Luchezar Boyadjiev on Sun, 28 Mar 1999 15:23:23 +0300 |
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Re: Syndicate: my dish is on again |
At 10:50 AM 3/28/99 +0200, you wrote: > >aleksandar is just mobilized..... >there is nothing to be said about it..... > >saw 5 weeks *old* baby yesterday evening in shelter. knowing that so >much kids are out in snow or in shelters is not encouraging at all.... > > radio deep europe -started?! >how was in vienna, by micz?! > >not in mood for long postings > >best > >br > Dear Branka and all, My strongest support and sympathy! To all who are under bombs or "mad killers in uniforms" (or paramilitary killers...) in Serbia, Kosovo, Montenegro! Phase II has made it clear that the stated objectives could not be achieved this way for in the total isolation of Kosovo ethnic cleansing could be fast, brutal and effective. So, it is clear now that the humanitarian disaster is already there. Does it matter in which exactly way one gets killed? I think that now both sides are giving each other justification. There is a feeling of numbness for not being able to do much here except distribute locally to people and media the postings on this list... and come up with some info. For instance, that the borders of the country are open, including the border with YU, for incoming refugees from Kosovo. However, relatively few are coming in and most of these are transiting to Turkey. For a neighboring city only 70 km away from the YU border Sofia has been strangely quite. However, news broadcasts on state and private TV and radio stations are following closely the war in YU using: a/ Western media sources; b/ YU TV; c/ their own correspondents in Belgrade reporting over telephone lines; d/ relevant web sites. (By the way, thanks for all these addresses!!!) Nothing directly from Kosovo. No movements that I know of regarding aid going there. The public "street" opinion seems to be going against NATO "action". However, the confirmed reports about ethnic cleansing in Kosovo make it clear that other something should have been done and other ways looked for. The conflicting sentiments run along the lines of - the Milosevic regime is feared and condemned, at the same time NATO action is... not welcomed. Today's reports claim that 432 BG volunteers have "gone to fight on the side of Serbia", just like there were some in Bosna. The public fear and indecisiveness is based on: a/ the fact that there is the Kozlodui nuclear power plant less than 100 km from the war and any "stray" missile could go that way; b/ we will still be here when NATO is gone - another public poll claims: "Is BG capable of countering by itself a possible aggression from Serbia? - yes - 22.5%; no - 67.5%"; c/ condemnation of ethnic cleansing in Kosovo. So, both anti-NATO and anti-Milosevic stands co-exist side by side The official position of government and parliament is of strict non-involvement (backed by 75.4 % public support, according to some polls from 2 days ago). Which means that air-space and logistic support (hospitals, etc.) has been promised in principle to NATO under the condition that BG parliament approves the granting of each such request. So far none has come. However, the story of the remnants of a NATO air-to-air missile falling on BG territory near the city of Trun (about 5 km from the YU border, and 50 km west of Sofia) revealed the degree of fear. It has been confirmed that this is a NATO missile gone off course and self-destroying in the air. This morning there is the report about a blast in an apple garden in a village near Kijustendil, about 15 km from the border with Macedonia - investigations under way. Ridiculous incidents in the face of the humanitarian disaster going on. It seems that locally the biggest concern is with the question - is there a military threat to BG or not? And it is paralleled with the temptation to trade support now for membership later... lb