastic bottles filled with soapy water to wash down the spot where
Milosevic's supporters rallied Tuesday. ``Arrest Slobo!'' they chanted.
The air vibrated with shrill whistles, and an occasional firecracker
popped. While the mood was festive, marshals with walkie-talkies
monitored the demonstration carefully to prevent any provocation.
``The idea is to have pressure from all sides,'' said Bojan Radinovic,
24, an agronomy student at Belgrade University, who blew a whistle as he
slogged through the slush. ``We want to have authorities that can be
replaced.''
The students addressed a letter to Milosevic on Wednesday, accusing him
of bringing Belgrade ``to the edge of civil war.''
Opposition leaders claimed that Milosevic was planning to ban the
pro-democracy protests. The government did not confirm that claim.
Still, Milosevic supporters demanded ``tough action'' against the
demonstrators, saying they came to the capital ``to save Serbia and
Belgrade'' from the opposition, but were greeted by ``hooligans''
hurling stones and eggs.
In a separate statement carried on state media, the ruling Socialist
Party called for ``punishment of the perpetrators for their brutal
attacks against peaceful citizens'' at the pro-Milosevic rally.
Milosevic all but programmed Tuesday's street battle by urging
government supporters to rally at the same site where the opposition has
been protesting regularly since his annulment of opposition victories in
the Nov. 17 elections.
Milosevic's supporters and opponents clashed repeatedly and police
weighed in with batons against the president's detractors. A man shot by
a gunner among Milosevic's supporters remained in critical condition.
The president's backers apparently were trying to orchestrate a
groundswell of support for a crackdown. But it was doubtful how much
they could drum up. Only about 50,000 took part in Tuesday's
pro-Milosevic rally. They were far outnumbered by the 300,000 opposition
protesters.
Most of the Milosevic supporters -- elderly and blue-collar workers
bused in from provincial towns -- appeared stunned by the level of
opposition support.
Many have received news only from Serbia's state-run TV, which has not
offered a clear picture of the opposition and its demands. Milosevic has
virtually ignored the protests -- the largest since he came to power in
1987.
A Socialist Party office in Nis, 150 miles south of Belgrade, was bombed
overnight, police said. There were no injuries.
In a sign that Milosevic's grip on power may be weakening, the prime
minister of Montenegro -- Serbia's junior partner in the Yugoslav
federation -- warned on Wednesday that his republic would take steps to
protect itself from further international isolation resulting from
Milosevic's policies.
The leadership of Montenegro has been sympathetic to the Serbian
opposition since the protests began. Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic said
Montenegro was prepared to conduct its own foreign policy if Serbia did
not work harder to rejoin the international community, the Fonet
independent news agency reported.
Even Moscow, long sympathetic to the Serbs, said it was seriously
concerned about the growing tension.
``The current crisis can and must be overcome by means of a political
dialogue involving all democratic forces,'' the Russian foreign ministry
said in a statement Wednesday. ``Violence and actions provoking clashes
and confrontation must be excluded.''
Milosevic triggered fighting in Bosnia in 1992 and supported Bosnian
Serb nationalists throughout the nearly four-year war. He abandoned them
in 1995, bowing to Western pressure and taking on the new role of
peacemaker.
(c) Copyright 1996 The Associated Press
------------------------------------------------- 6.1325 --
vesti.1288corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1326, drakce
(6.1326) Cet 26/12/1996 03:28, 1467 chr
:: Associated Press
----------------------------------------------------------------
Independence From Serbia Urged
Wednesday, December 25, 1996 6:01 pm EST
PRISTINA, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Apparently buoyed by pro-democracy protests
elsewhere in Serbia, ethnic Albanian students in the southern Kosovo
province urged their leader Wednesday to work harder for independence
from Serbia.
Almost 600 students sent a petition to Ibrahim Rugova, the leader of the
Albanian community of 1.7 million, demanding more aggressive action
toward achieving independence for Kosovo.
Ninety percent of the province's residents are ethnic Albanians. In
1989, Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic, revoked their autonomy. For
the last six years, Albanians have boycotted state health clinics,
schools and universities in protest.
The students attend a makeshift, Albanian-only university despite an
agreement between Rugova and Milosevic earlier this year that would
permit them to create their own curriculum in the state university
system.
The students also asked Rugova to give a more prominent role to Adem
Demaci, a radical Albanian activist who is considered a rival to Rugova.
Demaci opposes Rugova's strictly non-violent efforts to gain
independence for Kosovo.
In the Serbian capital Belgrade and other towns, hundreds of thousands
of Serbs have been demonstrating for weeks against Milosevic's annulment
of November local elections, which the opposition claims to have won.
(c) Copyright 1996 The Associated Press
------------------------------------------------- 6.1326 --
vesti.1289corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1327, drakce
(6.1327) Cet 26/12/1996 03:28, 4945 chr
:: Associated Press
----------------------------------------------------------------
Socialists Call for Punishment
By JUDITH INGRAM
Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, December 25, 1996 7:18 pm EST
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Slobodan Milosevic's supporters from the
countryside called Wednesday for ``tough action'' against opposition
demonstrators, and the Serbian president's Socialist Party demanded they
be punished.
Opposition leaders and students vowed to keep up their protests, but
many wondered whether Milosevic would use Tuesday's violence as an
excuse to crush the opposition.
The clashes between government supporters and opponents left 58 people
injured, including one man who suffered a gunshot wound. It was the
worst violence in Serbia in five years.
There were no signs of a crackdown Wednesday as 100,000 protesters
marched through Belgrade without incident, their 36th day in the
streets.
Earlier in the day, 10,000 student marchers carried sponges, brooms and
plastic bottles filled with soapy water to wash down the spot where
Milosevic's supporters rallied Tuesday. ``Arrest Slobo!'' they chanted.
The air vibrated with shrill whistles, and an occasional firecracker
popped. While the mood was festive, marshals with walkie-talkies
monitored the demonstration carefully to prevent any provocation.
``The idea is to have pressure from all sides,'' said Bojan Radinovic,
24, an agronomy student at Belgrade University, who blew a whistle as he
slogged through the slush. ``We want to have authorities that can be
replaced.''
The students addressed a letter to Milosevic on Wednesday, accusing him
of bringing Belgrade ``to the edge of civil war.''
Opposition leaders claimed that Milosevic was planning to ban the
pro-democracy protests. The government did not confirm that claim.
Still, Milosevic supporters demanded ``tough action'' against the
demonstrators, saying they came to the capital ``to save Serbia and
Belgrade'' from the opposition, but were greeted by ``hooligans''
hurling stones and eggs.
In a separate statement carried on state media, the ruling Socialist
Party called for ``punishment of the perpetrators for their brutal
attacks against peaceful citizens'' at the pro-Milosevic rally.
Police, in a statement read on state television late Wednesday night,
warned that all rallies must be organized in accordance with
regulations. One of those rules is that rallies cannot be held in the
center of cities.
Milosevic all but programmed Tuesday's street battle by urging
government supporters to rally at the same site where the opposition has
been protesting regularly since his annulment of opposition victories in
the Nov. 17 elections.
Milosevic's supporters and opponents clashed repeatedly and police
weighed in with batons against the president's detractors. A man shot by
a gunner among Milosevic's supporters remained in critical condition.
The president's backers apparently were trying to orchestrate a
groundswell of support for a crackdown. But it was doubtful how much
they could drum up. Only about 50,000 took part in Tuesday's
pro-Milosevic rally. They were far outnumbered by the 300,000 opposition
protesters.
Most of the Milosevic supporters -- elderly and blue-collar workers
bused in from provincial towns -- appeared stunned by the level of
opposition support.
Many have received news only from Serbia's state-run TV, which has not
offered a clear picture of the opposition and its demands. Milosevic has
virtually ignored the protests -- the largest since he came to power in
1987.
A Socialist Party office in Nis, 150 miles south of Belgrade, was bombed
overnight, police said. There were no injuries.
In a sign that Milosevic's grip on power may be weakening, the prime
minister of Montenegro -- Serbia's junior partner in the Yugoslav
federation -- warned on Wednesday that his republic would take steps to
protect itself from further international isolation resulting from
Milosevic's policies.
The leadership of Montenegro has been sympathetic to the Serbian
opposition since the protests began. Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic said
Montenegro was prepared to conduct its own foreign policy if Serbia did
not work harder to rejoin the international community, the Fonet
independent news agency reported.
Even Moscow, long sympathetic to the Serbs, said it was seriously
concerned about the growing tension.
``The current crisis can and must be overcome by means of a political
dialogue involving all democratic forces,'' the Russian foreign ministry
said in a statement Wednesday. ``Violence and actions provoking clashes
and confrontation must be excluded.''
Milosevic triggered fighting in Bosnia in 1992 and supported Bosnian
Serb nationalists throughout the nearly four-year war. He abandoned them
in 1995, bowing to Western pressure and taking on the new role of
peacemaker.
(c) Copyright 1996 The Associated Press
------------------------------------------------- 6.1327 --
vesti.1290corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1328, drakce
(6.1328) Cet 26/12/1996 03:28, 5138 chr
:: USA Today
----------------------------------------------------------------
12/25/96 - 03:16 PM ET
Students 'decontaminate' Belgrade after pro-Milosevic rally
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia - Thousands of Slobodan Milosevic's foes used
brooms, brushes and detergent Wednesday to "decontaminate" the site
where a gathering of the Serbian president's supporters prompted bloody
clashes between the two sides.
Tuesday's confrontation - the most violent in more than five years -
fueled the hatred between the autocratic leader and a growing opposition
that has filled the streets daily for more than a month to rail against
his annulment of local election results.
Heeding Milosevic's call to demonstrate in his support, protesters
traded blows with opposition supporters, who were then clubbed by riot
police. At least one person was shot by a gunman in a crowd of Milosevic
backers. Fifty-seven others were treated for injuries.
Wednesday, about 10,000 marching students returned to downtown Terazije
Square, chanting "We hate you Slobo."
"We wanted to decontaminate the spot where Milosevic's supporters
brought us mud and dirt," said student spokesman Sasa Petrovic, as the
demonstrators swept the pavement with detergent, brooms and brushes.
Later in the day, 100,000 opposition supporters, braving cold and snow,
flooded Belgrade streets for their 35th day of protests against the
Serbian president.
Opposition leaders claimed Wednesday that Milosevic was planning to ban
the pro-democracy protests, which until Tuesday had been relatively
peaceful. The government did not confirm that claim.
"We have information that Mr. Milosevic yesterday made the decision to
ban all gatherings and that now his (security) services are looking into
ways to make the ban operational," said Zoran Djindjic, an opposition
leader.
Milosevic all but programmed Tuesday's street battle by urging
government supporters to rally at the same site where the opposition has
been protesting regularly since his cancellation of what appeared to be
opposition victories in the Nov. 17 elections.
Protesting students sent a letter to Milosevic Wednesday, accusing him
of bringing Belgrade "to the edge of civil war."
"Only thanks to the enormous restraint of citizens, and great luck, the
catastrophe was avoided," said the letter. "We demand that you behave as
the president of all citizens of Serbia."
But a statement from Milosevic supporters, read on state radio, demanded
"tough action" against the opposition protesters. It said pro-Milosevic
forces had come to the capital "to save Serbia and Belgrade" from the
opposition, but were greeted by "hooligans" who hurled stones and eggs.
In a separate statement, carried by the state-run Tanjug news agency,
Milosevic's Socialist Party blasted the opposition for "terrorist
policy" and "armed attacks" against the Milosevic supporters.
It called for "the punishment of the perpetrators for their brutal
attacks against peaceful citizens."
Heavily armed forces intervened numerous times against the 300,000
opposition supporters who flooded downtown Belgrade on Tuesday, near
where Milosevic supporters assembled for their rally.
Swinging clubs, police waded into the crowds, separating anti- and
pro-government groups and shielding the Milosevic supporters. Although
state news media said 500,000 attended the pro-government gathering,
independent estimates put the crowd at no more than 50,000 - some true
supporters, others coerced into coming by threats they would lose their
jobs if they didn't.
Most of the Milosevic supporters - elderly and blue-collar workers bused
into the capital from provincial towns - appeared stunned by the level
of opposition support.
Many have received news only from Serbia's state-run TV, which has
created a distorted picture of the opposition and its demands.
Milosevic has virtually ignored the opposition protests - the largest
since he came to power in 1987. But he appeared at Tuesday's rally to
accuse opposition leaders of being foreign lackeys intent on Serbia's
breakup.
"Strong Serbia is not to the liking of some powers abroad, and that's
why they are trying to break it up with the help of the domestic
traitors," he said. "We, of course, won't let it happen."
The shooting victim, Ivica Lazovic, was in critical condition Wednesday,
said Rade Vasilic of Belgrade's main Emergency Hospital Center.
Four other injured were hospitalized, three with fractured limbs and one
with a concussion.
The U.S. Embassy in Belgrade said there was an "incident" involving two
Americans, but refused to elaborate, citing their right to privacy.
The last comparable violence in the capital was in March 1991, when, on
the eve of the outbreak of war in the former Yugoslavia, Milosevic used
tanks to quell opposition protests. Two people were killed.
At the time, Milosevic skillfully fanned nationalism as Yugoslavia
careened toward collapse; the opposition was divided and Milosevic had
full backing of the powerful Yugoslav army.
The opposition has since swelled and grown increasingly unified.
By The Associated Press
------------------------------------------------- 6.1328 --
vesti.1291sav.gacic,
-> #1177, dpaun> mislima - čuh izvesnu drugaricu Zoricu Sporić kako govori u ime
> radničkog Majdanpeka! O, njene misli postadoše moje misli! Još da nije
> onako spržena baba-devojka, pa da nam se i tela spoje, pomislio bih da
> je sam Bog udesio ovaj trenutak mog povratka na Sezam.)
Sa ovim u vezi koristim priliku da se na nivou sistema organizujemo, formiramo
komisiju i delegiramo nekog od eminentnih aktivista ovdašnjih da u formi
interventne brigade istoj otvore oči,
pardon, skinu mrak...
:)
vesti.1292corto,
Preuzeto sa Pro-a:
================================
Forum, Mediji.1333, drakce
(6.1333) Cet 26/12/1996 13:45, 3248 chr
:: Associated Press
----------------------------------------------------------------
Yugoslavia Cops Ban Protests
By JUDITH INGRAM
Associated Press Writer
Thursday, December 26, 1996 5:52 am EST
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Police banned demonstrations throughout
Serbia and said they would intervene if any went ahead. But opposition
leaders said today that they would continue their month-old protests
anyway.
The ban on demonstrations, read on state-run television Wednesday night,
was among several indications that President Slobodan Milosevic would
crack down on the protests, which are the most serious challenge to his
nine-year rule.
