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f шмшшмшјш it ШШЖ1ШшшШШШшШЖЈт И ii i ►J Ш ) :'fVi,; 31 'u, j fl , liit HJ 93 K-- мч ' 34 1£ & (Continued from Page 1) ai terrorism In the United States— I don't like it,. They are active against our highest representative there, and that should not be allowed. I believe that's also a thing thai should not be allowed. In my opinion, this snoqld not hap- -' pen in any countiy.no matter how. democratic it may be. Jhere is also much individual terrorism. Terrorists, victimize our people in America. They are-doi- ng this also in the Federal Republic of Germany, France and else-where, threatening the- - highest repre-sentatives of a state ,with which these countries maintain good relations. This is not good, It only causes us harm. Problems in the Horn of Africa Q. You said nothing about the Middle East and about the Horn of Africa that worry us. How do you interpret this problem? A. I can only say that we have been for a long time now engaged in connec-tion with the situation in the Horn of Africa, that is, with the conflict be-tween Eritrea and Ethiopia, and also between Somalia and Ethiopia. I have received high-rankin- g political delega-tions from. Ethiopia. I have advised them, in the spirit of the decisions of the United Nations, to grant autonomy to Eritrea —that is, a federatied status. Besides, it should not be permitted that Ethiopia be isolated from the sea. I discussed this also with the President of Somalia, Siad Barre, when he visited our country. I received a message from- - President Carter recently in which he expressed the wish that we engage ourselves there in some mediation role. I, how-ever, do not intend to acbas a mediator there. I replied to President Carter say-ing that I will continue in the future, as in the past, to do аЦ ,1 can so that the conflict be overcome. ' Recently President Carter's envoy, Mr. David Aaron, visited Ethiopia, Our ambassador there was asked to use his, good offices with .Mengistu. He also said that the U.S.A. would not send! armaments to Somalia. It is obvious that Somalia has intrude ed into the Ethiopian territory. And it would be highly. dangerous if the great powers were to exercise pressure on Ehiopla and enabled Somalia to' succeed in Its adventure. This would ммхл1'глшт?,т''л,ла aanttm ш mum mva's.тагиеа јгташш. Lon- - i also nave i Q. Are you about the , it a chain re?c- -' tlon in the whole of Africa. For, in there hardly exists a which has no border with its the there were by For this reason the of Africa fear that the success of Somalia in this war could open the way to a process of forceful Upon-- my return from the United States our for Affairs will visit both and Somalia so that we could act in the of out, as soon as a solution of the con-flict. Barre must his troops if he wishes a of the For if he waits for the troops to reach the they could even cross it, the claim that they would not do so. But who can this? are This conflict should end in such a way that both and sit at a and I intend to speak about this also with Carter. I will in-form him as to what we intend to do and I will also tell him what we think the United States could do. 'Even More Q. And the Middle East? A. The in the Middle East is even more A has there. Sadat has not in his plan. By Israel he has not in as it seems now. He True, what he did was a very move. when like this is it is to assess the and exist for success. I do not think that the way he acted was a good way since he had not any and this is wrong because Syria and Jordan and the also and yet he did not inform any one of them. He did not inform me either we are friends. I would have 'told to act so since in. that way he cannot r ј1- -- ј .,_ "љ - ? ► -- "' ;.' , ШШШшШШШШШшЗк,. - гЛ Englezi traze na§ intervjus kozmonautom , ' Brltansko astronomsko unforeseeable consequences disappointed because would-provok- e Africa, country dispute neighbors because boundaries tailored colonialism. peoples territorial changes. Minister Foreign Ethiopia direction finding possible, peaceful existing President withdraw lasting resolu-tion conflict. Ethiopian border, al-though Ethiopians guaran-tee Suprises always possible. therefore Somalia Ethiopia round-tab- le ne-gotiate. President Mideast: Entangled' situation entangled. deadlock occurred President succeeded visiting succeeded accom-plishing anything, entertainea illusions. courageous However, something undertak-en, indispenable whether necessary elements realistic prospects consulted