Ivo Skoric on Mon, 21 Jun 2004 07:21:52 +0200 (CEST) |
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[digested @ nettime] "Ivo Skoric" <ivo@reporters.net> Croatia's Untouchables Murder in Montenegro Bus bombing (Fwd) Re: Transparency of Evil Croatian Pamela South East Europe Cooperation Serb Talibans - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Ivo Skoric" <ivo@reporters.net> Date: Fri, 04 Jun 2004 12:27:46 -0400 Subject: Croatia's Untouchables While in Montenegro organized crime style murers are still the order of a day, in Croatia the units fighting organized crime seem to be getting upper hand: former Croatia's #2 arrested for attempt to extort a bribe! ivo ps - just like my father, Granic also likes to hold his confidential meetings at Zagreb's pictoresque main cemetery Mirogoj: I guess that must be a generational trait, feeling the closeness of the last days... ------- Forwarded message follows ------- Croatia: High Society Arrests by Drago Hedl 3 June 2004 Following the detention and release of one of Croatia’s most prominent politicians and an equally notable businessman, questions arise about the extent of corruption. ZAGREB, Croatia--A former foreign minister and a prominent businessman last month ended up in police custody in the wake of corruption allegations but have subsequently been released. Although no charges have been filed, the affair has nonetheless caused a scandal in Croatia. Accusations of corruption are commonplace in Croatia, but this marks the first time that such a high-ranking official has been detained. Mate Granic--the foreign minister from 1993 to 1999 under independent Croatia’ s first president, the nationalist Franjo Tudjman--was arrested on 7 May. He was suspected of seeking a bribe for his mediation in a financial transaction. At the same time, Darinko Bago--Granic's brother-in-law and the president of Zagreb’s Koncar electronics consortium--was also arrested. During Granic's mandate at the Foreign Ministry, Bago served as Croatian ambassador to Bosnia and Herzegovina and to Bulgaria. On 10 May, an investigative judge from the County Court in Zagreb, Kresimir Devcic, released the two, rejecting a request from USKOK--a special body operating within the Justice Ministry set up to deal with cases of organized crime--that the two men be kept in detention for a month. Devcic also refused to launch an investigation against Granic and Bago, arguing that the evidence presented by USKOK--including the results of undercover police surveillance—was insufficient. Upon his release, Granic charged that the whole affair had been staged to defame him. “I know who they are,” Granic said, referring to those figures he accused of plotting against him, “but I'd rather not name them.” Several hours later, he was admitted to a Zagreb hospital to undergo an emergency angioplasty after nearly suffering a heart attack. “I am shocked and aghast at the news [of Granic's arrest],” said Vesna Skare-Ozbolt, the current justice minister and a close Granic associate in the Democratic Centre (DC), at a press conference on the day of Granic’s arrest. Skare-Ozbolt and Granic established the DC together after leaving Tudjman's Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), and she recently took over the chairmanship of the DC from Granic. “Nevertheless, the legal system must function regardless of the [position] of the suspect,” Skare-Ozbolt added. “The rule of law should function, and no one is exempt from his or her responsibility, but since I have been, for 15 years, connected in various ways with this man who has been present on the public and political stage, then it is a painful situation for me as well, regardless of what the outcome of this affair may be,” Vladimir Seks, the speaker of the Croatian parliament and Granic's former HDZ party colleague, told the Zagreb daily Jutarnji list the day after the arrests. ARC OF POWER In his time as foreign minister, Granic ranked above current Croatian Prime Minister Ivo Sanadar when the latter was the assistant foreign minister. He had a reputation for being a moderate member of Tudjman's HDZ and was reputed to be in constant conflict with the rabidly nationalistic faction headed by the then-Defense Minister, Gojko Susak. After Tudjman’s death in 1999, with HDZ in a clear losing position in the run-up to elections, Granic gained the HDZ nod to run in the presidential elections. As it turned out, Granic--having been advised to distance himself