The ruling Socialist Party called Wednesday for tough action against the
tens of thousands of people who have demonstrated against Milosevic in
Belgrade each day for more than a month.
Demonstrators have clogged streets in the capital, Belgrade, since
courts loyal to Milosevic annulled Nov. 17 municipal elections that the
opposition had won. Other, smaller demonstrations have taken place in
other towns across Serbia.
The protests were peaceful until Tuesday, when clashes between Milosevic
supporters and opposition members injured 58 people. Opposition
supporters accused Milosevic of provoking the violence to give him an
excuse to crack down on the protests.
``Police will no longer tolerate the blocking of traffic and therefore
it warns organizers of demonstrations ... police will intervene in
accordance with the law to protect the rights of citizens,'' the police
statement read.
Vuk Draskovic, an opposition leader, said today that the protests would
continue.
``I will continue marching and I am calling on the citizens to march
along with me,'' he said.
Students planned to go ahead with their daily protest march through
central Belgrade today. The march is usually followed by an evening
protest of the opposition coalition Zajedno, or Together.
Hundreds of riot police bused into the capital ahead of Tuesday's
clashes are still in Belgrade.
The official Tanjug news agency reported that opposition supporters
stoned and smashed glass doors of the Socialist Party office in Uzice,
120 miles south of Belgrade, on Wednesday. An attack also was reported
Wednesday on Socialist offices in Nis, Serbia's second-largest city.
Neither of the reports could be confirmed independently. State-run news
media have sought throughout the crisis to portray opposition members as
rowdies and hooligans.
On Tuesday, at a Belgrade rally orchestrated to show he has popular
support, Milosevic painted opposition members as lackeys of unnamed
foreign powers he said want to weaken Serbia.
Milosevic had called a rally for the same time and place as his
opposition. About 50,000 people took part in the pro-Milosevic
demonstration; about 300,000 were in the opposition protest.
Police weighed in, beating anti-Milosevic demonstrators and several news
photographers. One man was shot and seriously wounded by a gunman
standing among Milosevic supporters.
On Wednesday, Milosevic's rural backers called for tough action against
demonstrators, and his Socialist Party demanded punishment of those who
attacked citizens attending the pro-Milosevic rally.
(c) Copyright 1996 The Associated Press
------------------------------------------------- 6.1333 --
vesti.1293corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1334, drakce
(6.1334) Cet 26/12/1996 13:45, 2275 chr, +radio.jpg 11k
:: CNN
----------------------------------------------------------------
Dissidents and rebels turn to the Internet
<Picture: computer>December 25, 1996
Web posted at: 11:10 p.m. EST
From Bureau Chief Greg Lefevre
SAN FRANCISCO (CNN) -- Governments around the world are confronted by a
new and powerful vehicle for dissent: the Internet.
The forces of both subversion and freedom are finding a useful tool in
the Internet, as illustrated earlier this month by the ongoing
opposition protests in Serbia.
When Serbian police shut down an independent radio station, it kept
right on broadcasting over the Internet -- spreading the word about
opposition protest marches in the former Yugoslavia.
<Picture: radio station>
Observers say the Internet is a great tool to allow international
pressure to be applied to repressive regimes.
So when Peruvian officials quietly arrested Rodolfo Robles, a critic of
death squads, his story was beamed worldwide over the Internet in a
matter of hours. Eventually, he was set free.
Whether the subject is human rights in Bosnia, disappearances in
Argentina or Shining Path communist rebels in Peru, the Internet
provides a worldwide pulpit.
And as more and more people plug into the computer network, its
influence continues to grow.
Some governments are starting to catch on. China, for one, has blocked
its citizens access to some World Wide Web areas, including CNN and
other news sites.
Ironically, some stifling of the Internet may come from the champion of
human rights: the United States.
<Picture: Tiananmen Square>
Amnesty International says that some of its files on some governments'
torture tactics are so graphic that they may violate the U.S.
Communications Decency Act now being argued in the courts.
Meanwhile, human rights Web sites feature the usual e-mail forms but
also the more ominous missing person form. The Internet is being used to
search for missing people in places like Bosnia.
Much as the fax machine was a key instrument in coordinating the Chinese
protests in 1989, the Internet is playing a role in the human rights hot
spots of the 1990s, from Burma to Tibet.
All it takes to post information to the rest of the world is an old
personal computer and a slow modem.
(c) 1996 Cable News Network, Inc.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1334 --
================================
Forum, Mediji.1335, bojt
(6.1335) Cet 26/12/1996 14:26, 638 chr
Odgovor na 6.1329, kile, Cet 26/12/1996 09:42
----------------------------------------------------------------
>> >> >> Evo kratkog filma (.MOV fajl) na kome se vidi kako je nesrecni
>> >> >> covek pogoden (tj. kako su pucali na njega) na demonstracijama.
>> >> >> Preuzeto sa www.cnn.com.
>> >> Samo jedna ispravka, fajl treba preimenovati u CNN.MOV - dakle,
>> >> to nije ZIP arhiva, greskom sam otkucao ime. Izvinjavam se.
>> Izvini, ali ja ovde sem sorke i mlataranja letvama od transparenata
>> nista drugo nisam video. Gresim li?
Da, tu nema pucnja. Ja sam taj MOV (yugo.clash.22.988.mov) skinuo sa
cnn-a. Prvo mi je bilo cudno sto je dejanr-ov ZIP iste duzine kao
moj MOV, al' reko' slucajno, pa sam ga ipak dzaba skidao. ;)
------------------------------------------------- 6.1335 --
Poruka 3, 6k teksta
Datoteka 1, 11k
vesti.1294corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1341, drakce
(6.1341) Cet 26/12/1996 18:51, 4110 chr
:: Associated Press
----------------------------------------------------------------
Belgrade Protest Ban Defied
By JUDITH INGRAM
Associated Press Writer
Thursday, December 26, 1996 9:36 am EST
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Thousands of students Thursday defied a new
police ban on opposition protests amid threats of a crackdown on the
most serious challenge to the nine-year rule of Serbian President
Slobodan Milosevic.
The first death in the current turmoil -- a 39-year-old man injured
after Milosevic supporters beat demonstrators in Belgrade on Tuesday --
was reported Thursday by the opposition and independent media.
In cold wind and light snow, about 10,000 students brushed aside a
warning from police not to start their march Thursday. A ranking police
officer, who declined to give his name, said he had orders to break up
the protest.
The students were not harassed. But thousands of riot police were
deployed in the center of Belgrade ahead of a larger rally planned later
in the day.
A police warning read on state television late Wednesday announced the
ban on demonstrations across Serbia and promised intervention if
protesters clogged traffic, as they have nightly for more than a month.
``Police will no longer tolerate the blocking of traffic and therefore
it warns organizers of demonstrations ... police will intervene in
accordance with the law to protect the rights of citizens,'' the police
statement read.
But opposition leaders said they would not be cowed.
``I'm calling on our supporters to ignore the ban,'' said Vuk Draskovic,
a leader of the opposition coalition Zajedno, or Together. ``If we show
we are afraid now, tomorrow they may forbid us to drink water or breathe
air.''
Some students Thursday carried long strings of garlic they said were
their defense against ``Communist vampires.'' Balkan superstition holds
that garlic wards off evil spirits.
``We will march ... until they fulfill our demands,'' said student
leader Cedomir Jovanovic.
Demonstrators have clogged streets in the capital since courts loyal to
Milosevic annulled Nov. 17 municipal elections won by the opposition.
Smaller demonstrations have been taking place in other towns across
Serbia.
The protests were peaceful until Tuesday, when clashes between Milosevic
supporters and opposition members injured 58 people. Police weighed in,
beating anti-Milosevic demonstrators and several news photographers. One
man was shot and seriously wounded by a gunman standing among Milosevic
supporters.
Opposition backers accused Milosevic of provoking the violence -- the
president called on supporters to rally at the same place and same time
as opposition demonstrators -- to give him an excuse to crack down on
the protests. Hundreds of riot police were bused into the capital before
Tuesday's clashes.
The official Tanjug news agency reported that opposition supporters
stoned and smashed glass doors of the Socialist Party office in Uzice,
120 miles south of Belgrade, on Wednesday. An attack also was reported
Wednesday on Socialist offices in Nis, Serbia's second-largest city.
Neither of the reports could be confirmed independently. Throughout the
crisis, state-run news media have sought to portray opposition members
as rowdies and hooligans.
Despite Wednesday's stern police warning, federal police minister
Vukasin Jokanovic told reporters in the Serbian parliament Thursday that
police would not intervene ``if demonstrators do not jeopardize the
traffic.'' The statement seemed designed to prevent a further erosion of
support for Milosevic, who faces his most serious challenge since taking
power in 1987.
Student radio Index reported Thursday that Predrag Starcevic is the
first casualty of the uprising against Milosevic. Rade Vasilic, a doctor
at Belgrade's Emergency Hospital, told Index that Starcevic died Tuesday
night.
Opposition leader Vesna Pesic said Starcevic was beaten up near one of
the Sava river bridges that link old and new Belgrade. The protesting
students held a minute of silence for him Thursday.
(c) Copyright 1996 The Associated Press
------------------------------------------------- 6.1341 --
vesti.1295corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1342, drakce
(6.1342) Cet 26/12/1996 18:51, 4378 chr
:: Associated Press
----------------------------------------------------------------
60,000 Protest in Belgrade
By JUDITH INGRAM
Associated Press Writer
Thursday, December 26, 1996 12:14 pm EST
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- About 60,000 opposition supporters today
defied hordes of riot police and a ban on protests, increasing pressure
on Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic to stamp out unrest -- or make
concessions.
Thousands of well-armed riot police encircled the daily opposition rally
on Belgrade's downtown Republic Square, but allowed the crowd to
disperse peacefully down one small street left open by the police
cordon.
Although the police presence and announced ban on protests cut turnout
from the regular 100,000, opposition leaders saw today's rally -- held
in a cold wind and light snow -- as a victory.
``Today we scored another triumph over Milosevic, showing we are not
afraid of his police,'' said Vesna Pesic, a leader of the opposition
coalition Zajedno, or Together. ``The police should think over who is
leading them.''
Milosevic ``is cornered, in panic,'' exulted another opposition leader,
Zoran Djindjic. ``We don't know how long he can survive, but we can
endure at least one day longer.''
Another opposition leader, Vuk Draskovic, told the crowd that at least
one elite army unit -- commandos based in Serbia's second-largest city,
Nis -- had come out in open support of the opposition. His claim could
not be independently verified. If true, it would indicate Milosevic is
losing ground in one traditional bastion of support: the military.
Demonstrators have clogged streets in the capital since courts loyal to
Milosevic annulled Nov. 17 municipal elections won by the opposition.
Smaller demonstrations have been taking place in other towns across
Serbia.
The first death in the current turmoil -- that of a 39-year-old man
injured when Milosevic supporters beat demonstrators in Belgrade on
Tuesday -- was reported today by the opposition and independent media.
Some 10,000 students, whose daily rallies precede those held by Zajedno,
held a minute of silence for the deceased.
The students and opposition supporters ignored a police warning read on
state television late Wednesday banning demonstrations across Serbia and
promising intervention if protesters clogged traffic, as they have in
Belgrade for the past 35 days.
``I'm calling on our supporters to ignore the ban,'' Draskovic said this
morning. ``If we show we are afraid now, tomorrow they may forbid us to
drink water or breathe air.''
Some students carried strings of garlic which they said was their
defense against ``Communist vampires.'' Balkan superstition has it that
garlic wards off evil spirits.
``We will march ... until they fulfill our demands,'' said student
leader Cedomir Jovanovic. Their demonstration ended without incident.
Despite the stern police warning and the amassing of police forces
today, federal Police Minister Vukasin Jokanovic had told reporters that
police would not intervene ``if demonstrators do not jeopardize the
traffic.''
Any police crackdown could further erode support for Milosevic, who is
facing the most serious challenge since taking power in 1987.
On Tuesday, violence erupted for the first time in Belgrade. The clashes
between anti- and pro-Milosevic factions left 58 people injured. Police
weighed in, beating anti-Milosevic demonstrators and several news
photographers. One man was shot and seriously wounded by a gunman
standing among Milosevic supporters.
Opposition leaders accused Milosevic of provoking the bloodshed by
scheduling a rally of supporters at the same time and place as the daily
opposition protest, saying he was looking for an excuse to crack down.
On Wednesday, Milosevic's ruling Socialist party and other backers
called for tough action against the the opposition demonstrators.
The official Tanjug news agency reported that opposition supporters
stoned and smashed glass doors of the Socialist Party office in Uzice,
120 miles south of Belgrade, on Wednesday. An attack also was reported
Wednesday on Socialist offices in Nis, Serbia's second-largest city.
Neither of the reports could be confirmed independently. Throughout the
crisis, state-run news media have sought to portray opposition members
as rowdies and hooligans.
(c) Copyright 1996 The Associated Press
------------------------------------------------- 6.1342 --
vesti.1296corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1343, drakce
(6.1343) Cet 26/12/1996 18:52, 425 chr, +zajedno.jpg 10k
:: Reuter
----------------------------------------------------------------
BELGRADE, 26 DEC 96 - The leaders of the Serbian opposition, Zajedno Vuk
Drazkovic (L), Vesna Pesic (R) and Zoran Dzinjic (L), wave to supporters
during a protest against election rigging, in Belgrade December 26.
Opposition protesters in Belgrade held a rally in Republic Square but
did not march through the city as usual because police cordons were
blocking the main streets. gb/op/
Photo by Oleg Popov REUTERS
------------------------------------------------- 6.1343 --
vesti.1297corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 13 sati, 26. decembar 1996.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Svi tekstovi su Copyright 1996 Radija B92. SVA PRAVA ZADRZANA.
------------------------------------------------------------------
MUP ZABRANJUJE OMETANJE SAOBRACAJA
------------------------------------------------------------------
PREMINUO DEMONSTRANT PREDRAG STARCEVIC
Predrag Starcevic, rodjen 1957. u Beogradu, simpatizer koalicije
,,Zajedno'', ucesnik u demonstracijama u Beogradu 24. decembra,
preminuo je te veceri u Urgentnom centru u Beogradu. Kako je
Radiju B92 saopstio dr Rade Vasilic iz Urgentnog centra, Starcevic
je bio pregledan u bolnici u Zemunu, odakle je prebacen u Urgentni
centar, gde je nakon par minuta preminuo. ,,S obzirom na sve te
okolnosti, mi nismo stigli da izvrsimo dijagnostiku. U toku je
obdukcija'', izjavio je dr Vasilic i potvrdio da je, prema
lekarskim izvestajima iz Zemunske bolnice, Predrag Starcevic
povredjen tokom demonstracija. Od jutros nismo uspeli da u
Klinicko-bolnickom centru Zemun saznamo bilo kakvu informaciju o
Predragu Starcevicu, cak ni podatak da li je uopste i bio primljen
u bolnicu. Kako pise danasnji ,,Blic'', Starcevic je nakon
demonstracija 24. decembra krenuo oko 17 casova kuci na Novi
Beograd preko mosta Gazela i oko 18 casova mu se izgubio svaki
trag. Kako je policija nezvanicno rekla roditeljima, na Gazeli je
doslo do sukoba dve velike grupe pristalica SPS-a i koalicije
,,Zajedno'', gde je, kako pise ,,Blic'', bilo mnogo mrtvih i
povredjenih. Takodje je nezvanicno receno da je pokojni Starcevic
sa Gazele prebacen u Zemunsku bolnicu, a potom u Urgentni centar.
