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- This section is from the document '/e-serials/d/dr/rferl/12-23-92'.
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- Subject: RFE/RL Daily Report 23 DEC, 1992
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-
- The RFE/RL Daily Report is a digest of the latest developments
- in the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. It is published
- Monday through Friday (except German holidays) by the RFE/RL
- Research Institute (a division of Radio Free Europe/Radio
- Liberty, Inc.). Copyright 1992 RFE/RL, Inc.
-
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- RFE/RL Daily Report
-
- No. 246, 23 December 1992
-
- SUCCESSOR STATES TO THE USSR
-
- RUSSIAN PARLIAMENT CODIFIES POWER GAINS. The Russian parliament
- has adopted a law on the government which gives the legislature
- the right to veto the appointment of the ministers of defense,
- security, interior and foreign affairs, Interfax reported on 22
- December. The head of the parliamentary Committee on Foreign
- Affairs and Economic Relations, Evgenii Ambartsumov, indicated
- that Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev may not be approved by the
- parliament. The deputies wrote the new law without confirming that
- the president remains the chief executive power. (Alexander Rahr,
- RFE/RL, Inc.)
-
- CIS SUMMIT IN MINSK POSTPONED; YELTSIN SICK. The CIS summit
- scheduled for 25 December in Minsk has been postponed because the
- presidents of Russia and Kazakhstan are ill, Russian Foreign
- Ministry spokesman Sergei Yastrzhembsky announced on 22 December,
- Reuters reported. He also said that a meeting between Russian
- President Boris Yeltsin and Ukrainian President Leonid Kravchuk,
- which had been planned to take place on the eve of the summit will
- also be postponed. The summit will most likely be rescheduled for
- 22 January 1993, the spokesman added. (Bohdan Nahaylo, RFE/RL,
- Inc.)
-
- CHANGES IN THE RUSSIAN CABINET. The Russian Minister for Foreign
- Economic Trade, Petr Aven, has resigned from the cabinet,
- ITAR-TASS reported on 22 December. The new prime minister, Viktor
- Chernomyrdin, is quoted as saying that his consultations with
- President Yeltsin on the new cabinet are complete and that there
- will be "no drastic changes." Deputy Prime Ministers Anatolii
- Chubais, Georgii Khizha, Aleksandr Shokhin, Boris Saltykov and the
- respective ministers for economics and finance, Andrei Nechaev and
- Vasill Barchuk, are expected to stay in the cabinet. But several
- democrats and centrists favor Boris Fedorov, Russia's present
- representative at the World Bank, to become the new director of
- economic policy. (Alexander Rahr, RFE/RL, Inc.)
-
- UKRAINE ISSUES PACKAGE OF REFORM DECREES. The Ukrainian government
- issued a set of significant decrees concerning economic reform on
- 22 December, Reuters reported. One decree apparently liberalizes
- prices on many commodities left under state control after initial
- measures in January freed prices of goods and services
- representing 60-70% of consumers' expenditures. Deputy Prime
- Minister Vasyl Yevtukhov said that, beginning early next year,
- state controls would be limited to goods produced in the
- metallurgical, chemical and machine-building industries as well as
- oil, cement, salt, sugar, vegetable oil and eggs. Monopolies would
- also remain under some price regulation. Two other decrees were
- issued the same day. One transfers ownership of private plots to
- those farming them, effective 1 March. The other revises the
- Ukrainian tax system. (Erik Whitlock, RFE/RL, Inc.)
-
- IMPENDING CHANGE IN RUSSIAN MONETARY POLICY DENIED. Several state
- officials on 22 December were quick to dismiss the previous
- evening's Izvestiya report of an imminent introduction of a new
- Russian ruble, recentralization of the banking system and massive
- new ruble credit issue. Deputy Central Bank chairman, Valerian
- Kulikov, who was quoted at length in the Izvestiya article, said
- that "Russia does not intend to introduce its own national
- currency in the near future," according to ITAR-TASS. Aleksei
- Ulyukaev, an advisor to Prime Minister Chernomyrdin, told a news
- conference that he did not foresee any major changes in monetary
- policy, Reuters reported. Aleksandr Pochinok, chairman of the
- parliamentary committee on the budget, taxes and prices, told
- parliament that no monetary reform was envisaged, according to
- Interfax. (Erik Whitlock, RFE/RL, Inc.)
-
- FIGHTING CONTINUES IN TAJIKISTAN. Pro- and anti-Communist forces
- were still fighting in southern Tajikistan on 22 December,
- Interfax and Western correspondents reported. Russian border
- guards stationed in Pyandzh were reported to have given refuge at
- their base to more than a thousand women and children, and
- pro-Communist supporters of the Tajik government threatened to
- attack the base if men from anti-government groups were given
- refuge there too. The same day Supreme Soviet Chairman Imomali
- Rakhmonov appealed on Tajik TV to Gorno-Badakhshan, which
- unilaterally declared itself an autonomous republic earlier in the
- year, not to destroy the territorial integrity of Tajikistan. Many
- of the anti-Communist fighters are either from Badakhshan or are
- of Badakhshani descent. The presence of a pro-Communist government
- in Dushanbe is likely to reinforce Badakhshani demands for
- autonomy. (Bess Brown, RFE/RL, Inc.)
