sIhowOiWotD Sarajevo showing signs of relief after NATO action The Michigan Daily -- Wednesday, September 6, 1995 - 11A The Washington Post SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina - In some places, shifts in well- being are measured by changes in prices on billion-dollar stock ex- changes. Here, it's about the price of a bunch of bananas. Or whether you can take your cow for a walk. Both those indexes showed positive signs yesterday, following a week of intermittent NATO airstrikes against the Serbs who besiege this mountain capital. Whether the relief will last, however, is another matter. Serbs shelled the city during the night, shat- tering a fragile pause and punctuating their refusal to withdraw their artillery once and for all beyond range of the city. This city is still surrounded, electric- ity is scarce, running water is scarcer, most stores are shut up, other com- merce is all but shut down, and coming ortoing is difficult and dangerous, not justto and from the city, but sometimes to and from next door. So in a town starting from alniost zero, even the most minor gain seems dramatic. Take the price of bananas and other commodities smuggled into the city by truckers who make their way across Bosnia to bring fresh fruits, vegetables, cooking gas, batteries and other goods in short supply. Until Monday, part of the route into the city was through a makeshift, two- abreast pedestrian tunnel beneath the aitport here. Traveling above ground on the run- way is usually impossible because of deadly Serb sniping. After the first round of airstrikes, the United Nations opened the road. The Serbs bitterly objected to the "unilat- eral move," but no one has fired on the more than 100 trucks that have made the passage. Yesterday, in markets across the city, prices of commodities fell. The price of bananas dropped from the equivalent of$1.70 a pound to $1. The cost of cheese pastry, a favorite here, fell from $1.66 to $1.33. The price fora little canisterof cooking gas the kind campers use - went from $5.33 to $4.66. In a city where many people depend on remittances from relatives abroad, these are major re- ductions. "Bananas are good for the children," said Zlatko, a middle-aged shopper. "So now they can eat some extra.", The cow factor is a gauge of the safety of city streets. After a Serb shell fell near the downtown market Aug. 28 and killed 37 bystanders, the streets emptied for a time. But yesterday they appeared about as full as when the Serb attack oc- curred. Among the dangerous strolls is one down so-called sniper alley, a wide boulevard that bisects Sarajevo and for several blocks parallels a divide be- tween Serb and Muslim parts of the city. Serbs frequently shoot at cars and pedestrians from tall apartment build- ings near the road. For refugees who brought livestock to Sarajevo when they fled rural areas, grassy strips along sidewalks provide feed for cows and goats. "The airstrikes were good for me," said Hamid, who had his cow on a leash along sniper alley. "Less sniping. More grass for the cow, more milk for the family. There is no feed in Sarajevo." Laterin theday, somesnipersdidfire briefly on the road, but by then it was largely empty, and there were no casu- alties. Sirens warning the Serb side of the city of impending NATO strikes also had the effect of warning pedestri- ans on the boulevard, who feared Serb retaliation. Nightfall, however, brought the re- turn of danger of the kind that makes Sarajevans want NATO to persist in its bombing campaign. Mortars fell in at least one residential area. Tanks fired at least three rounds toward a U.N. peace- keeping encampment, just blocks from U.N. headquarters. Even through a heavy rain, the flash from the gun bar- rels was visible from near the U.N. front gate. At a hospital close by, Bajro Arahodric watched as a surgeon re- paired the shattered right knee of his son, Alen, 6. Alen was sleeping in a second-story bedroom when a mortar shell hit, his father said. Shrapnel tore into his knee. It was one of about six mortar shells that fell within a fewminutes, he said. "There is no doubt this is because of NATO's air raids, revenge for them," Arahodric said. "But the NATO bomb- ing must go on. We had afew days of peace, but you see, we live in fear." Arahodric's tone was sadder than that of others who spokeduring the day, perhaps because of his son, or perhaps because of his familiarity with Srebrenica, another town that, like Sarajevo, was supposed to be under the protection of the United Nations. Srebrenica fell to the Serb forces in June. The United Nations and NATO made no effort to save it. Arahodric said friends told him his father was taken prisoner by the Serbs,.and no one knows what happened to him. Arahodric and his wife and son fled to Sarajevo a year ago, shortly after his mother was killed by a sniper. "I don't want this also to happen here to us," he said. t AP PHOTO British Rapid Reaction Forces drill yesterday in preparation to deploy to Mt. Igman from Pioce. Renewed airstrikes on rebel Serb areas draw mixed response from international community The Washington Post Although NATO's avowed aims for yesterday's renewed air attacks.on rebel Serb strongholds in Bosnia were re- stricted to lifting the siege on Sarajevo and deterring future attacks on the other three U.N.-designated "safe areas," some Western political leaders sug- gested the attacks also are intended to make the recalcitrant Serbs more flex- ible in peace negotiations. Delegates from the warring factions are scheduled to meet in Geneva on Friday as part of a U.S.-brokered peace initiative, but the Bosnian Serbs have balked at surrendering any of their battlefield advantages. "The goal is to bring the Pale Serbs to the bargaining table," French President Jacques Chirac told a television inter- viewer, referring to the secessionist Serbs' headquarters 10 miles southeast of Sarajevo. "If there had been a with- drawal, if the Pale Serbs had kept their promises that they made (Monday), there would not have been a resumption of the bombardments." Assistant Secretary of State Richard C. Holbrooke resumed his protracted negotiations with Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic in Belgrade, the Serbian and Yugoslav capital. Holbrooke, who hadmet with delegates of the Muslim-led Bosnian government earlier in the day in Ankara, Turkey, declined to discuss his talks with Milosevic except to describe them as "productive." Other Western leaders closed ranks as the bombs again began to fall. Presi- dent Clinton, wrapping up a political trip in California, is "fully supportive of the action," according to a White House spokesman. The loudest dissenting voice came from Moscow, where Russian authori- ties condemned the renewed attack in somewhat stronger language than last week. A Foreign Ministry statement last night bluntly declared, "We deci- sively condemn the military actions by NATO and demand their cessation." Little was heard from the Bosnian Serbs. Ratko Mladic, their military com- mander, maintained his defiant stance in an interview with Reuter Television in Pale shortly before the first bombs fell. "If you bomb us, we will defend ourselves. The more they bombard us, the stronger we are," Mladic said. "They can cause destruction and violence, but we are on our land, and we will win." .It was similar rhetoric from Mladic, contained in a five-page letter sent to Janvier shortly before Monday's 11 p.m. deadline, that helped set in motion the military action. "No one, not even my- self, has the right to order the with- drawal," Mladic declared. "This is ... not in the jurisdiction of generals." At the same time, U.N. officials were poring over a conciliatory letter signed by Nikola Koljevic, chief deputy to the Bosnian Serb political leader, Radovan Karadzic. Notwithstanding Mladic's unambiguous defiance, U.N. officials appeared eager to believe that the Serbs were repositioning their weapons from Sarajevo as demanded. Join the Daily Come to a mass meeting: Monda, Sept.11 Wednes , ,Sept.13 Tuesday, Sept.19 Thursday, Sept.21 All meetings are at 7 p.m. at the Student Putlications Building, 420 Maynard St. Note: Photography candidates should atend one of the first two meetings. 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