Subscribe to J'adore MilkNews FeedSubscribe to J'adore MilkComments

A meeting of Mr Silajdzic the Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic and the US Assistant Secretary

Posted by admin  
Filed under Magazine

Leave a comment

A meeting of Mr Silajdzic, the Bosnian President, Alija Izetbegovic, and the US Assistant Secretary of State, Richard Holbrooke, highlighted the Sarajevo government's frustration over what it perceives as a weakening of support from its key ally. Yesterday's disagreement made it unlikely that any progress could be made quickly on a political settlement of the 33-month-old war.Mr Holbrooke said the five-nation Contact Group - representatives of the US, Russia, Britain, France and Germany - would begin a new round of talks tomorrow in an attempt to reach a final political settlement.The Contact Group has proposed giving Bosnian Serbs, who hold 70 per cent of the republic, 49 per cent The government and its Croat allies would get 51 per cent. Markus Wolff, head of East Germany's international spy network, was accused of "betrayal of one's country". Mr Modrow's defenders pointed out the trial was something of a paradox, since Mr Modrow was once - even as the Wall came down - seen by Bonn as the bright hope, "the East German Gorbachev".Other trials have descended into near-farce. Thus, the reform Communist, Hans Modrow, former party leader in Dresden, was prosecuted in connection with election fraud.

Some "little people", including young border guards, have been prosecuted in connection with shootings on the East German death strip. But the big players have tended to get away - not least because their responsibility is less easy to pin down. As one German official noted, "The higher one gets, the more complicated things get, in purely legal terms."Bonn may have been partly relieved that Honecker's illness gave an excuse to allow him to board a plane into exile in Chile in 1993, where he died of cancer last year.The German government was unenthusiastic about the prospect of Honecker - who was charged with responsibility for killings at the East German border - revealing embarrassing details about his partly cosy contacts with Bonn in the 1980s.Most of the prosecutions have had to be based on the East German legal code. But most east Germans remember Mr Krenz primarily as the hardline comrade of the East German Communist Party leader, Erich Honecker, who he replaced.So far, German justice has found itself constantly tangled by the legacy of East German Communism. "For my political activity in the [German Democratic Republic], I am not subject to the legislation of the Federal German Republic, under national or international law," he said. In recent years Mr Krenz, 57, has been keen to present himself as a liberal - not least because he happened to be in charge of the Communist ship when it finally sank. Mr Krenz does not believe the court to have jurisdiction over him. Egon Krenz, the East German Communist who in June 1989 praised the Tiananmen Square massacre and who five months later opened the Berlin Wall, was charged yesterday in connection with killings on the East German border.

The case against Mr Krenz and six other leading East German Communists is not expected to come to court until the summer at the earliest But the trial looks set to be rich in contradictions. Second, the potential university students - now exempt - used to provide the non-commissioned officers and specialist troops. The only people properly qualified to do such jobs now are officers.. First, the Russian armed forces are getting only half the people they need. Last year they were 250,000 short of their authorised strength of 570,000.

Comments

Comments are closed.