The Militant(logo) 
    Vol.61/No.8           February 24, 1997 
 
 
Belgrade Formally Concedes Elections  

BY ARGIRIS MALAPANIS
After three months of non-stop marches and rallies, the parliament of Serbia acted on President Slobodan Milosevic's instructions and passed a law February 11 conceding victory to the opposition coalition Zajedno in municipal elections in 14 of the republic's 19 largest cities, including the capital Belgrade. The vote was 128-0 with two abstentions in favor of reversing the regime's annulment of the November 17 municipal election results.

Buoyed by the victory, students, striking teachers, and others continued their daily protests to press other demands. On the afternoon of February 12, tens of thousands of teachers, who have walked out of 1,800 schools across Serbia, surrounded the Serbian parliament to demand back wages and salary increases. At about the same time, 20,000 university students marched in Belgrade on their 82nd daily protest to demand the ouster of the college's pro-Milosevic rector.

On February 11, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State John Shattuck announced he will go on an official visit to Belgrade soon. This registered a policy shift for the Clinton administration, which a month earlier had publicly ruled out high-level contacts with government officials in Serbia.

Next day, NATO troops in Bosnia, now numbering 35,400, stepped up patrols in the city of Mostar, seizing some weapons from residents. The move came after Croatian government forces, which control half of this city, expelled about 200 Muslims from their homes and then fired on them, killing one man and wounding 20 others.

Albania anti-government revolt spreads
Meanwhile, the rebellion against the pro-capitalist regime of Democratic Party chief Sali Berisha has continued to spread in Albania. On February 11, about 40,000 angry demonstrators filled the streets of the southern port city of Vlora to mourn the first victims of government repression and press other demands. Many chanted, "We will take revenge!", "Berisha killed him," and "Down with dictatorship."

Two people were killed and 81 wounded a day earlier, when the police attacked thousands who took to the streets to protest another bankruptcy of a "pyramid scheme" based in the town and demand the government cover their losses. Over 500,000 Albanians were lured by exorbitant interest rates to deposit their savings in these fraudulent investment funds, promoted by state television, in search of income higher than average wages of $75 per month.

On February 12, government forces blocked the streets of Tirana and penned opposition leaders in their offices, to prevent protests from spreading in the country's capital. Fearing the increasingly militant revolt, however, authorities dropped plans to declare a state of emergency in Vlora.  
 
 
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