Arab-countr- y, Palestine Liberation .Organization fought, although Other-wise, himnot succeed; {EL&. НавшиНве,: druStvo'lz dona (Engleska) obratllo nam se s molbom za prefitampavanje naSeg Intervjua s koz- - § monautom Beregovojem u svom nauflnom casoplsu "Space" (Svemlr). Engleskl as- - tronomi su posobnozalnteresirani za taj Ш razgov'or, buducl je to bio prvl posjet jed-- s nog sovjetskog kozmpnauta --- generala s Л Zapadu. Kako smo vec pisall, BerogovoJ je 1 bio u Torontu zbog otvaranja izloZbe sov- - s jetskih 8vem!r8klh brodova u Ontario Scle-- 1 nee Centruv U nekoliko zadnjlh brojeva 1 'objavlll smo specijalni Intervju za "Nase— Ц ft novfne"., J ( Љ i , U Iducem broju donljei cemo llustrlranu ' 1. reportazu. o toj izlo2bl. - Ш Redakclja je odlufilla prepustiti Engle- - 1 1' ' zma"pfaVo4 na objavljlvanje tog Intervjua, i 1" fluz: uvfkjdafee navede Ime "Nasih novina" 1 g 'kao fzvofa Informaclja. lllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllHiiiliilllllllililllllllllllllllllllillliliiiilllliliil Шш Belgrade hum?n-right- s conference? - A. Here I am worried very much. It would be very dangerous if the meet-ing jn Belgrade were to end without success. It is true, the meeting is still in progress, and we can hope that a certain more substantive result will be achieved in the end. However, I am very sorry that things have been drag- ging on and-on- , especially in connec-tion with one question, that is, the question of human rights. I intend to talk about this also with President Car-ter. I do not like the fact that this question has been put in such a way that upon it should depend whether an agreement will be reached or not. Each country could be reproached for this or that in terms of human rights, some more and some less. This is also applicable to America and, of course, to the Soviet Union. In the Soviet Union there has developed a system, already at the time of Stalin, although it is now in a somewhat mild-er form. People there can now even express criticism, speak more freely, etc. It is not realistic, however, to ex-pect the Soviet Union to put its signa-ture, at such a gathering, to something that it would not be able to carry out. It is a big country, and all the processes cannot evolve at the same time, but only gradually. For this reason, we consider that agreement should be reached among all the participating states on a docu-ment in which it would be stated that each country should take account of this matter as well, that is, that there should be as little pressure as possible against people and their rights. How-ever, human rights is a broad concept which requires a more profound anal-ysis and more precise definition as to what is its essence. It is necessary to perceive how far it is possible for an individual to go in demanding his rights. It so happens that someone writes a a letter claiming that the state has deprived him of his rights and then this should somehow be immediately taken as granted. Now everything seems to be somewhat obfuscated. It is noi as simple as this. The Helsinki decisions cannot- - be, reduced- - to this only. ' TRAVEL 562 KING STREET, EAST P.O. BOX 221 6 KITCHENER, ONTARIO CANADA Complete Travel Service CHARTERS - GROUPS - INDIVIDUALS Phone (519) 743-026- 9 (519) 743-026- 0 VASA ARDELEAN After Hours (519) 886-268- 5 mSSStSmSmMmiMi'imMi 'Ч чт-ЈГ- н! i4t-+s-urf- № ¥љА¥Ш4алжгмтшш"тмш'(Мгтмштшм, SERVICE жШшџтШт %0оуШш late Шоф№№&рг&вЏш& e-Jugqafa- V efutDetroi.tu4 di4avte НША chganastpjakdaso ImkuJ? tUto myjuaskinpoStenimradon §doprsmforpjfprllfiitefjstvugmJmM fffnapretkuiuf§y ЏЏфСШђтШЏ ["barry дццдацринш Real Estate Ltd. Buy Real estate The only tax-fre- e investment In Canada ST. CLAIR — YOUNGE .Solid brick detached duplex, 10 rooms, 5 bedrooms, high Income property in . the very desirable area. Always tenan-ted. $109,900.00 — cash to mortgage KUCA ZA IZDAVANJE $700,— mesedno, kuca na idealnom me-st- u, blizuSkole, crkve, sinagoge, samou-slug- e I Subway-a- . Ogromna ogradena ba-s- ta sa garafom i privatnim parkingom. Iz-da- je se na 2 godine, po lelji sa komplet-ni- m namestajem. ZA SVE INFORMACUE NA NASEM JEZIKU OBRATITE SENA TEL" 535-310- 3 MILAN representative цпваИокШ '66ГГШП JQJKIC " c IWM 3117 WHARTON WAY ' " 1 (ЖШ?ШЧвШСТ 'ШШШШШШ MISSISSAUGA, ONT. L4X 2B6 ' TELEPHONE: 625-608- 2 o'r 625-919- 3 1 - т I Ј I ЈЛ
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Nase Novine, May 03, 1978 |
Language | sr; hr |
Subject | Yugoslavia -- Newspapers; Newspapers -- Yugoslavia; Yugoslavian Canadians Newspapers |