Starcevic je, dok je bio pri svesti, dezurnom lekaru rekao da je
tokom sukoba pao na zemlju i da su ga udarali nogama i motkama.
Oko 19 casova pao je u komu i u 23 casa preminuo, pise danasnji
,,Blic''. Zvanicnih podataka o sukobu na Gazeli nema.
MUP SRBIJE NECE DOPUSTITI BLOKIRANJE SAOBRACAJA
Ministarstvo unutrasnjih poslova Srbije saopstilo je da policija
ubuduce nece dopustiti samovoljno blokiranje saobracaja i zato
upozorava organizatore demonstracija da su duzni da svoja prava na
mirne demonstracije koriste samo u skladu sa propisima, kojima je
koriscenje tog prava regulisano, prenose beogradski mediji. Ulice
gradova moraju biti slobodne za sve gradjane i ne mogu biti
samovoljno zauzimane ili blokirane od bilo koje organizacije, cime
se nanosi steta drugim gradjanima i privredi, navodi se u sinoc
objavljenom saopstenju MUP Srbije. U slucaju krsenja zakona i
daljeg narusavanja javnog reda i mira, policija ce intervenisati u
skladu sa propisima i svojim duznostima u sprovodjenju Zakona i
zastiti prava gradjana, zakljucuje se u saopstenju.
vesti.1298corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 13 sati, 26. decembar 1996.
STUDENTI KRENULI U SETNJU
Nakon skupa na Platou ispred Filozofskog fakulteta, studenti
nameravaju da krenu u setnju. Prema poslednjim informacijama,
komandir specijalnih jedinica ih je upozorio da ne krecu u setnju.
STUDENTI MEDICINE O PREBIJANJU PROFESORA
Studenti Medicinskog fakulteta, pripadnici Studentskog protesta
96, izrazili su danas duboko ogorcenje i nezadovoljstvo povodom
jucerasnjeg brutalnog prebijanja i upotrebe fizicke sile protiv
profesora tog fakulteta dr Bogdana Beleslina. ,,Najostrije
protestujemo protiv ovakvih postupaka vlasti i drzave u kojoj se
tuku i fizicki zlostavljaju ljudi, koji su svojim radom,
strucnoscu i znanjem zasluzili iskljucivo postovanje'', navodi se
u saopstenju Studentskog protesta 96 na Medicinskom fakultetu.
,,Osudjujemo svaku vrstu nasilja i bilo kakvu upotrebu fizicke
sile protiv ljudi koji se bore za svoja osnova gradjanska i
ljudska prava. Ovakvi dogadjaji su samo razlog vise da nastavimo
sa svojom pravednom borbom do ispunjenja nasih zahteva. Ne zelimo
da zivimo u zemlji u kojoj ce profesori fakulteta biti prebijani,
maltretirani i privodjeni na ispitivanja'', kazu studenti
medicine. ,,Mi cemo i dalje stajati uz nase profesore koji su nas
od pocetka podrzali i stajali uz nas'', stoji u saopstenju u kojem
se apeluje na sve studente i profesore da dignu svoj glas povodom
ovog incidenta i iskazu solidarnost sa svojim kolegom.
STUDENTI OBAVESTENI O PREBIJANJU NOVINARA
Informativna sluzba Studentskog protesta 96 saopstila je danas da
je od vlasnika privatne klinike ,,Anlave'' dr Slobodana Ivanovica
danas dobila informaciju da je novinar ,,Nedeljnog Telegrafa'',
Soni Darijevic, juce pregledan u toj klinici, nakon sto je bio
uhapsen i pretucen u stanici milicije. Prema ovom saopstenju,
posle pregleda lekara specijaliste i odgovarajucih laboratorijskih
nalaza, konstatovano je da Darijevic ima povrede urogenitalnog
trakta. ,,Povrede su nanesene tupim predmetima u predelu bubrega,
pri cemu je doslo i do pojave krvi u mokraci. Zakljuceno je da su
u pitanju teske telesne povrede'' stoji u saopstenju Informativne
sluzbe Studentskog protesta 96, koji prenosi FoNet.
vesti.1299corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 13 sati, 26. decembar 1996.
ROJTER: RUSIJA I ZAPAD SE RAZISLI U ODNOSU PREMA SRBIJI
Rusija i Zapad razisli su se u politici prema Srbiji, buduci da se
Moskva izjasnila protiv mesanja spolja u srpsku krizu, dok su
Vasington, Pariz i Bon podrzali antivladine demonstracije u
Beogradu, ocenjuje Rojter, a prenosi FoNet. Vasington i Pariz
optuzili su predsednika Srbije Slobodana Milosevica da je
organizovanim dovodjenjem svojih pristalica na miting u Beograd --
koji je odrzan u isto vreme i na istom mestu kao i demonstracije
opozicije -- izazvao nasilje na beogradskim ulicama. Nemacki
ministar inostranih poslova Klaus Kinkel upozorio je da bi bilo
kakvo dalje nasilje ugrozilo napore Srbije da se integrise u
Evropu. Moskva se, medjutim, postavila drugacije. Ministarstvo
inostranih poslova Rusije objavilo je saopstenje u kojem se
pokusaji inostranih zemalja da se mesaju u srpsku politiku
ocenjuju ,,neprihvatljivim''.
DINKIC: ,,TAKVE PRAKSE NEMA NIGDE U SVETU''
Asistent na Ekonomskom fakultetu u Beogradu Mladjan Dinkic u
najnovijem broju ,,Monitora'' demantovao je tvrdnju ministra
finansija u Vladi Crne Gore Predraga Goranovica da je svuda u
svetu praksa da se drzavne devizne rezerve drze na inostranim
racunima, pa i na racunima privatnih lica. Kako javlja Montena-
faks, a prenosi FoNet, Dinkic smatra da ,,takve prakse nema nigde
u svetu'', te da bi ,,guverner Narodne banke Jugoslavije, odnosno
sadasnji zamenik, morao da postavi pitanje zakonitosti takvog
'cuvanja' deviznih rezervi'', jer su, ,,po zakonu, devizne rezerve
zemlje jedinstvene''. ,,Priznanje ministra Goranovica da se
drzavne rezerve drze na privatnom racunu govori o tajnovitosti
njihovog koriscenja'', ocenio je Dinkic. ,,Onda se, naravno,
postavlja pitanje: da li se taj novac trosi u drustvenom interesu
ili za privatni interes ljudi koji njime raspolazu'', rekao je
Dinkic, precizirajuci da ,,sumnja postoji, jer je Goranovic
istakao da ne zeli reci o kojoj sumi je rec, niti za sta se pare
trose''.
USVOJEN BUDZET CRNE GORE
Skupstina Crne Gore usvojila je predlog budzeta Republike za 1997.
godinu po predlogu Vlade u ranijem sastavu, prema kojem se budzet
povecava za oko 82 odsto u odnosu na proslogodisnji, javlja
Montena-faks, a prenosi FoNet. Kao i prilikom izbora predsednika
Vlade i njegovog novog kabineta, budzet je sinoc usvojen samo
glasovima vladajuce partije, jer su poslanici koalicije ,,Narodna
sloga'' napustili salu pre glasanja, u znak protesta sto ministar
finansija, pre svoje zavrsne reci, nije hteo da odgovori ni na
jedno od pitanja, koja su postavljali poslanici opozicije.
Poslanici ,,Narodne sloge'' pitali su: zasto je budzet veci za oko
82 odsto, da li su u prihodnu stranu usla devizna sredstva na
ministrovom i drugim privatnim racunima u stranim bankama, sta je
sa kamatama, koje se dobijaju za devize u inostranim bankama, sta
je sa 15 miliona dolara koji su izneseni za kupovnu aviona, zasto
se za policiju izdvaja vise nego zajedno za potrebe pravosudja,
zastitu zivotne sredine i zdravlje i drugo. Sva ta i druga pitanja
ostala su bez odgovora, osim price o devizama na privatnim
racunima i ino-bankama, za koje je ministar Goranovic ponovo rekao
da su tamo iznete po zakonu, te da je rec o drzavnoj imovini koja
se iskazuje u bilansu Republike, kao i sva nepokretna imovina,
poput zgrade Skupstine i druge imovine. Zbog zasedanja Saveznog
parlamenta, Skupstina Crne Gore rad ce nastaviti u ponedeljak, 30.
decembra, kada ce biti reci o demonstracijama u Srbiji i
zbivanjima nakon drugog kruga lokalnih izbora u Srbiji.
CRNA GORA ZA SVOJU VALUTU?
Potpredsednik vlade Crne Gore Slavko Drljevic izjavio je u
danasnjem broju ,,Dnevnog telegrafa'' da Crna Gora namerava da se
,,svim sredstvima'' brani od nekontrolisanog stampanja novca U
Srbiji, cime se izaziva inflacija. ,,Mi ovde imamo jedinstven stav
da se reaguje brzo i odlucno. U pocetku bi, verovatno kao prelazno
resenje, bili uvedeni novcani bonovi, a potom bismo stampali i
svoju monetu koja bi bila konvertibilna. Jos jedan udar bezvrednog
novca ne bismo mogli podneti. Takodje smo protiv promene kursa
dinara, jer bi to bio samo drugi naziv za istu operaciju'', rekao
je Drljevic.
Pripremio(la): Zoran Penevski
vesti.1300corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 15 sati, zima i sneg, 26. decembar 1996.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Svi tekstovi su Copyright 1996 Radija B92. SVA PRAVA ZADRZANA.
------------------------------------------------------------------
HLADNA NAPETOST
------------------------------------------------------------------
STUDENTSKA SETNJA ZAVRSENA BEZ INCIDENATA
Portparol Inicijativnog odbora Studentskog protesta, Dusan
Vasiljevic, potvrdio je danas u izjavi FoNetu da je policijac iz
stanice u beogradskoj opstini Stari grad dosao u pratnji dvojice
kolega u studentski Press centar i upozorio studente da na zabranu
blokiranja saobracaja. ,,On je razgovarao sa sefom obezbedjenja
studentskog protesta Mirjanom Antonicem i objasnio da policija
stiti interese gradjana'', izjavio je Vasiljevic. Vise hiljada
studenata i gradjana krenulo je oko 13.30 casova u protestnu
setnju Vasinom do Trga Republike, Terazijama, Srpskih vladara,
Kneza Milosa, Takovskom, Lole Ribara i Makedonskom do platoa
ispred Filozofskog fakulteta. Pre polaska, studentima je saopsteno
da je americki predsednik Bil Klinton prosle noci telefonirao
predsedniku Srbije Slobodanu Milosevicu i zapretio da ce uvesti
,,sankcije protiv rezima'' ukoliko bude upotrebljena sila protiv
mirnih demonstranata. Studentima se obratio danas glumac Voja
Brajovic. Povorka studenata u protestnoj setnji Ulicama Kneza
Milosa i Takovskom mirno je danas prosla pored 500 do 600
policajaca, koji su se, u punoj opremi za ulicne nemire, u isto
vreme iskrcavali iz 11 autobusa na platou i kolovoznim trakama
ispred Savezne skupstine. Istovremeno, velika kolona policijskih
dzipova, kombija i autobusa vidjena je kako prilazi Saveznoj
skupstini Bulevarom revolucije iz pravca Pravnog fakuleta.
JOKANOVIC: AKO BUDE MIRNO, POLICIJA NECE INTERVENISATI
Savezni ministar unutrasnjih poslova Vukasin Jokanovic izjavio je
novinarima, tokom danasnjeg zasedanja Savezne skupstine, da
intervencije policije nece biti, ako demonstracije na ulicama
Beograda budu mirne. Osvrcuci se na sinocnje saopstenje MUP
Srbije, Jokanovic je, prenosi Radio B92, rekao da je ,,to domen
nacelnika MUP Beograda, jer Savezno ministarstvo ne vodi racuna o
saobracaju u Beogradu''.
vesti.1301corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 15 sati, zima i sneg, 26. decembar 1996.
DJINDJIC: POLICIJA NE MOZE DA RESI OVAJ PROBLEM
Koalicija ,,Zajedno'' odrzace i danas protestne manifestacije,
uprkos saopstenju Republickog MUP da ce policija intervenisati,
receno je na konferenciji za stampu predsednika Demokratske
stranke Zorana Djindjica i Gradjanskog saveza Srbije Vesne Pesic.
Djindjic je ocenio da je Srbija i danas ,,u okvirima gradjanskog
mira samo zahvaljujuci maksimalnoj diciplini nasih aktivista''. On
je, medjutim, upozorio da ,,ne mozemo garantovati'' da ce -- ako
se cuje da je policija u Beogradu intervenisala protiv mirnih
demonstracija -- drugi gradovi u Srbiji ostati mirni. ,,Onima koji
misle da je to policijski problem, bolje bi bilo da shvate da nije
policijski problem i da policija to ne moze da resi'', naglasio je
Djindjic. Pesic je upozorenje RMUP nazvala ,,corkom'', dodajuci da
se ,,nista nece desiti'' i da ,,nas niko nece presresti''. Ona je
najavila da ce miting gradjana i pristalica Koalicije ,,Zajedno''
biti odrzan ,,normalno, kao i prethodnih 36 dana''.
KINA PROTIV MESANJA U JUGOSLOVENSKU KRIZU
Kina je danas podrzala Rusiju u protivljenju stranom mesanju u
sukob vlasti i opozicije u Srbiji, javlja AFP, a prenosi FoNet.
,,Sa velikom paznjom pratimo razvoj situacije'' u Beogradu, rekao
je portparol kineskog ministarstva spoljnih poslova Sen Guofeng.
,,Lokalni izbori su iskljucivo unutrasnja stvar Jugoslavije i
nadam se da ce oni moci da nadju valjano resenje za ovo pitanje'',
dodao je on.