from HDZ--ran as an unaffiliated candidate in his pre-election campaign. However, he was defeated in the first round of voting. Granic was the first to acknowledge the defeat of HDZ in the parliamentary elections in 2000. He would later say that it was very important to concede on the evening of election day because there were forces within HDZ that were not ready to withdraw from their positions easily. It was exactly those forces, he maintained, that induced him to leave HDZ and found DC. Several moderate HDZ parliamentarians joined him in the effort. However, due to the DC’s rather vaguely defined policy and its attempts to position itself between HDZ and the leftist coalition headed by then-Prime Minister Ivica Racan, DC never managed to attract a significant number of followers. His party was mocked as “HDZ lite.” The parliamentary elections in November last year were a debacle for Granic. His party won only one seat in parliament, and at the end of the last year, Granic withdrew from the position of DC chairman, leaving it to Skare-Ozbolt. There were rumors that he might be granted an ambassadorship, given his foreign affairs experience and his acquaintance with Sanadar, but no appointment materialized. A medical doctor by profession, Granic had most recently been working on founding his own company to provide consulting and mediation services. His financial affairs have been the subject of much scrutiny, and media reports have offered his financial problems as motive for the alleged affair. At the beginning of April, the weekly Feral Tribune published documents showing that Granic's wife took out a 20-year mortgage in the amount of 160,000 euros ($196,000) in 1997 for the construction of a villa in Zagreb. Sanader, the current prime minister, served as guarantor for the loan. The monthly payment necessary to service the debt amounts to nearly 1,400 euros ($1,711) until the year 2017. The figure represents three times the average salary in Croatia. Since his departure from parliament and the DC, Granic has been unemployed as his company has not yet started to function. CATCH AND RELEASE On 17 May, USKOK countered the 10 May County Court order by lodging an appeal with the Supreme Court. “We believe that we have collected sufficient evidence to support our reasonable suspicion that a crime has been committed,” USKOK head Zeljko Zganjer told the press on 17 May. Two days later, Jutarnji list published the leaked contents of the confidential police audiotapes of several of Granic's secret meetings. The recordings seemed to implicate Granic in a possible corruption case but indicated that he stopped short of completing the transaction. Jutarnji list is the second largest daily in Croatia. Owned by a Croatian businessperson and the German WAZ media empire, it has broken many of Croatia’s corruption scandals, although its journalistic standards have sometimes come into question. The leaking of the transcripts to Jutarnji list became an affair in itself. Given that it is illegal to disclose confidential evidence, the case triggered condemnation from the judiciary. While he cannot comment on the Granic and Bago case, Supreme Court President Ivica Crnic does not rule out that the leaking of the transcripts represents a form of pressure on the Supreme Court. He doesn’t think the media always show enough responsibility in such cases. According to Crnic, those who sue or find themselves sued often manipulate the media “ to the extent the media allows them.” “The public needs to know as many facts as possible. Nevertheless, confidential information should not be leaked as long as the state institutions in charge don’t decide about them. Any other way of conducting [judicial processes] ... would bring into question the dignity of all judicial bodies. All those who fail to keep judicial secrets should be thrown out ... of the state as well as judicial institutions,” Crnic told the Rijeka-based Novi list daily. According to reports from corruption watchdog group Transparency International and the media reports--as well as conventional wisdom within the country--Croatia remains a place struggling with high levels of corruption. Even high political officials are considered susceptible, although the number of people officially charged with corruption is relatively small. Granic is the highest-placed former government official to be so accused. And although he was arrested months after his withdrawal from politics, his political