Date | 1978-03-08 |
Type | application/pdf |
Format | text |
Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
Identifier | nanod2000059 |
Description
Title | 000197 |
OCR text | f шмшшмшјш it ШШЖ1ШшшШШШшШЖЈт И ii i ►J Ш ) :'fVi,; 31 'u, j fl , liit HJ 93 K-- мч ' 34 1£ & (Continued from Page 1) ai terrorism In the United States— I don't like it,. They are active against our highest representative there, and that should not be allowed. I believe that's also a thing thai should not be allowed. In my opinion, this snoqld not hap- -' pen in any countiy.no matter how. democratic it may be. Jhere is also much individual terrorism. Terrorists, victimize our people in America. They are-doi- ng this also in the Federal Republic of Germany, France and else-where, threatening the- - highest repre-sentatives of a state ,with which these countries maintain good relations. This is not good, It only causes us harm. Problems in the Horn of Africa Q. You said nothing about the Middle East and about the Horn of Africa that worry us. How do you interpret this problem? A. I can only say that we have been for a long time now engaged in connec-tion with the situation in the Horn of Africa, that is, with the conflict be-tween Eritrea and Ethiopia, and also between Somalia and Ethiopia. I have received high-rankin- g political delega-tions from. Ethiopia. I have advised them, in the spirit of the decisions of the United Nations, to grant autonomy to Eritrea —that is, a federatied status. Besides, it should not be permitted that Ethiopia be isolated from the sea. I discussed this also with the President of Somalia, Siad Barre, when he visited our country. I received a message from- - President Carter recently in which he expressed the wish that we engage ourselves there in some mediation role. I, how-ever, do not intend to acbas a mediator there. I replied to President Carter say-ing that I will continue in the future, as in the past, to do аЦ ,1 can so that the conflict be overcome. ' Recently President Carter's envoy, Mr. David Aaron, visited Ethiopia, Our ambassador there was asked to use his, good offices with .Mengistu. He also said that the U.S.A. would not send! armaments to Somalia. It is obvious that Somalia has intrude ed into the Ethiopian territory. And it would be highly. dangerous if the great powers were to exercise pressure on Ehiopla and enabled Somalia to' succeed in Its adventure. This would ммхл1'глшт?,т''л,ла aanttm ш mum mva's.тагиеа јгташш. Lon- - i also nave i Q. Are you about the , it a chain re?c- -' tlon in the whole of Africa. For, in there hardly exists a which has no border with its the there were by For this reason the of Africa fear that the success of Somalia in this war could open the way to a process of forceful Upon-- my return from the United States our for Affairs will visit both and Somalia so that we could act in the of out, as soon as a solution of the con-flict. Barre must his troops if he wishes a of the For if he waits for the troops to reach the they could even cross it, the claim that they would not do so. But who can this? are This conflict should end in such a way that both and sit at a and I intend to speak about this also with Carter. I will in-form him as to what we intend to do and I will also tell him what we think the United States could do. 'Even More Q. And the Middle East? A. The in the Middle East is even more A has there. Sadat has not in his plan. By Israel he has not in as it seems now. He True, what he did was a very move. when like this is it is to assess the and exist for success. I do not think that the way he acted was a good way since he had not any and this is wrong because Syria and Jordan and the also and yet he did not inform any one of them. He did not inform me either we are friends. I would have 'told to act so since in. that way he cannot r ј1- -- ј .,_ "љ - ? ► -- "' ;.' , ШШШшШШШШШшЗк,. - гЛ Englezi traze na§ intervjus kozmonautom , ' Brltansko astronomsko unforeseeable consequences disappointed because would-provok- e Africa, country dispute neighbors because boundaries tailored colonialism. peoples territorial changes. Minister Foreign Ethiopia direction finding possible, peaceful existing President withdraw lasting resolu-tion conflict. Ethiopian border, al-though Ethiopians guaran-tee Suprises always possible. therefore Somalia Ethiopia round-tab- le ne-gotiate. President Mideast: Entangled' situation entangled. deadlock occurred President succeeded visiting succeeded accom-plishing