POPOV: PRVO DEMOKRATIJA U SVOJOJ KUCI
Beogradski sociolog i urednik casopisa ,,Republika'' Nebojsa Popov
u intervjuu podgorickom nedeljniku ,,Monitor'', izjavio je da bi
crnogorske vlasti prvo trebalo da brine nedostatak demokratije u
Crnoj Gori i da bi mu bilo mnogo draze da se njihove simpatije
prema opoziciji prvo potvrde u Crnoj Gori. Kako javlja Montena-
faks, a prenosi FoNet, Popov smatra da ni sadasnje suceljavanje
srpskih i crnogorskih vlasti ,,nece ici dalje od sitnih
podmetanja''. ,,Crnogorsku vlast bi trebalo da brine prvo
nedostatak demokratije u Crnoj Gori, pa potom drugde'', dodao je
on. Popov je ocenio da vec godinama crnogorske i srpske vlasti
imaju zajednicki strateski interes, a da ,,samo s vremena na vreme
jedni drugima podmecu nogu, ali paze da time ne dovedu u pitanje
svoju poziciju vlasti''. ,,Poznato je da u totalitarnim
ideologijama i pokretima cesto postoji rivalstvo u samom vrhu, ali
to rivalstvo obicno ne ide dalje od sitnih podmetanja'', rekao je
Popov.
vesti.1302corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 15 sati, zima i sneg, 26. decembar 1996.
SPO O STARCEVICU
,,Brutalno ubistvo Predraga Starcevica od strane kaznenih
ekspedicija Slobodana Milosevica i dvodnevno skrivanje tog gnusnog
zlocina definitivno potvrdjuju da se rezim u Srbiji opredelio za
terorizam najcrnje vrste'', navodi se u danasnjem saopstenju SPO-
a. ,,Postizborna kriza ovim novim razvojem dogadjaja ulazi u
opoasnu fazu cije posledice mogu biti nesagledive'', navodi se u
saopstenju u kome se pristalice SPO-a pozivaju da sacuvaju
pribranost i mirno nastave protest.
SPO O ZABRANAMA SETNJI
,,Zabrana mirnih setnji Beogradjana ulicama njihovog grada, novi
je akt nasilja nad osnovnim politickim i ljudskim pravima i
slobodama'', ocenjuje se u saopstenju SPO-a. ,,Ta zabrana,
medjutim, nikoga ne obavezuje, jer dolazi od onih koji su nosioci
bezakonja i svih oblika anticivilizacijskog ponasanja. Izricuci
zabranu, Slobodan Milosevic pokazuje da se definitivno opredelio
za siledzijstvo, ali taj plan ne moze da prodje. Mirne i
dostojanstvene setnje ce se nastaviti'', navodi se u saopstenju
SPO-a.
PISMO FONDA ZA RAZVOJ DEMOKRATIJE MUP-U
Fond za razvoj demokratije uputio je ministru Zoranu Sokolovicu
danas pismo sledece sadrzine: Od danas, prema objavljenom
saopstenju, POLICIJA nece dopustati odrzavanje mirnih
demonstracija u Beogradu. S obzirom da Zakonom o unutrasnjim
poslovima nije predvidjeno postojanje policije, vec iskljucivo
MILICIJE, u zastiti i ostvarivanju ustavnih prava i sloboda
gradjana, verujemo da kao ministar MUP-a i clan Glavnog odbora
SPS-a, ne stojite iza pomenutog saopstenja. Kada je u pitanju
odrzavanje mirnih demonstracija, ukazujemo da su prava gradjana
regulisana i medjunarodnim propisima, koje je prihvatio SPS, cime
su postali obavezujuci za MILICIJU. Vase dosadasnje iskustvo i
nedavna izjava u Skupstini Srbije, ukazuju da shvatate situaciju u
kojoj se nalazimo i zbog toga PREDLAZEMO da se uzdrzite od akcija
protiv mirnih demonstranata. U situaciji kada je prestao da
funkcionise pravni sistem, OPRAVDANE su reakcije studenata i
gradjana. Protesti studenata i drugih ucesnika mirnih
demonstracija povratili su medjunarodni ugled narodu Srbije. Svetu
je postalo jasno da su gradjani Srbije miroljubivi i da nisu
odlucivali ni o svojoj sudbini, ni o raspadu SFRJ, ni o prestanku
funkcionisanja pravnog sistema. Mirni demonstranti su zrtve
zloupotreba vezanih za: Zajam za privredni preporod Srbije, zlato
i druge dragocenosti iz Fonda za razvoj Srbije, iznosenje
milijardi dolara iz Srbije, stvaranje inflacije od 313 miliona
odsto, koriscenje novca iz primarne emisije, selektivno dobijanje
uvozno-izvoznih dozvola, deviza iz Narodne banke Jugoslavije po
zvanicnom kursu, za upad u platni sistem SFRJ, laziranje izbornih
rezultata, stvaranje Dafiment i drugih ,,banaka'', nestanak i
uzurpaciji vila, stanova i poslovnog prostora iz javnog fonda itd.
Iz navedenih razloga, sa zeljom da doprinesemo mirnom raspletu
nastale situacije i primeni propisa kojima ce se eliminisati
uzroci nezadovoljstva studenata i drugih ucesnika mirnih
demonstracija, ocekujemo Vase razumevanje. S postovanjem, Fond za
razvoj demokratije.
vesti.1303corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 15 sati, zima i sneg, 26. decembar 1996.
JUCE U NISU: POGLEDAJTE SEMAFOR -- GINISOVA KNJIGA PRIZNALA
SVETSKI REKORD!
Na 38 okupljanju u Nisu oboren je svetski rekord u protestima.
Juce su, po izuzetno jakoj kisi, pred oko 15 hiljada ljudi
govorili su prof. dr Kosta Cavoski, predsednik Izvrsnog odbora
SLS, doc. dr Drasko Bjelica sa Filozofskog fakulteta u Nisu,
arhimandrit otac Petar, Aleksandar Krstic, predsednik Gradskog
odbora DS-a, Miroslav Milanovic, potpredsednik Okruznog odbora
SPO-a i Oliver Sukletovic, glumac Narodnog pozorista u Nisu. Potom
je usledila kraca setnja, nakon koje su se gradjani vratili na
Trg. Jedini incident usledio je kao posledica toga sto pripadnici
saobracajne milicije nisu zaustavili saobracaj u Vozdovoj ulici,
sve do 15 casova i 30 minuta, uprkos tome sto su gradjani vec bili
na Trgu Oslobodjenja. Jedan od vozaca Nis-ekspresa pokusao je
autobusom da prokrci put kroz demonstrante, cemu su se oni
suprotstavili. Brzom akcijom obezbedjenja koalicije ,,Zajedno'',
izbegnut je ozbiljniji incident.
SPS I DNEVNICE
Izborni stab koalicije ,,Zajedno'', saopstio je da su u nekoliko
mesta u Srbiji lokalni funkcioneri SPS-a prisvojili novac namenjen
za dnevnice ucesnicima kontramitinga SPS-a u Beogradu. Pozivajuci
se na informacije clanova SPS-a, koji su zeleli da ostanu
anonimni, izborni stab koalicije ,,Zajedno'', takodje saopstava da
su ucesnici kontramitinga razocarani svojom losom informisanoscu o
raspolozenju Beogradjana i pravom stanju stvari.
CESTITKA NOVOSADSKIH STUDENATA
Studenti novosadskog univerziteta uputili su svojim sugradjanima
novogodisnju cestitku u kojoj se kaze: ,,Drage mame i tate, sacica
izmanipulisane dece zeli vam da nastupajuce praznike provedete u
toplim domovima, da se divno provedete uz praznicne programe RTS-
a, da ni slucajno ne izlazite na hladnu i cudljivu ulicu i ne
pruzite podrsku vasoj promrzloj deci, cije zvizduke slusate pod
svojim prozorima''.
,,POLITIKA'' ZABRANILA ULAZ SVOM UGLEDNOM NOVINARU
Jednoj od najistaknutijih novinara dnevnog lista ,,Politika'',
Biserki Matic, jutros je zabranjen ulaz u ovu kucu nakon cega su
joj urucena resenja o suspenziji i o pokretanju disciplinskog
postupka. Kako je Biserka Matic izjavila Radiju B92, poternica sa
njenom slikom podeljena je portirima kako na ulasku u
,,Politiku'', tako i na ulasku u zgradu, gde se nalazi redakcija
,,NIN''-a sa uputstvom da joj se ne dozvoli ulazak. ,,Mi smo,
ocajni zbog manipulacija u koje se Politika sramno upustila, za
danas zakazali sastanak na kome smo hteli da raspravimo o
uredjivackoj politici naseg lista'', rekla je Biserka Matic u
pokusaju da da objasnjenje za ovakav potez rukovodstva lista.
Pripremio(la): Zoran Penevski
vesti.1304bceklic,
-> #1272, mpavlo> A kako znas da je taj tip o kom pises pucao a ne onaj sa
> snimka, koji je, kako se lepo vidi, stvarno pucao i sto je
> najgore (a i to se lepo vidi) i upucao?
Odmah da kazem da snimak sa TV-a nisam video ali oni koji su ga
videli rekose da je u pitanju mladji covek u crvenoj jakni? Iz
nekoliko izvora sam dobio informaciju da je ovaj oteo pistolj od
coveka u sivom kaputu a zatim pucao u vazduh ne bi li zaustavio
prisutne gradjane. Covek sa slike u potpuno ispruzenoj desnoj ruci
drzi pistolj sa prstom na obaracu i nanisanjen u visini glava
suprostavljene grupe. Oko njega je nekoliko istomisljenika
okrenutih u istom pravcu kao i pistolj. Tip deluje veoma smireno i
odlucno da ubije coveka da je to zastrasujuce! Onaj koji je video
sliku zna o cemu pricam. Nemam proverene informacije tako da su ovo
sve samo pretpostavke. Samo neko ko je bio u blizini mogao bi da
siguran odgovor. Ja sam u to vreme bio na drugom mestu.
vesti.1305corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 26. decembar 1996.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Svi tekstovi su Copyright 1996 Radija B92. SVA PRAVA ZADRZANA.
------------------------------------------------------------------
MILICIJA BLOKIRALA SETNJU
------------------------------------------------------------------
MILOSEVIC ODBIO DA PRIMI MAJLSA
Pedsednik Srbije Slobodan Milosevic odbio je danas popodne da
primi otpravnika poslova americke ambasade u Beogradu Ricarda
Majlsa, koji je sastanak zatrazio jos jutros. U popodnevnim
casovima, Majls je sa sefom jugoslovenske diplomatije Milanom
Milutinovicem razgovarao o eventualnoj intervenciji milicijskih
snaga na danasnjem mitingu koalicije ,,Zajedno''.
PESIC: NISMO U SUKOBU SA POLICIJOM VECA SA PREDSEDNIKOM SRBIJE
Lideri Koalicije ,,Zajedno'' danas su pred vise desetina hiljada
gradjana po ostrom mrazu i snegu odrzali miting na Trgu Republike
u Beogradu, ali je zbog jakih policijskih snaga, opremljenih za
suzbijanje demonstracija, koje su bile rasporedjene u okolnim
ulicama, izostala uobicajena protestna setnja. Oko 10.000
policajaca rasporedjeno je na ulicama Beograda kako bi sprecili
demonstracije. Na pocetku mitinga, prisutni su -- na poziv lidera
Srpskog pokreta obnove Vuka Draskovica -- aplauzom i uzvicima
,,plavi, plavi'' pozdravili povlacenje jakih snaga policije iz
okolnih ulica, a potom je minutom cutanja odata posta Predragu
Starcevicu, koji je poginuo tokom prekjucerasnjih nemira u
Beogradu.
Predsednik Demokratske stranke Zoran Djindjic rekao je da ,,smo mi
narod koji na zemljinoj kugli najduze demonstrira za svoja osnovna
gradjanska i ljudska prava'', zbog toga sto ,,imamo najgoru vlast
na svetu''. Ocenjujuci da predsednik Srbije zbog izgubljenih
lokalnih izbora hoce da izazove gradjanski rat, Djindjic je
istakao da je situacija u zemlji ,,krajnje ozbiljna'', ali da je,
na srecu, predsednik Milosevic okruzen ,,zidom razuma''. ,,On je
dobrovoljno poceo da se odrice svojih nadleznosti, jer je
prepustio saobracajcima resavanje pitanja politickih odnosa i
odnosa vlasti i opozicije u Srbiji. To nije lose, jer cemo sa
njima lakse da se dogovorimo. Pametniji su oni od njega'',
naglasio je Djindjic. Djindjic je pozvao demonstrante na upornost
i istrajnost u okupljanju, u slucaju da ,,nas troje uhapse'',
dodajuci da vlasti ,,ne mogu svakog dana da drze 30 hiljada
policajaca na ulicama''.
Predsednica Gradjanskog saveza Srbije Vesna Pesic je kao ,,dobru
vest'' prisutnima saopstila da je ,,nas gospodin diktator izgubio
gradjanski rat 24. decembra'', posto se prethodno ,,obukao u ratnu
uniformu i pozvao SPS vojsku da se obracuna sa demokratskom
Srbijom''. Prema njenim recima, pokazalo se je od te vojske ostala
samo ,,jadna ceta'', zbog cega je ,,deblji kraj izvukla Gorica
Gajovic''. Pesic je naglasila da je predsednik Srbije, zbog toga,
,,posle svih prica o tudjoj ruci i suverenitetu'' spor sa
opozicijom pretvorio u ,,saobracajno pitanje''. ,,Znaci nije u
pitanju drzava nego saobracaj i privredne aktivnosti. Da li taj
covek zna sta radi? Ne zna. Cas peta kolona, cas saobracaj, cas
privreda, a u stvari, radi se o -- kradji glasova'', istakla je
Pesic. Ona je podvukla da nije zadatak policije da resava
politicka i drzavna pitanja i da ,,mi nismo u sukobu sa policijom,
nego sa predsednikom Srbije''. ,,Policija nije zaduzena da resava
ova politicka pitanja i zato neka ne prihvate naredjenja koja nisu
u njihovoj nadleznosti'', rekla je Pesic.
Predsednik Srpskog pokreta obnove Vuk Draskovic zahvalio se
demonstrantima na upornosti i izdrzljivosti, ali pre svega na
mudrosti, jer ,,od ljudskog zivota nije preci nikakav stranacki,
izborni ili bilo kakav drugi interes ili razlog''. On je ocenio da
su masovni protesti u Srbiji naceli vrh piramide ,,jedne
neodgovorne, antiljudske vlasti, kojoj zivot njenih gradjana
nikada nista nije znacio''. Draskovic je rekao da je poginulog
Predraga Starcevica ,,izgazio stampedo pijanih Milosevicevih
pristalica, tih sludjenih ljudi'', precizirajuci da je ,,on ziv
dosao u zemunsku bolnicu'', ali da mu tamo nije na vreme ukazana
prva pomoc, jer ,,i medju lekarima imamo ljude, kojima je
partijska pripadnost preca od lekarske etike''. Draskovic je,
potom, konstatovao da je ,,Crna Gora pred odlukom o otcepljenju'',
zbog toga sto ne zeli da se odrekne od Evrope i izlozi
medjunarodnoj izolaciji, uz opasku da se ,,ne treba radovati
rusenju sopstvene kuce''. Lider SPO je naglasio da ,,nas u veliku
nesrecu gura samo nekoliko ljudi'', cija je ,,poslednja udica --
krv'', zakljucujuci da koalicija ,,Zajedno'' i njene pristalice
nece dozvoliti da se ona ponovo prolije.
