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- Path: sparky!uunet!ogicse!emory!wupost!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!news.acns.nwu.edu!uicvm.uic.edu!u15231
- From: U15231@uicvm.uic.edu
- Newsgroups: soc.culture.bosna-herzgvna
- Subject: Iranian President warns of Palestinian-type problem in Bosnia
- Message-ID: <92320.190535U15231@uicvm.uic.edu>
- Date: 16 Nov 92 01:05:35 GMT
- Article-I.D.: uicvm.92320.190535U15231
- Organization: University of Illinois at Chicago
- Lines: 65
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- ATHENS, Greece (UPI) -- Iranian President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani
- warned the West Friday not to allow the plight of Muslims in Bosnia-
- Herzegovina to become another Palestinian problem on Europe's doorstep,
- Tehran radio said.
- The Iranian president, who was addressing a Friday prayer
- congregation in Tehran, said the West did not want a sovereign Muslim-
- majority state to emerge in Eastern Europe and was turning a blind eye
- to the massacre of Bosnian Muslims by Serbs.
- A Tehran radio broadcast monitored in Athens quoted him as saying:
- ``The Muslims of Iran support the innocent and defenseless Muslims of
- Bosnia-Herzegovina.''
- He said, ``If the Western powers think they can create another
- Palestine in Europe and the Balkans, they are making a serious mistake.''
- Rafsanjani's warning came a day after U.N. and European Community
- negotiators Cyrus Vance and Lord David Owen ended a one-day visit to
- Turkey, where they heard Turkish officials express strong views on the
- treatment of Muslims in Bosnia.
- Both Iran and Turkey are seeking intervention by an Islamic force to
- end the Serbian attacks on Bosnian Muslims.
- Rafsanjani said: ``What is happening in Bosnia-Herzegovina is
- shameful, and if the West does not pay attention to this, the Bosnian
- problem will become worse than the Palestinian.''
- Allowing the Muslims of Bosnia to become refugees ``will be a major
- mistake for the West, because the history of this nation will not remain
- hidden,'' he said.
- This time a Palestinian-type situation would develop on the doorstep
- of the continent. ``This is Europe we are talking about. This is the
- Balkans,'' he said.
- In Ankara earlier, Owen told the Turkish state television TRT that
- the conflict in Bosnia-Herzegoivina should not be allowed to become one
- between Muslims and Christians.
- He said pressure on Belgrade should be intensified, because Belgrade
- bore most of the responsibility for the fighting in the former Yugoslav
- state.
- Owen and Vance held discussions with Turkish Prime Minister Sulayman
- Demirel and other officials during their stay in Ankara.
- A Turkish Foreign Ministry source said Demirel explaiend the Turkish
- view to the two negotiators, and called for the use of force to end the
- conflict, based on a plan drawn up earlier by Ankara.
- Demirel expressed fears that a continuation of the conflict may fuel
- Islamic fundamentalist sentiments, and called for the arms embargo on
- Bosnia to be lifted.
- Vance and Owen reportedly replied that lifting the arms embargo
- ``would deepen and widen the conflict,'' the Turkish source said.
- Earlier this year, Iran called for an Islamic force to be set up to
- interverne in Bosnia on the side of the Muslims against the Serbs.
- Turkey, which has been in frequent consultation with Iran and
- Pakistan on the conflict, has offered to send its troops to Bosnia to
- assist the Muslims, and wants Turkish warplanes to be used, as part of a
- NATO force, to bombard Serbian artillery positions.
- Neither plan has won support in the West, but last month Turkish
- Foreign Minister Hikmet Cetin said the crisis in Bosnia would be raised
- in the next ministerial meeting of the Islamic Conference Organization,
- a grouping of 46 Muslim states.
- He said the ICO was expected to issue a strongly-worded statement on
- the conflict at its next meeting.
- Two months ago, an Iranian transport plane ostensibly carrying relief
- supplies to the Bosnian Muslims was found to have weapons and Islamic
- revolutionary guards hidden on board.
- The United Nations asked Iran to explain the presence of the arms and
- fighters on board the plane, but Rafsanjani, then on a visit to China,
- publicly denied there was any truth in the report.
-