allies are still painting the arrest as a form of political reprisal. Adding fuel to the fire, reports in the Croatian media claim that if the case is ultimately pursued after an appeal to the Supreme Court and ends up in trial, witnesses for the prosecution could include the former mayor of Zagreb, Milan Bandic, and Neven Mimica, a former European integration minister in the previous Ivica Racan government and retired chair of the Koncar supervisory board who is now an independent parliamentarian. Bandic and Mimica confirmed to the press that they had heard about the case of alleged bribery from Granic and Bago even before their arrests but refused to speculate on the credibility of the case. Details of the case remain sketchy. What can be deduced from a scanty police press release published after Granic and Bago had been arrested is that Vladimir Delonga--a former president of one of the 20 firms belonging to the Koncar umbrella--wanted to sell his shares of that firm. Since the shares do not trade on the Croatian stock market, they could be traded or sold only within the Koncar holding company itself, which Bago heads. Granic, the police claim, volunteered to act as a negotiator for the transaction but wanted to sell the shares at a price higher than the actual one and in return wanted a commission of approximately 80,000 euros ($98,000). Delonga, according to the police, reported the conversation as an attempt to extort a bribe. He agreed to cooperate with police, attending the next meeting with Granic wearing a recording device. The two met at the famous Zagreb cemetery Mirogoj, where Tudjman was buried in 1999. Interestingly, Granic in interviews long before the arrest had mentioned Mirogoj as a place he often chose for confidential discussions when he suspected that he was being watched by Tudjman's secret services. On the day in question, police say that it was raining and the two men were standing under one umbrella, making the recording of their conversation of excellent quality. Their conversation is distinct and clearly heard, and the police say it provides sufficient evidence to hold both Granic and Bago. There is no legal deadline for the Supreme Court to rule on the case. “Therefore, the Supreme Court will be able to impartially and calmly examine the case and make the final ruling then. ... I say to all those who ‘cheer’ for one side in court cases to calm down and let the courts perform their legal and constitutional duties,” Crnic said. Drago Hedl is an Osijek-based editor with Feral Tribune. ------- End of forwarded message -------Ivo Skoric 1773 Lexington Ave New York NY 10029 212.369.9197 ivo@balkansnet.org http://balkansnet.org - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Ivo Skoric" <ivo@reporters.net> Date: Fri, 04 Jun 2004 14:00:39 -0400 Subject: Murder in Montenegro Who killed Dusko Jovanovic and why? Jovanovic was an editor and journalist of anti-inependence Podgorica's daily Dan, and a former defender of policies of Slobodan Milosevic. He had a record as a politically motivated muck-raker. And he particularly annoyed Djukanovic's government by re-publishing the condemning series of stories on Montenegro's pro-independence govt being involved in cigarette smuggling and trafficing in people from Croatia's newspaper Nacional. He was killed a couple of days ago in a well executed gangland murder reminiscent of the Al Capone times (machine guns fired from a car, no silencers). By chance or design, the police came to the scene quickly, yet the clues proved to be confusing and contradicting. So far, only two young athletes - whose uncle, the former reigning world tae-kwan-do champion, was himself killed by an anti-independence gunmen a few years ago (hence the revenge motive) - were taken into custody. But they - locals with good knowledge of escape routes - might have been used only as drivers, while the gunmen might be outsiders. The list of people that would have a motive to kill him is pretty long and includes many people in Montenegrin government as well. His brother says he can name exactly 5 people who wanted Jovanovic dead. At an opposition march held to honour Jovanovic's memory on May 29, protesters shouted "Milo - murderer" as they passed government buildings in Podgorica. Djukanovic maintains that the 'other side' killed him with intention to destabilize Montenegro's government. The government called foreign forensic experts, and announced a 1 millio euro award for information