anything, entertainea illusions. courageous However, something undertak-en, indispenable whether necessary elements realistic prospects consulted Arab-countr- y, Palestine Liberation .Organization fought, although Other-wise, himnot succeed; {EL&. НавшиНве,: druStvo'lz dona (Engleska) obratllo nam se s molbom za prefitampavanje naSeg Intervjua s koz- - § monautom Beregovojem u svom nauflnom casoplsu "Space" (Svemlr). Engleskl as- - tronomi su posobnozalnteresirani za taj Ш razgov'or, buducl je to bio prvl posjet jed-- s nog sovjetskog kozmpnauta --- generala s Л Zapadu. Kako smo vec pisall, BerogovoJ je 1 bio u Torontu zbog otvaranja izloZbe sov- - s jetskih 8vem!r8klh brodova u Ontario Scle-- 1 nee Centruv U nekoliko zadnjlh brojeva 1 'objavlll smo specijalni Intervju za "Nase— Ц ft novfne"., J ( Љ i , U Iducem broju donljei cemo llustrlranu ' 1. reportazu. o toj izlo2bl. - Ш Redakclja je odlufilla prepustiti Engle- - 1 1' ' zma"pfaVo4 na objavljlvanje tog Intervjua, i 1" fluz: uvfkjdafee navede Ime "Nasih novina" 1 g 'kao fzvofa Informaclja. lllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllHiiiliilllllllililllllllllllllllllllillliliiiilllliliil Шш Belgrade hum?n-right- s conference? - A. Here I am worried very much. It would be very dangerous if the meet-ing jn Belgrade were to end without success. It is true, the meeting is still in progress, and we can hope that a certain more substantive result will be achieved in the end. However, I am very sorry that things have been drag- ging on and-on- , especially in connec-tion with one question, that is, the question of human rights. I intend to talk about this also with President Car-ter. I do not like the fact that this question has been put in such a way that upon it should depend whether an agreement will be reached or not. Each country could be reproached for this or that in terms of human rights, some more and some less. This is also applicable to America and, of course, to the Soviet Union. In the Soviet Union there has developed a system, already at the time of Stalin, although it is now in a somewhat mild-er form. People there can now even express criticism, speak more freely, etc. It is not realistic, however, to ex-pect the Soviet Union to put its signa-ture, at such a gathering, to something that it would not be able to carry out. It is a big country, and all the processes cannot evolve at the same time, but only gradually. For this reason, we consider that agreement should be reached among all the participating states on a docu-ment in which it would be stated that each country should take account of this matter as well, that is, that there should be as little pressure as possible against people and their rights. How-ever, human rights is a broad concept which requires a more profound anal-ysis and more precise definition as to what is its essence. It is necessary to perceive how far it is possible for an individual to go in demanding his rights. It so happens that someone writes a a letter claiming that the state has deprived him of his rights and then this should somehow be immediately taken as granted. Now everything seems to be somewhat obfuscated. It is noi as simple as this. The Helsinki decisions cannot- - be, reduced- - to this only. ' TRAVEL 562 KING STREET, EAST P.O. BOX 221 6 KITCHENER, ONTARIO CANADA Complete Travel Service CHARTERS - GROUPS - INDIVIDUALS Phone (519) 743-026- 9 (519) 743-026- 0 VASA ARDELEAN After Hours (519) 886-268- 5 mSSStSmSmMmiMi'imMi 'Ч чт-ЈГ- н! i4t-+s-urf- № ¥љА¥Ш4алжгмтшш"тмш'(Мгтмштшм, SERVICE жШшџтШт %0оуШш late Шоф№№&рг&вЏш& e-Jugqafa- V efutDetroi.tu4 di4avte НША chganastpjakdaso ImkuJ? tUto myjuaskinpoStenimradon §doprsmforpjfprllfiitefjstvugmJmM fffnapretkuiuf§y ЏЏфСШђтШЏ ["barry дццдацринш Real Estate Ltd. Buy Real estate The only tax-fre- e investment In Canada ST. CLAIR — YOUNGE .Solid brick detached duplex, 10 rooms, 5 bedrooms, high Income property in . the very desirable area. Always tenan-ted. $109,900.00 — cash to mortgage KUCA ZA IZDAVANJE $700,— mesedno, kuca na idealnom me-st- u, blizuSkole, crkve, sinagoge, samou-slug- e I Subway-a- . Ogromna ogradena ba-s- ta sa garafom i privatnim parkingom. Iz-da- je se na 2 godine, po lelji sa komplet-ni- m namestajem. ZA SVE INFORMACUE NA NASEM JEZIKU OBRATITE SENA TEL" 535-310- 3 MILAN representative цпваИокШ '66ГГШП JQJKIC " c IWM 3117 WHARTON WAY ' " 1 (ЖШ?ШЧвШСТ 'ШШШШШШ MISSISSAUGA, ONT. L4X 2B6 ' TELEPHONE: 625-608- 2 o'r 625-919- 3 1 - т I Ј I ЈЛ |
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