OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 203, 18 October 1995
HUNGARIAN PREMIER ON VISIT TO CROATIA, SERBIA. Gyula Horn told the
parliament on 16 October that the purpose of his visit to Zagreb and
Belgrade is to help start economic reconstruction efforts there,
Hungarian media reported. He noted that this is of primary importance
for Hungary because its economy has suffered significant losses since
the outbreak of war in the region. He also commented that as acting head
of the OSCE, Hungary will do everything in its power to secure the
earliest possible resolution to the Yugoslav crisis. Horn the next day
met with leaders of four parties representing Croatian and Vojvodina
Hungarians to discuss how his visit can help the situation of ethnic
Hungarians in the region, according to Hungarian media on 18 October.
Vojvodina Hungarians said they asked the premier to pressure Belgrade to
move most Serb refugees out of the Vojvodina region to other parts of
Serbia. Representatives of Hungarians in Croatia told reporters they
want to take part in any negotiations on the future of eastern Slavonia.
Hungary and Croatia have signed a basic treaty and an accord on the
mutual protection of minorities, but Budapest's links with Belgrade are
rather tense at present. -- Zsofia Szilagyi
[As of 12:00 CET]
Compiled by Jan Cleave
|
Wednesday, 18 October 1995
Volume 2, Issue 204
REGIONAL NEWS
-------------
**HUNGARIAN PRIME MINISTER TO VISIT ZAGREB AND BELGRADE**
Representatives of Hungarian minorities in Croatia and Serbia
are calling on Hungarian Prime Minister Gyula Horn not to
forget about them when he visits Zagreb and Belgrade this
week. Horn will be in Zagreb today. He'll head to Belgrade
Friday for a meeting with Serbian president Slobodan
Milosevic. Hungarian participation in the post-war
reconstruction of the former Yugoslavia's infastructure will
be on the agenda. Horn is also expected to suggest that
Hungary host a multinational reconstruction conference. The
leaders of four parties representing Hungarians in the former
Yugoslavia are asking Horn to press Belgrade to move most of
the Serb refugees in Vojvodina to other parts of Serbia.
Vojvodina's 300 thousand Hungarians feel threatened by an
influx of 100 thousand Serbian refugees from Croatia's Krajina
region, whose presence, they say, is changing the region's
ethnic balance. They think the Serbian government intends to
settle the Krajinan Serbs permanently in the region.
ABOUT CET ON-LINE
-----------------
* CET On-Line is Copyright (c) 1995 Word Up! Inc., New Media
Group, all rights reserved. Not-for-profit redistribution of
CET On-Line in electronic format is allowed only if our
copyright notice, and all other copyright and by-line
information contained in this publication is included.
For-profit distribution of this publication or the information
contained herein is strictly prohibited without the express
written permission of Word Up! Inc., New Media Group. These
conditions are subject to change without notice. For further
information, contact Zoltan Nagy at >
Some portions of the news provided by special agreement with
Reuters. For information on Reuters news and information
products, contact your local Reuters office.
* All "Letters to the Editor" and other comments about
editorial content should be directed to Duncan Shiels at
>. Any comments about distribution or
production should be directed to Zoltan Nagy at
>.
**CET On-Line** is a Word Up! Inc., New Media Group
Publication. The New Media Group also publishes the Prague
Financial Monitor on-line. For more information on the Prague
FM, send a message with the word INFO in the body of a message
to >.
For a copy of the latest issue of the Prague Financial Monitor,
send a blank e-mail message to >.
**Subscription Information**
CET On-Line is a free e-publication. Subscribe by sending a
message with the word SUBSCRIBE in the body of a message to
>. For an automated information
response, send a blank message to >.
To unsubscribe at any time, send the word UNSUBSCRIBE in the body,
not the subject line, of a message to >.
For a copy of the latest issue of CET On-Line, simply send a blank
e-mail message to >.
|