leading to arrest of the killer, with minister of interior tending in his resignation pending failure to solve the murder case. Out of three cars mentioned by witnesses - VW passat, VW golf, and BMW M5 SUV, the cheapest one (golf) was recovered by the police wit copious amounts of evidence - including guns. But the fact that the car was left to be found, suggests that it might be there to take the investigation on the wrong track. Interstingly - and that is reported in Croatia's Nacional - bmw had license plates from Novi Sad, and could be traced to private eye agency Gvozden in Vojvodina that employs many former infamous Red Berrets - hired guns that killed journalists before. That lead could take to Vojvodina's leading organized crime figure Stanko Subotic Cane (whose security is provided by Gvozden). He used to be involved in cigarette smuggling operation and he was named as one of 5 people who would want Jovanovic dead, by Jovanovic's brother. Apparently, with loss of his political connections in Serbia, Subotic was trying to legitimize his crime revenues by buying a string of hotels on Montenegrin coast (as the US crime figures used to in 1950s in Las Vegas after Castro took over Havana). Jovanovic run a story on Subotic-Djukanovic connection just 2 days before his death. ivo Sources: http://www.pcnen.cg.yu/ http://www.iwpr.net/ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Ivo Skoric" <ivo@reporters.net> Date: Fri, 11 Jun 2004 11:37:17 -0400 Subject: Bus bombing This time it is not Greyhound in the US but Nis-Express in Serbia.. That Ejupi dude must have been a great pain for Americans managing to escape from their largest European military base, Bondsteel, and evade CIA for about 3 years. ivo Bus-bombing suspects arrested in Tirana (RTS) Three Kosovo Albanians charged with terrorism have been arrested in Tirana, the Albanian Police spokeswoman Ediira Teferichi announced. According to the Albanian Police, Florim Ejupi (25) is responsible for murdering a NATO soldier alongside with 11 Serbs by activating an explosive device under the Nis Express bus in the village of Livadice near Podujevo in February 2001. Ejupi is also connected with murders of one international and one local KPS policeman, as well as for wounding two police officers in March 2004. The other two, Faik Saciri (22) and Xevat Kosuni (36), for whom the German Police has released international warrants a couple of months ago, are also charged with murders and terrorist actions, the Albanian daily Gazette Schiptare reported. The Albanian Police made the arrests at UNMIK Police request and the three Kosovo Albanians are currently held in custody, waiting for UNMIK Police to send files of the arrested persons to Interpol Office in Albania for the procedure of extradition to start. The daily writes that the group headed by Florim Ejupi was located with the assistance of the CIA, whose agents have been intensively searching for Ejupi, because he had succeeded to escape from detention in the US military base Bondsteel. The Albanian Police says that Ejupi and Saciri are members of the Albanian National Army (ANA).----------------------------------------- ---------------- Ivo Skoric 19 Baxter Street Rutland VT 05701 802.775.7257 ivo@balkansnet.org balkansnet.org - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Ivo Skoric" <ivo@reporters.net> Date: Sun, 13 Jun 2004 11:09:25 -0400 Subject: (Fwd) Re: Transparency of Evil ------- Forwarded message follows ------- I married one of those women (in black) that you saw in Belgrade. That is quite correct comparison (Vietnam - Bosnia). There is indeed disturbingly high similarity in behavior of Americans vs. the rest of the world to the behavior of Belgrade Serbs vs. the rest of former Yugoslavia: in both cases the former treat the later as their backyard, not as their neighbors. Milosevic (and Saddam) are mini- imperialists. Ordinary people are the most dangerous. They still do not believe mass killings, rape, and torture camps ever happened in Bosnia, particularly not at the hands of Serbs. They may as well vote for Bush here as they are for Milosevic there for years. ivo On 9 Jun 2004 at 14:50, Franke Wilmer wrote: hey ivo -- it is little consolation to live in a desolate place in the mountains (like montana). societies that refuse to examine their own capacity to do harm and their history of doing harm are condemned to repeat such harm-doing. this is surely one of the darker chapters in our history. but