Owen persuades EC ministers to pin hopes on Panic

THE European Community yesterday drew back from imposing tough new measures against Serbia, after Lord Owen, the EC peace envoy, said he thought the influence of Milan Panic was growing. Mr Panic, the Prime Minister of the rump Yugoslavia - Serbia and Montenegro - is seen as a moderating influence.

EC foreign ministers, meeting in Brocket Hall in Hertfordshire, brandished the threat of further moves to isolate Serbia. They said that there had been progress since the London conference on Yugoslavia last month, but not enough. They said that they wanted to see an international humanitarian court set up to try those guilty of breaching the Geneva Convention.

Lord Owen briefed the ministers after his trip to Sarajevo, Zagreb and Belgrade. Despite an agreement on co-operation to end ethnic conflict, he told ministers that more needed to be done to push Serbia towards peace. A deadline for putting heavy weapons under UN supervision passed yesterday lunchtime and though early indications were that Bosnian Serb forces around Sarajevo had complied, Lord Owen said that in other areas - including the besieged Muslim town of Gorazde - some heavy weapons had been kept back.

The ministers will push forward with plans for a 'no fly zone' over Bosnia, amidst indications that the Italian aircraft shot down last week may have been mistaken by Croatian forces for a hostile aircraft, flown by Bosnian Serbs. They will draw up a draft UN Security Council resolution. Indications from the US that this might include Western air patrols over Bosnia were played down; British officials said that it was more likely that monitors on the ground would police such action.

But Lord Owen asked the EC not to push ahead with more extreme measures. He told the ministers that Mr Panic was growing in stature, a British official said. The evidence for this was his appointment of a new, more moderate foreign minister, and his good relationship with the armed forces and with Dobrica Cosic, the President of Yugoslavia. The ministers decided to close loopholes in existing sanctions by sending monitors to Romania, Hungary and Bulgaria.

A team of EC ministers has just finished a trip to the three countries, and says that application of sanctions has already been made more effective. Total trade has been cut by between a half and three quarters, and oil imports are down by 80 per cent. The result is that unemployment has more than doubled, to over 1,000,000 - about 35 per cent of the working population. Foreign Office estimates put annual inflation at 7,200 per cent.

There is still concern that some goods may be entering from the Adriatic, but no moves were taken to give Western naval patrols the right to stop and search vessels; at the moment, they can only monitor. Nor did the meeting decide to quash Yugoslavia's membership of the United Nations, currently in abeyance pending a decision on the successor state to the former federation. Instead, they said that the rump Yugoslavia cannot participate in the UN. 'We do not want to pull the rug totally from under Panic,' said an official.

Start your day with The Independent, sign up for daily news emails
Have you tried new the Independent Digital Edition apps?
ebooks
ebooksAn introduction to the ground rules of British democracy
Latest stories from i100
Have you tried new the Independent Digital Edition apps?
SPONSORED FEATURES
Independent Dating
and  

By clicking 'Search' you
are agreeing to our
Terms of Use.

iJobs Job Widget
iJobs General

Guru Careers: Digital Project Manager

£30 - 55k: Guru Careers: A Digital Project Manager (at either junior or senior...

Guru Careers: Commercial Finance Analyst

£Competitive + Benefits: Guru Careers: A Commercial Finance Analyst is needed ...

Guru Careers: Lifeguards / Pool Attendants

£9.85 per hour (Casual Hours): Guru Careers: We are seeking qualified Lifeguar...

Recruitment Genius: IT Support Engineer / Helpdesk

£18000 - £23000 per annum: Recruitment Genius: This is a great opportunity for...

Day In a Page

Iran nuclear deal: However the great and good represent it, America has now taken the Shia side in the Middle East's sectarian war

America takes Iran's side (to Israeli and Saudi fury)

In the subtext to a historic deal many thought impossible lies a remarkable Shia triumph in a decades-long sectarian conflict. Has the region’s balance of power changed forever, asks Robert Fisk
The most efficient government in the world has been announced... and it's Qatar

The most efficient government in the world has been announced...

League table compiled by the World Economic Forum has surprising entry in top spot
Nairobi Westgate attack: Shopping mall re-opens two years after terror siege where al-Shabaab killed 67 people

Nairobi Westgate attack, two years on

Shopping mall where al-Shabaab killed 67 people re-opens - but so much remains unknown about the atrocity
How heavy is a kilogram? International scientific effort to redefine the kilo makes breakthrough

How heavy is a kilogram?

International scientific effort to redefine the kilo makes breakthrough
Go Set A Watchman: 'Finch fries' all round as Harper Lee’s home town celebrates book launch

'Finch fries' all round as Harper Lee's home town celebrates book launch

Street parties held ahead of the long-awaited release of To Kill a Mockingbird sequel
The £1 homes: What do you get for your money - and what do you get locked into?

The £1 homes

What do you get for your money - and what do you get locked into?
Indie magazine sales are proving print is not dead

Getting into print

Far from killing them off, the internet has sparked a renaissance in cult magazines
Actors in unprofitable show lose in bid to be paid the minimum wage

Actors in unprofitable show lose in bid to be paid the minimum wage

Judge rules they are self-employed professionals
10 best gifts for teachers

Saying thank you: 10 best gifts for teachers

Teachers work an average of 60 hours a week running around after our kids (and educating them, too). Here's how to show your gratitude
Ashes 2015: Quite simply, Ben Stokes has Aussies worried

Quite simply, Ben Stokes has Aussies worried

Throwback all-rounder is in devastating form and is relishing making Lehmann’s men suffer the way they hurt England in the last Ashes
The battle for Fallujah: Thousands of Shia militiamen join decisive battle to take back Iraqi city – but there will be heavy casualties ahead

Battle for Fallujah

Thousands of Shia militiamen to join decisive battle
Unseen Charles Dickens: read excoriating essay on Victorian poverty no-one knew he had written

The unseen Charles Dickens

The excoriating essay on Victorian poverty that no-one knew he had written
Hyde Park mansion with 45 bedrooms set to become Britain's most expensive home

Hyde Park mansion set to become Britain's most expensive home

45-bedroom property was originally listed with a £300m asking price
How the BBC might look in 2025 if Tories get their way: No more Chris Evans, no more Wimbledon and a far leaner website

Chris Evans quits, Wimbledon cut and a shrunken website

How the BBC might look in 2025 if the Tories get their way
Apple Pay: boon or security nightmare?

Apple Pay: boon or security nightmare?

Questions remain over security and privacy