MAJDANPEK I KIKINDA
Za vreme protesta koalicije ,,Zajedno'' u Majdanpeku, medju
demonstrante je uleteo naoruzani clan SPS-a i pretio pistoljem.
,,Okupljacete se samo ako ja tako naredim i nosicete zastave koje
vam ja budem odobrio'', rekao je clan SPS-a.
Pocela su okupljanja, u znak podrske drugim gradovima, i u
Kikindi.
vesti.1306corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 26. decembar 1996.
KOMENTARI IZ SVETA
------------------------------------------------------------------
VASINGTON JUTROS BEZ NOVIH KOMENTARA O SRBIJI
U Stejt departmentu se jutros nije mogla dobiti nikakva reakcija
na novu fazu protesta u Srbiji, koja je otpocela sinocnim
upozorenjem policije da se vise nece dozvoljavati sadasnja forma
demonstriranja u Beogradu, uz istovremeno izrazavanje odlucnosti
studenata i Koalicije ,,Zajedno'' da, se bez obzira na to
upozorenje, nastavi javni protest, podstaknut izbornom kradjom od
17. novembra, javlja za FoNet dopisnik ,,Nase Borbe'' Slobodan
Pavlovic. Od predstavnika americke administracije najavljeno je da
se nekakvo izjasnjavanje Sjedinjenih Drzava oko ovog, kako je
receno, novog podizanja tenzije moze ocekivati kasnije, tokom
dana, s tim sto se u ovom tenutku jedino podseca na prekjucerasnji
poziv Vasingtona predsedniku Srbije Slobodanu Milosevicu da se
iskljucivo putem otvorenog dijalog resavaju sporovi sa
demokratskom opozicijom.
KANADSKI MEDIJI O ZBIVANJIMA U SRBIJI
Kanadski radio i televizijski programi emitovali su u protekla dva
dana, kao udarne, vesti o sukobu demonstranata u Beogradu. Uz
naglasavanje da su demonstracije opozicije zbog ponistavanja njene
pobede u velikim gradovima na novembarskim izborima vise od mesec
dana bile mirne, receno je da je organizovanje kontramitinga od
strane vladajuce Socijalisticke partije Srbije dovelo do ulicnih
obracuna i krvoprolica. Svi isticu da je pristalica Slobodana
Milosevica bilo znatno manje od ocekivanog i da su na miting
dovozeni iz drugih mesta Srbije. Danasnji dnevni listovi, koji
juce zbog praznika nisu izasli, na naslovnim stranama pisu ili
najavljuju napise o zbivanjima u Srbiji. Novine, koje prenose
americke izvore, u prvi plan isticu odluku vlasti o zabrani
ulicnih okupljanja. ,,Otava Sitizen'' u tekstu, pod naslovom
,,Spreman na borbu srbijanski lider zabranjuje proteste'', pise da
je propala namera vladajuce partije da zaplasi demonstrante
opozicije.
,,Umesto pola miliona u Beogradu se okupilo manje od sto hiljada
njenih pristalica'', pise taj list. List javlja i o nameri
opozicije da nastavi proteste ali i o njenom strahovanju da je
zabrana okupljanja pocetak pokreta za slamanje opozicije.
Nacionalni ,,Gloub end mejl'', takodje, upozorava da bi nasilje od
utorka moglo da bude opravdanje vlastima sa suzbijanje
demonstracija, isticuci da su pristalice Slobodana Milosevica
trazile ,,cvrscu akciju'' i kaznjavanje opozicije. List pise i o
jucerasnjem upozorenju Crne Gore da ce ova republika ,,preduzeti
korake da zastiti samu sebe od dalje medjunarodne izolacije
Beograda zbog politike Slobodana Milosevica'' i izjavi Mila
Djukanovica da je ,,Crna Gora spremna da vodi sopstvenu spoljnu
politiku, ukoliko Srbija ne bude cvrsce radila na njenom
povezivanju sa medjunarodnom zajednicom'', prenosi FoNet.
vesti.1307corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 26. decembar 1996.
KINKEL UPOZORAVA MILOSEVICA
Nemacki ministar inostranih poslova Klaus Kinkel upozorio je danas
predsednika Srbije Slobodana Milosevica da ne sprecava proteste
opozicije u Beogradu, javlja Rojter, a prenosi FoNet. Kinkel je
izjavio da svet nece ostati po strani, ukoliko Milosvic zabrani
opozicione skupove u Beogradu, sa obrazlozenjem da ometaju
saobracaj. ,,Milosevic mora biti svestan cinjenice da svet gleda u
Beograd. Trebalo bi da drzi ruke dalje od prava ucesnika protesta
i njihove slobode da se okupljaju. Dalja eskalacija nece biti
tolerisana'', rekao je Kinkel. On je upozorio da ce nade
Jugoslavije da se integrise u Evropu biti okoncane bilo kakvim
pokusajem da se okupljanja zaustave. ,,Milosevic bi trebalo da zna
da mere protiv mirnih demonstracija zajednica nacija nece
jednostavno prihvatiti. Predsednik Milosevic bi definitvno trebalo
da ima na umu napore Beograda da se vrati u Evropu, ukoliko
razmislja o zabrani demonstracija sa opravdanjem da onemogucavaju
saobracaj'', izjavio je Kinkel. On je dodao: ,,Sloboda okupljanja
i govora, uz pluralizam i slobodu stampe, temelji su svakog
demokratskog drustva. Svako ko pokusava da ogranici demokratske
slobode morace da se suoci sa posledicama''.
PARIZ TRAZI OKONCANJE SUKOBA U SRBIJI
Francuska je danas zatrazila okoncanje nasilnih sukoba u
Jugoslaviji izmedju protivnika i pristalica predsednika Srbije
Slobodana Milosevica i postavila zahtev vlastima u Beogradu da
osiguraju postovanje slobode izrazavanja. Rojter javlja, a prenosi
FoNet, da je predstavnica za stampu francuskog Ministarstva
inostranih poslova izjavila: ,,Ovaj novi ciklus nasilja mora odmah
biti prekinut i oni koji su odgovorni za nasilne incidente predati
odgovarajucim sudskim vlastima. Istovremeno, trazimo od srpske
vlade da se obaveze na priblizavanje dve strane i pocetak
dijaloga, zasnovanog na preporuci koju ce sutra objaviti
Organizacija za evropsku bezbednost i saradnju''.
RUSKA DUMA O JUGOSLAVIJI
Drzavna Duma Rusije, posle duge protivrecne debate o situaciji u
Jugoslaviji povodom najnovijeg zaostravanja sukoba, izjasnila se u
specijalnoj rezoluciji da je kategoricki protiv pritisaka spolja,
raspirivanja strasti i jednostranih akcija, koje, kako se navodi,
nanose udar interesima Jugoslavije, javlja dopisnik FoNeta Branko
Stosic. Prema oceni ogromne vecine poslanika, politicki spor
vlasti i opozicije u Srbiji, a posebno akcije koje prete
krvoprolicem, samo jos vise mogu da otezaju polozaj zemlje, koja
tek sto je pocela da izlazi iz duge krize, i prevladava posledice
ekonomskih sankcija, ciju je cenu platilo stanovnistvo, kaze se u
rezoluciji. Duma podrzava ucesce Organizacije za evropsku
bezbednost i saradnju u akcijama za smanjivanje napetosti, ali
istovremeno istice da samovoljno prosirenje mandata Gonsalesove
misije i pretvaranje OEBS-a u polugu pritisaka na Jugoslaviju,
mogu imati samo negativne politicke posledice. Lider ruskih
radikala Vladimir Zirinovski izjavio je u debati da ce ,,sudbina
Slobodana Milosevica biti ista kao sudbina Causeskua''. ,,Mi se
necemo mesati i ne treba da se mesamo u poslove Srbije, neka sami
Srbi resavaju svoje probleme'', rekao je Zirinovski, ali, dodao je
on, ,,svaki izdajnik treba da zna kako zavrsavaju izdajnici
sopstvenog naroda''. Ovaj ekstremni stav, medjutim, nije dobio
podrsku poslanika Dume.
GONSALES SUTRA PODNOSI IZVESTAJ O IZBORIMA U SRBIJI
Bivsi spanski premijer Felipe Gonsales podnece sutra u Zenevi
predsedavajucem Organizacije za evropsku bezbednost i saradnju
Flaviju Kotiju izvestaj o regularnosti lokalnih izbora u Srbiji,
javlja danas AFP, a prenosi FoNet. Gonsales je proteklog vikenda
predvodio delegaciju OEBS koja je u Beogradu o spornim lokalnim
izborima razgovarala sa predstavnicima vlasti i opozicije u
Srbiji.
vesti.1308corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 26. decembar 1996.
OSTALE VESTI
------------------------------------------------------------------
SUTRA TRECA REDOVNA SEDNICA SKUPSTINE RS
Predsednik skupstine Republike Srpske Dragan Kalinic sazvao je za
sutra u 10.00 casova trecu redovnu sednicu parlamenta RS, koja ce
se odrzati u hotelu ,,Bistrica'' na Jahorini, javlja SRNA, a
prenosi FoNet. Prema predlozenom dnevnom redu od 16 tacaka, pred
poslanicima ce se naci vise nacrta zakona koje je predlozila Vlada
RS, izabrana na prethodnom zasedanju od 27. novembra, a medju
njima su nacrti zakona o Vladi RS, ministarstvima, vojsci, o
duvanu, vinu i rakiji. Kao posebna tacka dnevnog reda je izbor
imenovanja i razresenja, u okviru koje ce poslanici imenovati
nosioce pravosudnih funkcija i razresiiti dosadasnje.
KLINTONOVA CESTITKA KRAJISNIKU ZA NOVU GODINU
Clan Predsednistva BiH Momcilo Krajisnik sastao se danas na Palama
sa otpravnikom poslova americke ambasade u Sarajevu Majklom
Parmlijem, javlja SRNA, a prenosi FoNet. Kako se navodi u
saopstenju, koje je potpisala Krajisnikov portparol Mirjana
Kusmuk, Parmli je Krajisniku urucio cestitku za Novu godinu
americkog predsednika Bila Klintona i njegove supruge Hilari.
Tokom razgovora Krajisnik je Parmliju preneo stavove srpske strane
u vezi sa konstituisanjem Saveta ministara i zamolio ga da o njima
obavesti americkog izaslanika za Balkan Dzona Kornbluma, koji je
bio veoma aktivan na konstituisanju zajednickih institucija.
Krajisnik je izrazio nadu da ce nesporazumi oko uspostavljanja
Saveta ministara, do kojih je doslo u poslednjih nekoliko dana,
biti otklonjeni veoma brzo.
vesti.1309corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 26. decembar 1996.
MAGAZIN
------------------------------------------------------------------
NUNS OSUDJUJE POSTUPAK DIREKTORA ,,POLITIKE''
Nezavisno udruzenje novinara Srbije osudjuje ,,postupak vrsioca
duznosti glavnog urednika i direktora Politike, koji je zabranio
ulazak u zgradu lista, pokrenuo diciplinski postupak i suspendovao
sa posla Biserku Matic, uglednog izvestaca iz Savezne skupstine''.
,,Povod za ovu drasticnu meru je poziv novinara 'Politike' (koji
ne odobravaju nacin izvestavanja o dogadjajima u Srbiji) na
raspravu o pisanju lista. Jedini greh Biserke Matic je sto je u
tome ucestvovala''. Navodeci da ce o svemu biti obavestena
novinarska udruzenja sirom Evrope, Medjunarodna federacija
novinara i Komitet za zastitu novinara u Njujorku, NUNS istice da
je ,,v.d. glavnog urednika i direktora 'Politike' u potpunosti
ignorisao profesionalne norme svakog demokratskog drustva,
sprecavajuci Biserku Matic da se i dalje bavi profesijom. Jos vise
je neshvatljivo da novinaru, koji je decenije proveo u 'Politici',
resenje o suspenziji i zabrani ulaza u zgradu urucuje sluzba
obezbedjenja'', stoji u saopstenju NUNS-a.
STARI GRAD O MITINGU ,,ZA SRBIJU''
Povodom mitinga pristalica Slobodana Milosevica, Skupstina Opstine
Stari Grad saopstila je da od nadleznih organa opstine za taj skup
nije bila zatrazena dozvola. Javnosti i opstini Stari Grad
nepoznati organizatori postavili su binu kod Terazijske cesme na
teritoriji Starog Grada, cime su prekrsili zakon, ignorisali
nadleznost opstine i ugrozili bezbednost gradjana i imovine,
navodi se u saopstenju. U tekstu se zakljucuje da se opstina Stari
Grad ne miri sa cinjenicom da su Slobodan Milosevic i celnici SPS-
a i JUL-a odabrali za popriste sukoba upravo najstariju beogradsku
opstinu na kojoj nisu osvojili nijedan odbornicki mandat.
DUHOVITI DEMONSTRANTI
Povodom izlozbe karikatura u bioskopu ,,Reks'' i knjige
,,Familija'' u izdanju Radija B92, poznati je karikaturista
Predrag Koraksic Koraks u danasnjem intervjuu Radiju B92, pored
ostalog, naglasio kako ove demonstracije karakterise humor,
duhovitost koja ce doci glave ovom rezimu. Belezimo danas, prema
recima ocevidaca i ucesnika, mnoge zabavne detalje u bliskim
susretima milicije i gradjana.
Primer prvi: Upravo danas, nakon mitinga na Trgu Republike,
demonstranti su se sjajno zabavljali na Terazijama. Naime, kordoni
milicije, koji se nisu sasvim povukli, stajali su s jedne strane
ulice. Nasuprot njih, gradjani Beograda su cekali da se na
semaforu upali zeleno svetlo. Tada bi dosli na sred pesackog
prelaza i policajcima dovikivali: ,,Pogledajte semafor, pogledajte
semafor!'', ,,Zeleno, zeleno!''. Crveno svetlo je bio znak da se
vrate na trotoar, a tada bi uzvikivali: ,,Vratite nam zeleno!''
ili ,,Idemo ponovo!''. Ta igra se ponavljala desetak minuta.