in each dark chapter we never, at the time, saw it that way (slavery until the mid-19th century, genocide of indigenous peoples mostly in the 19th century, imperialism and imperialistic wars in the 20th century...) this all feels like the most dismal failure of all of the things i have spent more than half my life trying to be a force for -- tolerance, compassion, recognition of our interchangeability, knowledge that the oneness of our humanity is not an ideal but the most real thing there is, with the most real consequences for our failure to understand...unaware of the ubiquity of our inhumanity is the same thing as being unaware of our common humanity. you cannot treat others inhumanely without damaging or losing your own humanity, without dehumanizing yourself. we celebrate "Martin Luther King" day and have no idea (not being reflective anyway) how he tried to teach us exactly that. i am sad, even depressed, too, by my sense of failure as a teacher. the majority of americans have little understanding of democracy, how essential criticism and collective self-reflection are to it, nor how the gang in the white house now is destroying both democracy and the rule of law...depressing that people are not raging in the streets. but they are getting better at math and science. but hey, i am spoiled, like most Americans, particularly white Americans, by how little we have had to fight. i keep remembering two impressions from my first trip to Belgrade in the spring of 1995. one was the small number of people (women in black) who stood on Republika square protesting the war an hour every wednesday at 4. they had to get up and fight every day for years against anti-democratic forces...and they are still struggling. but they struggled. and they thought about democracy all the time, as people do when they are deprived of it. the other impression was how oblivious "ordinary" people in Belgrade seemed to be about the atrocities going on not so far away in Bosnia and how their govt was implicated, and i remember thinking that if you were outraged about Vietnam (as i was in the 1960s) and you were a visitor to the US during that time, the war in Vietnam would have appeared just as distant to Americans then as the war in Bosnia (and Croatia) was to the people in Belgrade 30 years later...as Iraq is now. it becomes normalized very quickly. when a frog is dropped into a pot of boiling water it screams. but if you put it in a pot of cool water and then turn the heat on slowing, it never even sees death coming. most americans are not even seeing the loss of democracy, or the connection between Abu Ghraib, Git-mo, the Patriot Act and the loss of democracy. finally, i remember protesting the vietnam war. and i remember how popular the war was until thousands of body bags started coming home. so i do not delude myself about people opposing a war until they perceive themselves at risk of losing something, though i do think there was more criticism and protest in advance this time around. cause for hope? sorry this is so long...thanks for being there to talk to... franke On Wednesday, June 9, 2004, at 10:23 AM, Ivo Skoric wrote: Yet there > is nothing that we can do to change this, except to get out of the > way of the predictable wave of vengeance, and go live somewhere in > desolate mountain ranges, perhaps, with no internet. Pretty > depressing. ivo > > +---------------------- zamir-chat-list ----------------------+ > The following commands may be sent to > LISTSERV@LISTSERV.BUFFALO.EDU > To unsubscribe: SIGNOFF To get a help file: HELP > > questions and queries may be sent to > ZAMIR-CHAT-LIST-REQUEST@LISTSERV.BUFFALO.EDU > > Our web interface is at > http://listserv.buffalo.edu/archives/zamir-chat-list.html > +---------------------- zamir-chat-list ----------------------+ > > > * * * * * * * * * * * * "When the power of love overcomes the love of power the world will know peace." - Jimi Hendrix, American musician and songwriter Franke Wilmer Professor and Department Head Political Science Montana State University Bozeman, MT 59717 +---------------------- zamir-chat-list ----------------------+ The following commands may be sent to LISTSERV@LISTSERV.BUFFALO.EDU To unsubscribe: SIGNOFF To get a help file: HELP questions and queries may be sent to ZAMIR-CHAT-LIST-REQUEST@LISTSERV.BUFFALO.EDU Our web interface is at http://listserv.buffalo.edu/archives/zamir-chat-list.html +---------------------- zamir-chat-list ----------------------+ +---------------------- zamir-chat-list ----------------------+ The following commands may be sent to LISTSERV@LISTSERV.BUFFALO.EDU To unsubscribe: SIGNOFF To get a help file: HELP questions and queries may be sent to ZAMIR-CHAT-LIST-REQUEST@LISTSERV.BUFFALO.EDU Our web interface is at http://listserv.buffalo.edu/archives/zamir-chat-list.html +---------------------- zamir-chat-list ----------------------+ ------- End of forwarded message ------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Ivo Skoric" <ivo@reporters.net> Date: Fri, 18 Jun 2004 12:44:00 -0400 Subject: Croatian Pamela Croatia (and Serbia + Slovenia) got their own Tomy Lee & Pamela Anderson video tape legal drama. Judged by this story both media people and lawyers have established pretty good transfrontier cooperation between formerly fighting countries of former Yugoslavia. ivo SINGER SUES KURIR ZAGREB, June 7, 2004 - An agent representing Croatian singer Severina Vuckovic has told Beta news agency that he will press charges against the Serbian tabloid Kurir. The charges will allege that the daily published pictures from a stolen private videotape with erotic content. Lawyer Anto Nobilo said that, through Belgrade lawyer Igor Pantelic, he would press charges against Kurir, which published a collection of photographs from the controversial tape. Nobilo also warned that similar action would be taken against any other media company which attempted to commercially exploit the private recording belonging to Vuckovic. He explained that his office, through lawyers in Slovenia and Serbia-Montenegro which the tape had already reached, had already laid the ground to bring charges against a number of television stations in Slovenia and several newspapers which had published content from the controversial tape. The tape in question is a private video recording of Vuckovic engaging in sexual intercourse with her former partner, Milan Lucic. The singer claims the tape was stolen two years ago, together with a video camera, from her private apartment. --------------------------------------------------------- Ivo Skoric 19 Baxter Street Rutland VT 05701 802.775.7257 ivo@balkansnet.org balkansnet.org - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Ivo Skoric" <ivo@reporters.net> Date: Sat, 19 Jun 2004 18:22:28 -0400 Subject: South East Europe Cooperation http://www.gay-serbia.com/article.jsp?id=1399&src=1&date=1 This interesting movie is about to be produced and distributed in all countries of former Yugoslavia. It features a multi-ethnic gay couple - Serb and Bosniak - trying to leave war-time Sarajevo and go to the West. They get stuck in a Serbian village on the outskirts of Sarajevo, where the Serb is forced to go to the war, while Bosniak is forced to stay behind, waiting for him as his bride. Serbian homosexual is played by a Bosniak who presently runs a TV show in Croatia, while the Bosniak homosexual is played by a Croatian actor from Mostar. In a spectacular revival of the 'brotherhood and unity' the cast is joined by well known ex-Yugoslav star actors of various ethnic backgrounds (Serbian, Croat, Bosniak): Mirjana Karanovic, Nermin Tulic, Rade erbedija, and Branko uric. Is Yugoslavia back? No. But movie making is an expensive art, and the new countries are simply to small to support each their own Hollywood, so we may see similar transfrontier co-operation in film industry of ex-Yugoslav statelets in the years to come, benefiting from the similarity of language. ivo--------------------------------------------------------- Ivo Skoric 19 Baxter Street Rutland VT 05701 802.775.7257 ivo@balkansnet.org balkansnet.org - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Ivo Skoric" <ivo@reporters.net> Date: Sat, 19 Jun 2004 18:22:27 -0400 Subject: Serb Talibans http://www.danas.co.yu/20040614/kultura1.html Drama about deliberate destruction of Bosniak historic gravestones at the Military Museun in Belgrade, by two high ranking Serb army officers in charge of their protection, continues. Two colonels are discharged, but there is no official report about the damages. And the overwhelming feeling is that the Military Museum is simply in a very bad shape, under atrocious leadership, with possibly other artefacts being missing and/or destroyed. ivo--------------------------------------------------------- Ivo Skoric 19 Baxter Street Rutland VT 05701 802.775.7257 ivo@balkansnet.org balkansnet.org - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net