-
- PAPER NAMES NEW RUSSIAN CHIEF OF STAFF. Rossiiskie vesti on 23
- December said that it had learned from "well informed circles"
- that Col. General Mikhail P. Kolesnikov had been appointed chief
- of the Russian general staff by Minister of Defense Pavel Grachev.
- The previous chief of staff, General Viktor Dubynin, died of an
- illness on 22 November. Kolesnikov headed the Ground Forces staff
- and was promoted to the General Staff in 1991, where he was
- reputed to be the chief planner for the Ground Forces. The paper
- indicated that Grachev might not publicly name Kolesnikov until
- after his own confirmation in the new cabinet, but said that the
- appointment had already formally taken place. (Doug Clarke,
- RFE/RL, Inc.)
-
- NORTH KOREA SAYS SOVIET TREATY "INAPPROPRIATE." Radio Moscow on 21
- December, quoting ITAR-TASS, said that the North Korean foreign
- ministry had sent a letter to its Russian counterpart declaring
- that the 1961 Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation, and Mutual
- Assistance signed by the Soviet Union and the Russian Republic was
- inappropriate under present circumstances. The broadcast said that
- a spokesman for the North Korean foreign ministry had pointed out
- that Russia and North Korea had established trade relations, which
- included trade involving military equipment, and said that Russian
- authorities had proposed that such relations be maintained in the
- future. (Doug Clarke, RFE/RL, Inc.)
-
- KOZYREV SAYS START-II TREATY "ALMOST READY." Russian Foreign
- Minister Andrei Kozyrev told Interfax on 22 December that a new
- strategic arms agreement between Russia and the United States was
- "almost ready" and that a January meeting between Presidents
- Yeltsin and Bush was "quite probable." Kozyrev said that he had
- repeatedly spoken with U.S. Secretary of State Lawrence
- Eagleburger that day, and that Russian and American experts would
- "finish work" on the final text in Geneva on 23 December. (Doug
- Clarke, RFE/RL, Inc.)
-
- UKRAINIAN RATIFICATION OF START AT LEAST A MONTH AWAY. According
- to Interfax on 22 December, the press center of the Ukrainian
- parliament announced that the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty
- (START) would not be submitted to the Ukrainian parliament for
- ratification before late January, 1993. (Doug Clarke, RFE/RL,
- Inc.)
-
- RUBLE EDGES UP. The ruble-dollar exchange rate closed at 415 on
- the Moscow Interbank Currency Exchange on 22 December, various
- Russian and Western news agencies reported. The rate at the start
- of trading was 416. Trade volume was higher than average at $71.03
- million. (Erik Whitlock, RFE/RL, Inc.)
-
- SOUTH OSSETIA SEEKS RUSSIAN SUPPORT FOR INDEPENDENCE. South
- Ossetian parliament chairman Torez Kulumbegov is in Moscow seeking
- Russia's recognition of his region's self-proclaimed independence
- from Georgia, an RFE/RL correspondent reported from Moscow.
- Kulumbegov said that Russian alone can guarantee stability in the
- region. In 1990, South Ossetia declared independence from Georgia
- with the aim of uniting with North Ossetia, which is across the
- border in Russia. In response to South Ossetia's efforts to secure
- independence, the Georgian government revoked the region's
- autonomous status. (Hal Kosiba, RFE/RL, Inc.)
-
- CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE
-
- SERBIAN & MONTENEGRIN ELECTIONS. The latest unofficial results of
- the presidential elections in Serbia show Slobodan Milosevic with
- a convincing lead in 114 of the 188 municipalities in Serbia,
- Kosovo, and Vojvodina. With 63% of the vote counted, Milosevic
- received 55.9% against Milan Panic's 34.3%. According to Serbia's
- Institute for Statistics, the complete unofficial results of the
- presidential election is expected at 15:00 CET on 23 December and
- of the parliamentary elections on 24 December. Final results are
- expected on 25 December. In the federal assembly elections the
- ruling Socialist Party is leading, followed by the Serbian Radical
- Party, the Democratic Movement of Serbia (DEPOS) and finally the
- Democratic Party. For Serbia's 250-seat parliament, the SPS is
- saying it has won 99 seats, the SRS--75, and DEPOS--50. Radio
- Serbia carried the report on 22 December. Radio Montenegro reports
- that incumbent president Momir Bulatovic failed to win over 50% of
- the vote and will have to enter a second round of elections in
- less than two weeks against Branko Kostic, a former federal vice
- president. In partial official returns Bulatovic received 42.2%
- versus Kostic's 23%. In the local, republican, and federal
- legislative elections, candidates of the ruling Democratic Party
- of Socialists received the highest number of votes with 42.5%.
- (Milan Andrejevich, RFE/RL, Inc.)
-
- ... <abridged>
-
- [As of 1200 CET]
- Compiled by Hal Kosiba & Charles Trumbull
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