Primer drugi: Posto su mitingasi na Trgu Republike bili,
prakticno, opkoljeni visestrukim kordonima milicije, paralelno sa
tim protestom, grupa od par hiljada ljudi je nacinila vise krugova
setnji od Beogradjanke do Slavije i natrag. Policija ih je na
trenutak razdvojila, ali su ljudi i dalje setali. Slicna
,,demokratska zmija'' pruzala se i od Beogradjanke ka Terazijama.
Primer treci: Ljudi, koji su zakasnili na Trg u 15 casova, a nisu
mogli da im se prikljuce, nastavili su setnje u malim krugovima
izmedju kordona milicije.
Primer cetvrti: Mozda hiljadu specijalaca nalazilo se ispred
Albanije, opkolivsi tako i trafiku sa cigaretama i cokoladama.
Njima prilazi demonstrant i zamoli: ,,Je l' mogu samo do trafike,
da kupim cigare?''...
Primer peti: U trenutku povlacenja milicijskih snaga na Trgu
republike, demonstranti su malo promenili navijacku pesmu:
,,'Ajmo, 'ajde, svi NAZAD!''.
vesti.1310corto,
------------------------------------------------------------------
ODRAZ B92, Beograd Dnevni informativni servis
Odraz B92 vesti do 21 sat, 26. decembar 1996.
SAMOSTALNI SINDIKAT GSP STRAJK 13. JANUARA
GSP je juce osvanuo oblepljen pozivima Samostalnog sindikata svom
clanstvu da ucestvuje u strajku, koji oni organizuju 13. januara
1997. godine, iako su vise nego aktivno ucestvovali u izradi
zahteva za strajk najavljen za danas. U obrazlozenju promene stava
na plakatu, koji je potpisao Rados Stovragovic, predsednik
Samostalnog sindikata pise: ,,Zasto strajk 13. januara? 1. Zato
sto se po Kolektivnom ugovoru o visini cene rada pregovara za
platu, a ne za akontaciju. 2. Zato sto ce se do 31. januara
konstituisati Skupstina grada Beograda koja je nadlezna kao prvi
potpisnik Kolektivnog ugovora da ispostuje visinu cene rada po
Kolektivnom ugovoru. S toga ce se pregovori voditi do isplate 10.
januara, a ukoliko se ne uvaze zahtevi stupa se u strajk
13.1.1997. godine''.
,,WEBCITY''
,,Beograd Webcity'' je zajednicki projekat provajdera interneta u
Jugoslaviji -- BK MR Sistemsa (EUnet Jugoslavija) i Advertajzing
agencije ,,Ultima'', cija je prezentacija odrzana juce u hotelu
,,Interkontinental''. Rec je o kompletnoj ponudi Beograda na
Internetu.
PREKRSENO ZAVESTANJE KOMPOZITORA ,,VOSTANI SERBIJE''
Porodica preminulog Vartkesa Baronijana, kompozitora i tvorca
kompozicije na tekst himne Dositeja Obradovica ,,Vostani
Serbije'', ovim otvorenim pismom osudjuje koriscenje ove
kompozicije na mitingu ,,Za Srbiju'' odrzanog dana 24. decembra
1996. godine, kaze se u pismu porodice Vartan Baronijan. ,,Nas
otac i suprug ostavio je u amanet ovu kompoziciju srpskom narodu i
posebno je naznacio da se ne sme koristiti u politicke svrhe.
Koalicija Zajedno trazila je dozvolu da se kompozicija izvodi na
njihovim mitinzima, ali kao ljudi od casti, cuvajuci uspomenu na
naseg oca i supruga, mi to nismo dozvolili. Organizatori mitinga
Za Srbiju bez ikakvog pitanja i dozvole, uzeli su sebi za pravo da
delo Vartkesa Baronijana koriste u svoje politicke svrhe. Ovim ne
osudjujemo, vec sazaljevamo one kojima nista nije sveto, pa cak,
ni himna najvecem srpskom prosvetitelju Dositeju Obradovicu. Ono
sto zelimo je da se nikad ime naseg oca i supruga i njegov rad
nece koristiti u politicke svrhe'', stoji u tom pismu povredjene
porodice, sa nadom da se to nikada nece ponoviti.
,,ZAJEDNO'' TUZI RTS
Saopstenje Izbornog staba Koalicije ,,Zajedno'', a povodom
najnovijih optuzbi RTS na racun Koalicije, kaze se da su kamere
svih domacih i stranih agencija snimile da je Milosevicev
pristalica iz Vrbasa pucao u glavu Ivici Lazovicu, pristalici
Koalicije ,,Zajedno''koji je i dalje u vrlo teskom stanju, a da
sada RTS optuzuje gradjane Beograda i Koaliciju ,,Zajedno'' da su
oni krivi za sukobe na ulicama Beograda. Kako su sve domace i
svetske agencije zabelezile ko je koristio vatreno oruzje i ko je
izazvao sukobe, Koalicija ,,Zajedno'' podnece krivicne prijave
protiv urednika i direktora RTS, zbog laznih optuzbi i
obmanjivanja javnosti, kaze se u saopstenju Izbornog staba
Koalicije ,,Zajedno''.
TIJANIC: SAMO BOG POMAZE
,,Srbiji, koja ima za premijera Mirka Marjanovica, moze samo bog
da pomogne. Zasto dajem ostavku nisam mu obrazlozio jer on i onako
ne bi nista razumeo'', odgovorio je u svom stilu dojucerasnji
ministar informisanja Aleksandar Tijanic na napade premijera
republicke Vlade izrecene u Skupstini Srbije. Marjanovic je rekao
da mu je bilo jasno da Tijanic pripada desnici, a bivsi ministar
informisanja odgovara da je on samo zeleo da demokratizuje drzavne
medije, koji su sramota za ovu zemlju.
PAROLE ZA DANAS
,,Uhapsite Slobu'', ,,'Ajmo, 'ajde, svi na pivo!''
Pripremio(la): Zoran Penevski
vesti.1311corto,
Preuzeto sa Pro-a:
================================
Forum, Mediji.1349, drakce
(6.1349) Pet 27/12/1996 03:24, 4495 chr, +plavi.jpg 15k
:: CNN
----------------------------------------------------------------
Ignoring police ban, protesters gather in Belgrade
<Picture: Police>
December 26, 1996
Web posted at: 1:15 p.m. EST (1815 GMT)
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (CNN) -- Defying a police ban, tens of thousands of
people turned out in the streets of Belgrade on Thursday to protest the
rule of President Slobodan Milosevic, and the first death from the wave
of demonstrations that have swept Serbia was reported.
Thousands of police in riot gear were deployed to the center of the
capital, but they allowed the protesters to disperse peacefully.
Although there was no new violence, the opposition coalition said it
feared the government was preparing to arrest its leaders.
Massive demonstrations have been held in Belgrade and other towns
throughout Serbia since courts loyal to Milosevic annulled the results
of November 17 municipal elections won by the opposition. On Tuesday,
the protests turned violent when opposition demonstrators clashed with
Milosevic followers. Police joined the fray, beating anti-Milosevic
demonstrators and several news photographers.
<Picture: Hats>
Opposition urges protesters: Don't give in to fear
Police warned Wednesday night in a statement read on state television
that they would "no longer tolerate the blocking of traffic" and warned
that "police will intervene in accordance with the law to protect the
rights of citizens" if more demonstrations were held.
But on Thursday, about 60,000 people ignored both the warning and cold
wind and snow and turned out for a rally in the capital. Some carried
strings of garlic, which they said were meant as a defense against
"communist vampires."
"We will march ... until they fulfill our demands," said student leader
Cedomir Jovanovic.
<Picture: Draskovic>
Leaders of the main opposition also vowed to continue demonstrating
despite police warnings.
Although police presence brought an end to Thursday's demonstration, the
fact that a rally was held was a victory for the opposition, an
organizer said.
"Today we scored another triumph over Milosevic, showing we are not
afraid of his police," said Vesna Pesic, a leader of the opposition
coalition Zajedno, or Together. "The police should think over who is
leading them."
Vuk Draskovic, another opposition leader, urged supporters not to give
in to scare tactics.
"I'm calling on our supporters to ignore the ban," Draskovic said. "If
we show we are afraid now, tomorrow they may forbid us to drink water or
breathe air."
A third opposition leader, Zoran Djindjic, spoke out against efforts to
overturn municipal election results that didn't favor Milosevic's
Socialists.
"Can you imagine a country in which, after losing local elections, its
president tries to provoke a civil war?" he said. "can you imagine what
he would do if he lost a presidential election -- provoke a world war?"
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe sent a team to
investigate the allegations of election fraud. Its ruling is expected
within the next few days.
First death from the protests reported
A Zajedno spokeswoman said the coalition feared that the government was
preparing to arrest Draskovic, Djindjic and Pesic.
Meanwhile, opposition and independent media reported the first death
from the protests. Predrag Starcevic, 39, died late Tuesday, student
radio Index said, quoting a doctor at Belgrade's Emergency Hospital.
<Picture: Line>
Pesic said Starcevic was beaten near a bridge spanning the Sava River.
Some 10,000 students, who held a demonstration prior to Zajedno's, held
a moment of silence in his memory Thursday.
The United States and other Western nations have warned Milosevic that
he could face renewed economic sanctions if he uses violence to quell
the demonstration. Some opposition protesters, however, have accused the
United States of being afraid to intervene because Milosevic is thought
to be a key player in holding together the fragile peace in neighboring
Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Milosevic was initially seen as the prime backer of Bosnian Serbs who
sought to carve out their own state from Bosnia and merge it with
"Greater Serbia," but he withdrew his support after being hit by
sanctions. Milosevic, along with the Bosnian and Croatian presidents,
signed the Dayton peace accord that ended the Bosnian war.
The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.
(c) 1996 Cable News Network, Inc.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1349 --
vesti.1312corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1350, drakce
(6.1350) Pet 27/12/1996 03:24, 1682 chr
:: Associated Press
----------------------------------------------------------------
Montenegro May Make Its Own Money
Thursday, December 26, 1996 1:20 pm EST
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Montenegro has threatened to introduce its
own currency if Serbia doesn't stop printing money to bolster support
for Slobodan Milosevic, news agencies reported Thursday.
The Serbian president's government reportedly has printed millions of
dollars worth of fresh dinars to take the steam out of more than a month
of anti-government protests. Serbia is tiny Montenegro's senior partner
in the Yugoslav federation and the two republics share a single
currency.
The breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991 was prompted by Milosevic's printing
of money without consultation with other republics. The move angered
Slovenia so much that it announced its independence from the old
federation. War followed between Serbs, Croats and Bosnians.
``If Serbia doesn't stop ... Montenegro will defend itself by all
means,'' Montenegro's vice premier, Slavko Drljevic, was quoted by
Belgrade's Daily Telegraf as saying. ``We will first issue money
coupons, and then we will print our own currency.''
Serbia says the money has gone to pay overdue salaries to workers,
pensions and student loans. The opposition claims that $1 million of it
was spent on a pro-Milosevic rally in Belgrade on Tuesday.
Montenegro's leaders have been sympathetic to the Serbian opposition
since the anti-government protests began. Premier Milo Djukanovic has
said Montenegro was prepared to conduct its own foreign policy if Serbia
did not work harder to rejoin the international community, the Fonet
independent news agency reported.
(c) Copyright 1996 The Associated Press
------------------------------------------------- 6.1350 --
vesti.1313corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1351, drakce
(6.1351) Pet 27/12/1996 03:24, 3864 chr
:: Reuter
----------------------------------------------------------------
Thursday December 26 5:17 PM EST
Serbian President Cracks Down on Protests
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (Reuter) - Riot police forced opposition
demonstrators off Belgrade's streets Thursday as the Serbian government
cracked down on more than five weeks of protests against President
Slobodan Milosevic.
A spokeswoman for the Zajedno opposition parties said the coalition
feared its three main leaders were about to be arrested as Milosevic
appeared to lose patience with the disruption of the capital for at
least six hours a day.
Thousands of police in riot gear swamped central Belgrade to enforce an
Interior Ministry ban on marches by Zajedno and students against
election fraud by the ruling Socialist Party, the SPS.
They ignored a march through snowy streets by 5,000 students but were
firm with around 30,000 Zajedno activists blocking a main street under
the windows of the opposition headquarters in the city center.
They forced the demonstrators into a pedestrian area at the nearby
Republic Square, butting those who resisted with their shields and
hitting them with batons but without severe force.
The three Zajedno leaders said to be threatened with arrest, Zoran
Djindjic, Vuk Draskovic and Vesna Pesic, addressed the demonstrators
from a platform in the square.
Djindjic told the whistling crowd: "Can you imagine a country in which,
after losing local elections, its president tries to provoke a civil
war. Can you imagine what he would do if he lost a presidential election
-- provoke a world war?"
He added before the demonstrators dispersed without apparent incident:
"We will always manage to last one day longer than Milosevic. They
simply cannot keep 20,000 police in Belgrade every day, but we can hold
out for six months if necessary."
The Zajedno spokeswoman said 20,000 police equipped with water cannon
were deployed in the capital to prevent a 37th day of opposition
protests.
The police movements themselves caused traffic chaos and blocked river
and motorway bridges on which the city relies.
The United States and other Western governments have warned Milosevic he
risks economic reprisals and continued international isolation if he
uses violence to restore order.
He rejected a request for an emergency meeting from U.S. Charge
d'Affaires Richard Miles, who saw Foreign Minister Milan Milutinovic
instead.
Yugoslav Deputy Prime Minister Nikola Sainovic told journalists the
authorities would not use violence but said "anyone who violates or
questions the authority of the law will not be tolerated."
At least 58 people were injured in fighting between police, opposition
and SPS supporters Tuesday when Milosevic held a counter-rally outside
the Zajedno offices which flopped.
A man claimed by his family to have been an opposition demonstrator
injured in the clashes died in hospital on Christmas Eve, his doctor
said.
Draskovic, commenting on the ban on marching, said any violence would be
Milosevic's fault.
"This responsibility will be Milosevic's because if the police and
Milosevic's drunken and armed people were not on the streets there would
not be any problems at all," Draskovic said in a radio interview.
Opposition protests were free of violence until Milosevic brought SPS
supporters from outside Belgrade into the city Tuesday.
Russia, traditionally more sympathetic to Serbia than the West, has
warned against outside any interference in Belgrade's current political
turmoil.
The anti-government protests began after Milosevic refused to accept a
stunning series of opposition victories in local elections Nov. 17.
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe is expected to
deliver its opinion on the outcome of the elections within the next few
days.
Copyright (c) 1996 Reuters Limited.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1351 --
vesti.1314corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1352, drakce
(6.1352) Pet 27/12/1996 03:24, 6278 chr
:: Washington Post
----------------------------------------------------------------
Protesters Dash Through Belgrade Snow
Anti-Milosevic Crowd Celebrates Government's Failed Attempt to End
Marches
By John Pomfret
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, December 26 1996; Page A37
The Washington Post
Defying police beatings, tough words from President Slobodan Milosevic
and harsh weather, hundreds of thousands of opposition supporters packed
the snowy streets of the capital today in a boisterous 36th day of
protests against Milosevic's nine-year rule.
Tooting kazoos and whistles, lobbing firecrackers and chanting slogans,
approximately 200,000 people formed a line that snaked through central
Belgrade partly to demand democracy and partly to celebrate what many
here believe to be a significant victory over Milosevic's supporters the
night before.
The peaceful demonstration today was a blunt reminder that Milosevic's
attempts Tuesday night to use his Socialist backers to smash the
month-long wave of opposition protests failed. Socialist Party officials
said they expected 500,000 Milosevic loyalists to converge on Belgrade
Tuesday and scare off the opposition. But far fewer than 100,000 showed
up, and it was Milosevic's boosters who were forced to flee the capital
instead. In all, about 100 people were injured in street clashes between
supporters of the opposition and Milosevic's loyalists and riot police.
The fighting erupted when Milosevic's Socialist Party of Serbia
organized a pro-government demonstration at the same time and in the
same place where the opposition demonstration was to be staged. It was
the first attempt by the Socialists to demonstrate for Milosevic since
the opposition began marching in the capital more than a month ago to
protest the government's annulment of Nov. 17 municipal voting. The
opposition won elections in 14 out of 19 cities, including Belgrade, the
capital.
"The whole world can see that Serbia is the last bastion in Europe for
this kind of government," said Vesna Pesic, an opposition leader. "It is
as if seven years ago the Berlin Wall did not fall. It is as if Serbia
is an island in Europe where democracy has not reached."
Leaders of the opposition coalition, Together, said today they would
continue protesting until Milosevic restores the election results.
In a joint news conference today, Pesic and another opposition leader
dismissed signs of disagreement in their movement and said they still
wish for discussions with Milosevic and other Socialists as long as the
government first recognizes Together's electoral victories.
"We will accept dialogue on condition that he accepts the law," said
Zoran Djindjic, president of the Democratic Party and the main
strategist of the Together movement.
Earlier, Vuk Draskovic, another opposition leader, ruled out any talks
with Milosevic following Tuesday's clashes. One Democratic Party
official said Draskovic's statement "was an emotional overreaction."
The opposition statements appeared to be attempts to calm Western fears
that Tuesday's violence threatened chances of a peaceful settlement of
Serbia's biggest political crisis since 1991, when war came to the
Balkans at what is widely held to be Milosevic's instigation.
It is unclear how the unpredictable Serbian president will respond to
the continued protests or to the growing threat to his rule. In coming
days, he will have several chances to defuse the situation and meet
opposition demands.
In a statement read on state television late tonight, police warned that
all rallies must be organized in accordance with regulations, the
Associated Press reported. One of those rules is that rallies cannot be
held in city centers.
In the important industrial city of Nis, 140 miles south of Belgrade,
where Together says Milosevic's party stole an opposition victory, the
local election commission began meeting today following a court decision
ordering the panel to re-count ballots in 26 polling stations.
On Friday, the 55-nation Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe is expected to issue its recommendations based on a visit to
Belgrade last week by an OSCE delegation, which came at Milosevic's
invitation to look into allegations of vote rigging.
Today, Djindjic and Pesic set out terms for a possible compromise with
Milosevic. The pair said they would agree to new municipal elections
quickly as long as Milosevic recognized their victories.
Djindjic and Pesic also stressed that they wanted equal access to
Serbia's electronic media, which are dominated by the Socialists. An
estimated 80 percent of Serbia's 10 million people rely on state-run TV
Serbia for their news.
Tonight, the state-run TV news called the pro-Milosevic demonstration a
"glorious" and "magnificent" rally of the "forces of peace and
progress." In rhetoric filled with references to "foreign plots,"
"terrorism" and "Western schemes to destabilize Serbia," TV Serbia aired
an unusually strong dose of pro-Milosevic programming.
If the opposition is installed in city halls throughout Serbia,
especially in Belgrade, it would be in a strong position to affect the
outcome of any subsequent elections. Under Serbian law, municipal
governments are responsible for holding elections.
An air of defiance filled the crowd of protesters today. Ivanka
Miljacki, a retired architect, said she was marching for her son and
daughter. They emigrated to the United States because "they saw no hope
for people like them who aren't good at stealing and manipulation and
all the other damnable skills needed to survive here," she said.
Miljacki said she stayed with the crowd Tuesday even though riot police
charged waving batons. "I was protected by big gentlemen," she said. "We
felt secure in our numbers."
Djordje Ristic, 19, a civil engineering student, walked with a placard
taken from a Socialist demonstrator. The placard read: "We don't want
foreign flags." State-run media have said the presence of American and
German flags among the protesters proved that the West funds the
opposition.
"We are a democratic gathering, so even their posters are welcome,"
Ristic said with a wide grin.
(c) Copyright 1996 The Washington Post Company
------------------------------------------------- 6.1352 --
vesti.1315corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1354, drakce
(6.1354) Pet 27/12/1996 03:24, 5100 chr
:: Christian Science Monitor
----------------------------------------------------------------
Friday December 27, 1996 Edition
Serbia Teeters as Opposition Rallies Despite Ban, Violence
Paul Wood, Special to The Christian Science Monitor
BELGRADE -- After six weeks of street protests in Serbia, the prospects
for political compromise are fading quickly.
Yesterday, about 10,000 opponents of strongman Slobodan Milosevic braved
icicle weather and the first police ban on demonstrations to stage
another defiant march in Belgrade. Their action came two days after the
first violent clash between pro- and antigovernment demonstrators that
left one person dead.
"Serbia has never been so close to civil war," said one weary Belgrade
citizen as he surveyed the debris of Tuesday's scuffles, during which
police wielded batons and fired tear gas at the opposition. The
violence, seen widely as having been orchestrated by Mr. Milosevic,
sparked sharp condemnation from the US.
The violence was the official trigger for a warning from authorities
that they are now prepared to clear the streets. This is the strongest
signal so far that Milosevic is preparing a crackdown against the
opposition, which claims he overturned the results of recent local
elections.
Milosevic's intentions are, as ever, hard to read. Police warnings could
be a sign of panic or confidence on his part. He is facing the most
serious challenge of his nine-year rule.
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe is due to
present its findings on November's Serbian local elections today, but
it's not clear if Milosevic will pay any attention.
Battling it out
The stage seems set for a war of attrition on the streets of Belgrade
between the besieged government and the defiant opposition.
The Interior Ministry issued a statement Wednesday saying that any
obstruction to traffic in Belgrade would not be tolerated - effectively
banning any large gathering in the center of the city.
"The streets are for the use of all citizens," the statement said. "The
police in Serbia will not tolerate the blockade of traffic in future and
warn the organizers of the demonstrations that they must exercise their
right to peaceful demonstrations in keeping with the regulations."
The opposition, however, is determined to be defiant.
One of the coalition leaders, Vuk Draskovic, said the protests would go
on as planned. "I'm calling on our supporters to ignore the ban. I will
continue marching and I am calling on the citizens to march along with
me," he said. "If we show we are afraid now, tomorrow they may forbid us
to drink water or breathe air."
Thursday's march
The opposition began to gather for their demonstration on Thursday
afternoon, despite a warning from the Belgrade police chief that the
security forces were prepared to intervene.
At the time of writing, there had been no further violence, but large
numbers of riot police had been deployed into the back streets lining
the main route that the demonstration has taken every day for the past
month.
The warnings from the police came after rural chapters of Milosevic's
socialist party called for tough action against opposition demonstrators
following Tuesday's violence. A statement from Milosevic's supporters
who had attended a progovernment rally on Tuesday said they had come to
the capital "to save Serbia and Belgrade" from the opposition, which was
following a terrorist policy of armed attack against "the glorious
Socialist rally."
One man was killed, and 58 people were treated for injuries, including
one man who was shot in the head. The opposition blamed the governing
socialists for planning their rally - the first so far - for the same
time and same place as the regular opposition rally.
Opposition officials say the socialist rally on Tuesday was a disaster
for Milosevic, who, despite strenuous efforts, failed to muster a larger
crowd than the opposition. Socialists were bused in from the country,
and workers were given a day's pay for attending. One theory is the
government hoped to dwarf the antigovernment rally and gain legitimacy
to sweep the opposition from the streets. Despite state television
reports that half a million socialists were at the progovernment rally,
independent estimates put the total at 50,000 - compared with 200,000
for the opposition.
What police did
After scuffles between supporters and opponents of Milosevic, the police
waded into the opposition protesters with batons drawn. They inflicted
severe beatings on a number of antigovernment demonstrators and fired
vollies of tear gas. More police action will likely cause more
international condemnation of the Serbian government, already heavily
criticized over the cancellation of the local election results. The
United States has raised the possibility of a return to economic
sanctions, and even Russia - a traditional Serbian ally - has warned
Belgrade against the use of force, yet says the West should not meddle
in Serbia's internal affairs.
(c) Copyright 1996 The Christian Science Publishing Society.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1354 --
vesti.1316corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1355, drakce
(6.1355) Pet 27/12/1996 03:24, 3007 chr
:: Miami Herald
----------------------------------------------------------------
Published Thursday, December 26, 1996, in the Miami Herald
Belgrade demonstrations turn violent
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia -- (AP) -- Slobodan Milosevic's supporters from the
countryside called Wednesday for ``tough action'' against opposition
demonstrators, and the Serbian president's Socialist Party demanded they
be punished.
Opposition leaders and students vowed to keep up their protests, but
many wondered whether Milosevic would use Tuesday's violence as an
excuse to crush the opposition.
The clashes between government supporters and opponents left 58 people
injured, including one man who suffered a gunshot wound. It was the
worst violence in Serbia in five years.
There were no signs of a crackdown Wednesday as 100,000 protesters
marched through Belgrade without incident, their 36th day in the
streets.
Earlier in the day, 10,000 student marchers carried sponges, brooms and
plastic bottles filled with soapy water to wash down the spot where
Milosevic's supporters rallied Tuesday. ``Arrest Slobo!'' they chanted.
``The idea is to have pressure from all sides,'' said Bojan Radinovic,
24, an agronomy student at Belgrade University, who blew a whistle as he
slogged through the slush. ``We want to have authorities that can be
replaced.''
The students addressed a letter to Milosevic on Wednesday, accusing him
of bringing Belgrade ``to the edge of civil war.''
Opposition leaders claimed that Milosevic was planning to ban the
pro-democracy protests. The government did not confirm that claim.
Still, Milosevic supporters demanded ``tough action'' against the
demonstrators, saying they came to the capital ``to save Serbia and
Belgrade'' from the opposition, but were greeted by ``hooligans''
hurling stones and eggs.
In a separate statement carried on state media, the ruling Socialist
Party called for ``punishment of the perpetrators for their brutal
attacks against peaceful citizens'' at the pro-Milosevic rally.
Milosevic all but programmed the street battle by urging government
supporters to rally at the same site where the opposition has been
protesting regularly since his annulment of opposition victories in the
Nov. 17 elections.
Milosevic's supporters and opponents clashed repeatedly and police
weighed in with batons against the president's detractors.
The president's backers apparently were trying to orchestrate a
groundswell of support for a crackdown. The 50,000 who took part in
Tuesday's pro-Milosevic rally were far outnumbered by the 300,000
opposition protesters.
Most of the Milosevic supporters -- elderly and blue-collar workers
bused in from provincial towns -- appeared stunned by the level of
opposition support.
Many have received news only from Serbia's state-run TV, which has not
offered a clear picture of the opposition and its demands. Milosevic has
virtually ignored the protests -- the largest since he came to power in
1987.
Copyright (c) 1996 The Miami Herald
------------------------------------------------- 6.1355 --
vesti.1317corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1356, drakce
(6.1356) Pet 27/12/1996 03:24, 1887 chr
:: Miami Herald
----------------------------------------------------------------
Published Thursday, December 26, 1996, in the Miami Herald
Don't punish Serbians for Milosevic's actions
I disagree strongly with the Dec. 10 editorial Send a warning to Serbia
and the idea that reimposing sanctions against Serbia will have any
positive effect on the current crisis there.
The United States wants to keep Slobodan Milosevic as its puppet because
he acquiesced to the ethnic cleansing of more than one million Serbians
(my relatives included) from their centuries-old homes.
If any new leaders emerge in Serbia, they will want to renegotiate a
fairer solution to the Yugoslav Civil War that will acknowledge the
right of self-determination for 2.5 million Serbians who live outside of
Marshal Tito's artificially created borders of Serbia. Mr. Milosevic
knows that if the opposition does assume political command of many major
cities, as the election results seem to warrant, then he can't control
the ballot boxes during the next election. He will be finished.
If we're going to impose sanctions on Serbia for obstructing democracy,
then we should also apply them to Croatia for Franjo Tudjman's barbaric
actions against the tiny independent media there and in Bosnia for the
fraudulent elections that ``elected'' Alija Izetbegovic.
The United States has imposed sanctions on Cuba for more than 30 years.
Have the sanctions deposed Fidel Castro? No, but they have certainly
made life miserable for millions of Cubans.
We should persevere in our efforts to educate Yugoslavs about Mr.
Milosevic's fraud. Only they can depose him. If any sanctions are to be
reimposed, they should target the wealthy scum who have corrupted this
small but proud and historically significant nation.
Michael Pravica
Vice President,
Serbian-American Alliance
of New England
Cambridge, Mass.
Copyright (c) 1996 The Miami Herald
------------------------------------------------- 6.1356 --
vesti.1318corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1357, drakce
(6.1357) Pet 27/12/1996 03:24, 5777 chr
:: Los Angeles Times
----------------------------------------------------------------
Thursday, December 26, 1996
Crackdown Feared as Serbia Bans Protests
By TRACY WILKINSON, Times Staff Writer
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia--The government of President Slobodan Milosevic on
Wednesday banned street demonstrations amid signs that the embattled
Serbian leader may be moving to crush an opposition movement that has
been protesting election fraud for more than a month.
Police, who on Tuesday beat protesters in the first significant violence
recorded since the demonstrations began, will "intervene" to end any
"disruptions of law and order" on city streets, the Interior Ministry
said in a statement issued late Wednesday night.
The warning followed another day of protest, when defiant and boisterous
opposition demonstrators returned to the snowy streets of this Serbian
and Yugoslav capital, despite clashes the day before with Milosevic's
bused-in supporters and his riot police.
Opposition leaders had earlier said they feared Milosevic would use
Tuesday's violence to justify a wider crackdown, and they predicted a
protest ban would be ordered. A previous prohibition was ignored. But
that was before police beatings and other skirmishes injured more than
50 people.
Vuk Draskovic, one of three leaders of the opposition coalition known as
Zajedno, or Together, late Wednesday urged his followers to disregard
the police order. "We are walking against the stealing of elections, and
we will continue walking," he told radio listeners. "Citizens, behave as
though you didn't hear the [government] message and walk tomorrow in all
directions."
On Wednesday, the protest began with a lower number than usual of
students, who used liquid detergent and brooms to "decontaminate" the
site of the previous day's pro-Milosevic rally. Later, tens of thousands
of opposition activists marched through downtown, then gathered in
Republic Square. No riot police were visible and no violence was
reported. Today may be different.
Shattering more than five weeks of relatively peaceful protest against
Milosevic for annulling opposition victories in municipal elections,
Tuesday's fighting has made a solution to the political crisis seizing
Serbia seem more remote than ever. Both sides hardened their positions
Wednesday.
"Frankly, it seems now there is no room for dialogue," said Vesna Pesic,
another Zajedno leader. "We can be nice and say we are ready for
dialogue, but the reality we saw yesterday is he [Milosevic] doesn't
want it."
* * *
In police-escorted buses, Milosevic transported thousands of his rural,
working-class supporters to Belgrade on Tuesday for a rally timed to
upstage the daily demonstration by opposition forces.
The bewildered government supporters, reportedly paid to attend and
unaware of what they would be up against, fought with opposition
hecklers until police separated the two sides. Police later fired tear
gas and used batons to disperse opposition activists.
But the regime controlled by Milosevic for the last nine years, shaken
by protests it cannot stop, was reportedly stunned by the low turnout of
its supporters, a fraction of the crowd mustered by Zajedno and student
groups.
Flanked by the elite of his leftist ruling coalition, including his
powerful wife, Milosevic addressed his rally and attempted to portray
his opponents as foreign lackeys who want to weaken Serbia, which with
tiny Montenegro makes up the rump Yugoslavia.
As he did during his rise to power in the late 1980s, Milosevic drummed
up support by creating an enemy within that must be resisted. The
earlier performance played on festering nationalism and led to the
breakup of the former Yugoslav federation and to savage civil war in
neighboring republics.
On cue, Milosevic's supporters Wednesday issued condemnations of the
violence, blaming it exclusively on the opposition, and demanded
punishment of the "peace-breakers."
"Zajedno displayed its terrorist techniques by throwing stones and
beating people," one group said in a statement read on official radio.
"They provoked many incidents, showing what kind of democracy they are.
. . . We condemn the wild behavior of extreme and militant [members] of
the Zajedno coalition."
State television, which broadcast Milosevic's speech live and has been
repeating it regularly, included coverage Wednesday of the fights
"provoked by leaders of Zajedno" and praised the police for restoring
order.
Controlled by Milosevic, state television is the main source of news for
all Serbia; it did not broadcast footage of a Socialist Party supporter
shooting an opposition activist in the head, the most serious of
Tuesday's injuries.
In one sign of compromise, however, opposition leaders signaled their
willingness to go to new elections if the Nov. 17 results are
recognized. This would allow Zajedno to have its people in office
overseeing preparation for the new round of voting.
Milosevic's hard-line speech, declaring that Serbia will not be enslaved
to a foreign power, may also have been a preemptory slap at the findings
of an international commission examining the alleged election fraud that
has sparked 38 days of protest. A delegation of the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe will make recommendations by the end
of this week and is expected to urge Milosevic to recognize the Nov. 17
results.
Already, officials of the regime are prepared to dismiss the OSCE
findings, even though the delegation came to Belgrade at Milosevic's
invitation. "The commission can give its opinion, but it has no right to
[enforce] conclusions," Serbian Prime Minister Mirko Marjanovic told the
daily newspaper Nasa Borba.
Copyright Los Angeles Times
------------------------------------------------- 6.1357 --
vesti.1319corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1358, drakce
(6.1358) Pet 27/12/1996 03:24, 847 chr
:: USA Today
----------------------------------------------------------------
Crackdown on protests continues in Yugoslavia
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia - Riot police tried to enforce a new ban on
anti-government rallies Thursday, sealing off a central square and
clubbing demonstrators who defiantly filled the streets in spite of
President Slobodan Milosevic's new crackdown. Police blocked the
protesters from their route to a downtown square where they have been
massing for 37 straight days. In closing off the square, the police
trapped thousands of protesters within. About 60,000 demonstrators made
their way to another square nearby. Police allowed the rally to proceed,
but later clubbed dozens of demonstrators and three news camaramen. The
beatings sent three demonstrators to the hospital, protest organizers
said. State television had announced the nationwide police ban on
rallies the night before.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1358 --
vesti.1320corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1359, drakce
(6.1359) Pet 27/12/1996 03:24, 1127 chr
:: Wall Street Journal
----------------------------------------------------------------
Dow Jones Business News
-- December 26, 1996
U.S. Defends Serbia 'Protestors Rights'; Warns Milosevic
AP-Dow Jones News Service
WASHINGTON -- Upholding rights of protest for the Serbian opposition,
the U.S. government warned again Thursday that it would hold Serb
President Slobodan Milosevic's government responsible for any violence
in the streets of Belgrade.
State Department spokesman John Dinger said the Serbian government had
acted irresponsibly in ordering a ban against ongoing demonstrations in
the capital. The government should 'show restraint and not interfere
with the protesters' rights,' he added to reporters.
U.S. officials have earlier branded as provocative government efforts to
crack down on the welling street protests, and warned that violence
could mean toughening of existing international sanctions against the
Serb authorities.
Commenting on a report that two Americans have been injured during the
Belgrade demonstrations, Dinger said U.S. privacy laws prevented
releasing such information.
Copyright c 1996 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
------------------------------------------------- 6.1359 --
vesti.1321corto,
================================
Forum, Mediji.1361, dejanr
(6.1361) Pet 27/12/1996 04:24, 5349 chr
----------------------------------------------------------------
THE END OF THE ROAD
Collapse of the "Milosevic system" at home more apparent day by day
By Karl Grobe / Frankfurter Rundschau =3D
Frankfurt am Main - The Serbian president has reached the end of
the road he started out along in Kosovo in 1989.
His conversion from late Titoist communism to Serbian nationalism
has saved neither the Serbian hold on Yugoslavia nor Yugoslavia
itself. His attempt to gain more and more territory for a Greater
Serbia failed in the face of opposition from other - Croatian and
Bosnian - chauvinisms which challenged that of Slobodan Milosevic.
Instead of a future in which the peoples of Yugoslavia more or
less obediently toed the Belgrade line, Milosevic's war - and those
of Franjo Tudjman, Radovan Karadzic, paramilitary groups, Ratko
Mladic and others - has created a present based on historical myths
which will burden the region for generations.
Now the collapse of the "Milosevic system" at home, too, is
becoming more apparent day by day. Blatant electoral fraud failed to
secure him a majority in the major cities. The even greater outrage
of having people go on voting for as long as compliant judges and
spineless electoral commissions think fit, in other words until the
politically correct majority is achieved, has been thwarted by the
popular movement in Belgrade.
The plebiscite of the streets has turned out clear enough.
Estimates of demonstrating crowds are always subjective. Beyond a
doubt, however, the democratic opponents of the system outnumber its
supporters by four or more to one.
Another factor to consider is that the hundreds of thousands who
have taken to the Belgrade streets day after day for more than a
month have done so voluntarily - despite absurd references to road
traffic regulations, despite the threat of armed force and
punishment, despite the deathly silence in the state-censored
mass media. The few broadcasting stations and newspapers who
portrayed them anywhere near objectively soon had their freedom of
expression curtailed.
It was not the mass media who called upon people to resist. It was
opposition politicians like Vuk Draskovic and Zoran Djindjic, unknown
students and office workers, manual labourers and intellectuals.
The Christmas demonstrations in support of the system, on the
contrary, were few in number and mainly brought about through
promises and threats - promises of food, clothing and cash, and
threats of losing jobs.
Even so, in the whole of Serbia only a few stood up to be counted.
Another failed attempt by the Milosevic clan was to try to mobilise
the base they claim to have in the provinces, among the still largely
agrarian population and people living in small towns, against the big
cities inhabited by urbane intellectuals and the proletariat.
Milosevic and his Socialist Party, his wife Mirijana Markovic and
her more radical band of supporters, are failing in their struggle
against the more progressive sections of Serbian society, who will
form the basis of a future civilian society.
Using the primitive tactics of national consciousness and
chauvinism, the Milosevic clan has tried to appeal to the self-image
of the social forces one might describe as "old Serbian", who have
stayed one generation behind Belgrade and the other urban centres. To
no avail: even they no longer follow him.
For the future, first, of Serbian society, that is far more
important than the answer to the question as to how many units if not
of the army then of the police are still loyal to the system.
In any case the heir of Tito-style bureaucratic communism cannot
rely on the bureaucrats - and he knows it. The new bureaucratic class
has been reared on opportunism and careerism, has adapted to every
change of course, followed Milosevic and his clan to Kosovo and
chauvinism, and will serve any new state power in the same way.
A new government would be well advised to overcome its naive
belief in the normative power of election results alone. At this
phase of the struggle for a civilian society defending election
victory has had a detonating, inspiring effect. Now more is required
- namely controlling the corrupt, conscience-bereft bureaucratic
apparatus.
If in addition to the votes it has won first through the ballot
box and subsequently through people's feet, the Belgrade mass
movement manages to predominate over the executive, the city may once
more become a radiant centre of social and political modernisation.
In order to achieve this, the present opposition needs support
from abroad, and it is essential to isolate Milosevic and his
henchmen internationally and strip them of the myth of being the
"guarantors of the Dayton accords".
The Dayton Accords are based on the misuse of ethnic principles
which Milosevic initiated in Kosovo. This truce can only be
transformed into real peace through a genuinely democratic, tolerant,
civilian political order without nationalist hangers-on of any
colour. And not just in Belgrade - though that is where the critical
confrontation is making promising progress right now.
790 words
(c) Frankfurter Rundschau/The German Newspaper News Service mt pb
+++gnns+gnns+gnns+++German Newspaper News Service+++gnns+gnns+gnns+++
262201 MEZ Dez 96 nnnn
------------------------------------------------- 6.1361 --
vesti.1322dzakic,
Radio B92 se ponovo ne čuje. Tehnička ekipa RTK javlja da je signal koji
stiže iz Doma Omladine loš, međutim u Domu Omladine kažu da su imali pad
napona, ali su isključili sve uređaje kojima bi to moglo da smeta i da
'distorzija' postoji samo na predajniku.
Studenti danas nisu išli u šetnju jer ih je u tome sprečio kordon
policajaca. Šetalo se 'u krug' Knez Mihajlovom. Studenti su još uvek
ispred platoa. Radio Index javlja da na desetine autobusa stiže u Beograd
iz svih pravaca - od hale Pionir Takovskom, niz Bulevar takođe, ima ih i
u Nemanjinoj.
Filipe Gonzales potvrdio pobedu opozicije u drugom izbornom krugu. Više
detalja biće poznato u toku popodneva nakon konferencije za štampu.
vesti.1323inferno,
-> #1216, juniorŮ│ ˙ Drugo, socijalisti ne bi ni pravili miting da nisu imali osiguranih
Ů│ ˙ bar 100 000 ljudi koji će da dođu. A to je _njihova_ najgora procena.
Zašto ne bi pravili? Uz vešte kamermane može i 40000 ljudi
da se predstavi kao "napregledan kolona od 500000 ljudi".
vesti.1324dpaun,
-> #1223, olio> Paune, paune, samo se ti sepuri sa svojim raskosnim repom.?
Raskosnog repa vise nema: ove godine su me nacisto ocerupali;
ostali su samo _repovi_ koji ce se dugo vuci ZaMnom!
> A ona tvoja govornica iz Majdanpeka ..... daj malo vise o njoj?
> Strasno me interesuje ko je i sto je?
Zasla u petu deceniju, a jos uvek joj devojacko prezime nevino.
Na ovaj nacin se dopunjuje do Cele Licnosti (From). Da si Zgodno
Zensko, mozda bi te primetila! (Lokalni trac, nisam proverio. ;)
> Nemoj da mi kaljate lik i delo CORTO-a i DJCORTO-a jel se za to
> odgovara po ovdasnjim zakonima, a i zakonima ovde na
> sezamnet-u.
Priznajem (nek mi se pola oprosti!):
- Corto&Corto, mi_vas_volimo! Corto&Corto, mi_vas_volimo!
(Ako izostane ono: "I mi volimo vas" - odo ja na SezamPro!)
PS. Fale mi samo njihovi likovi za transparente!
PS.1. Trazio sam, ali su mi poslali samo sliku Pufte (njihovog macka,
a vidim sada da je i on indoktrinirani strani /pot/placenik!)
PS.2. Jes vidio sta sve nasim _macorima_ mogu da ucine strane
konzerve?! Konzerva-dve i odmah frkcu drugacije! Ocekujem od Pufte da
zakaci strane zastave o rep i pronese ih kroz Beograd.)
... Pufta! Pufta! Pufta!
> Pozdrav Oliver.
I mi tebi.
dPaun i njegova Peta Kolona iz Muzeja u Majdanpeku.
PS.3. Slatka Dr.Aginja vec pevusi:
Drug Paun jase na celu V kolone?
vesti.1325ognjen,
-> #1203, corto)-> Po ostalima, nista sem diktatorove izjave ljubavi svome stadu,
Ima li neko "I ja volim vas" .WAV?
vesti.1326corto,
-> #1324, dpaun> - Corto&Corto, mi_vas_volimo! Corto&Corto, mi_vas_volimo!
> (Ako izostane ono: "I mi volimo vas" - odo ja na SezamPro!)
NE ! Odlucno, mirno, dostojanstveno, bez namere da se menja,
nicim izazvano (ops!) NE !
PAUNE, MI TE VOLIMO !!!!
> PS.1. Trazio sam, ali su mi poslali samo sliku Pufte (njihovog
> macka, a vidim sada da je i on indoktrinirani strani
> /pot/placenik!)
Ovakvi napadi, cccccc ...
Kao prvo, Pufna je gospodjica macka. Macor je Obelix, strvina
muska koja samo zdere i pravi sran*a po kuci.
> PS.2. Jes vidio sta sve nasim _macorima_ mogu da ucine strane
> konzerve?! Konzerva-dve i odmah frkcu drugacije! Ocekujem od
> Pufte da zakaci strane zastave o rep i pronese ih kroz
> Beograd.)
Nogekako ;)
Zloupotrebljavajuci user,
djcorto ;)
> - Corto&Corto, mi_vas_volimo! Corto&Corto, mi_vas_volimo!
> (Ako izostane ono: "I mi volimo vas" - odo ja na SezamPro!)
Malo morgen ! A gde je ono "Mi smo Cortovi, Corto je nas" ?
Ovlasceni user ;)