Archive-name: bosnia-news-faq
Posting-Frequency: monthly
Last-modified: 1994/10/20
Version: 1.1
Organization: Alumni Association, Caltech, Pasadena, California



        Copyright 1993,1994 Asim Mughal (mughal@caltech.edu) 

        Redistribution  for  profit,    or   in  altered  
content/format
        prohibited without explicit  written  permission  of the 
author.
        Any other redistribution must  include this copyright notice 
and
        attribution. 


                   __________________________________________
        

        This message is automatically posted to 'misc.news.bosnia' 
every
        month and when updated.  This  lists  answers  to  most 
commonly
        asked questions  on  the  forum.  Contributions  &  changes  
are
        requested and should be directed to: mughal@caltech.edu 




        Contents        

     --Articles--
 1. Bosnia
.................................................................... 
 2. Charter (Original Text)
................................................... 
 3. List of Relief Agencies
................................................... 
 4. Bosnia News on Internet
................................................... 
 5. FTP Sites for Bosnia Info
................................................. 
 6. Need for this Newsgroup
................................................... 
    --Announcements--
 7. Moderation Policy
......................................................... 
 8. Moderators List & Guidelines
.............................................. 
 9. Administrativa 001: Oct 03, 1994
.......................................... 
10. Where & How to send your submissions
...................................... 
11. How to reach Moderators & Facilitators
.................................... 
12. History of this newsgroup
................................................. 
13. This FAQ: Archive Info, History & Credits
................................. 



 Articles
.....................................................................


 1. Bosnia
.................................................................... 


    Probably  the  most  appropriate  person  to  talk  about  Bosnia 
is the
    President of Bosnia-Herzegovina. 


                **************************************

        Following is from speech of Mr. Alija Izetbegovic,President of
     Bosnia and Herzegovina, for the 49 session of General Assembly of
             the United Nations. 27th of September 1994.

                **************************************



    Mr. Secretary General, Distinguished delegates, 

    Allow me at the outset, to commend  His  Excellency Mr. Samuel 
Insanally
    for the able manner in which he  conducted  the work of the 48th 
Session
    of the General Assembly. I  would  also  like  to  congratulate 
H.E. Mr.
    Amara Essy for his election as  the  President  of  this 49th 
Session. I
    wish him all success in pursuing this very important task. 

    I would like to thank the  President  for  giving me this 
opportunity to
    speak on behalf of the  Republic  of  Bosnia  and  Herzegovina  at  
this
    distinguished gathering. I thank you all for your attention. 

    Mr. President, I come from Bosnia  and  Herzegovina,  a far away 
country
    that has currently been the subject of many discussions. 

    Unfortunately, I have to begin my statement  by repeating facts 
that for
    the majority of you may be or should be well known. 

    At the time - some  three  years  ago,  when  Yugoslavia  
underwent  its
    dissolution, we were doing  our  best  to  conduct  this 
separation in a
    peaceful fashion and without any violence.  For reasons already 
known to
    us all, our initiatives bore no fruits. 

    When  Slovenia  and  Croatia  had  seceded  ,  and  the  
dissolution  of
    Yugoslavia had become inevitable, we  organized a referendum in 
order to
    decide, in a democratic manner, about  the fate of Bosnia. By two-
thirds
    majority ( that  is,  exactly:  64,4%)  of  the  registered  voter 
body,
    citizens of Bosnia and  Herzegovina  opted  for  the independence 
of the
    country at  the  referendum  of  March   1,   1992.  The  
international
    recognition  of  our  country   followed  soon  after,  and  so  
did the
    aggression against it. The decision  of recognition was made on 
April 5,
    1992, and it was announced the following day, April 6, 1992. The 
Serbian
    and Montenegrin aggression against Bosnia and Herzegovina began on 
April
    5, 1992, the same day when the decision on recognition was passed. 

    The aggression continues  to  this  day,  with  more  or, at 
times, less
    intensity, and without any prospects of it coming to an end soon. 

    War, that was forced upon Bosnia  and  Herzegovina  and its 
peoples, and
    has now entered its 31st  month,  belongs  to  the bloodiest wars 
in the
    history of mankind. In its  very  beginnings,  it  was not a war, 
but an
    attack of a well armed  and  equipped  army,  the  former Yugoslav 
Army,
    against defenseless citizens. 

    The results of this uneven  struggle  are as follows: 70% of our 
country
    fell under occupation in the first months  of the war, more than 
200 000
    civilians have been  killed,  over  1,000  000  (  or one fourth) 
of our
    inhabitants have been expelled from  their homes, hundreds of 
cities and
    villages destroyed and burnt.  This  cannot  be  described  as a 
classic
    example of a warfare between two armies.  This has been a war of 
an army
    against 


    civilians, followed by  genocide  and,  until  this  time, 
unprecedented
    destruction  of  cultural  and  religious  objects.  The  world  
has not
    responded in an appropriate manner to such barbarism. 

    Whether it was because of the brutality  of the attack, or being 
morally
    and psychologically unprepared, or  perhaps,  due to the 
entanglement in
    its contradictory interests, the world appeared confused and 
hesitant. 

    When the news and pictures of new  concentration  camps  in the 
heart of
    Europe came out, the public  was  astonished,  but  the 
responsible ones
    mostly kept silent. Tens of  thousands  of people have perished in 
these
    camps, and many thousands of them have disappeared, without any 
trace. 

    The more brutal an attack, the more  hesitant the world became. 
The free
    world neither defended, nor supported freedom. 

    Our people, facing the threat of extermination  and a clearly 
pronounced
    death sentence, decided to defend itself. 

    But then it encountered a new  absurdity.  It  had found its hands 
tied.
    Namely, before the war was  waged  against  Bosnia  and 
Herzegovina, The
    United Nations imposed an notorious resolution that banned any 
import of
    weapons in the territory of Former  Yugoslavia.  Everything 
changed, the
    war began, the aggressor and the  victim  emerged,  but the arms 
embargo
    has remained in place,  as  if  nothing  had  happened  in the 
meantime.
    Justice has turned into injustice,  because  the aggressor had 
weapons -
    which had been stock - piled over  40  years time - while the 
victim was
    unarmed and its hands were kept tied. 

    The resolution on the arms  embargo  became  its  own  
contradiction. By
    maintaining the imbalance in weaponry,  it has prolonged the war, 
and it
    has  turned  peace  negotiations  into   diktats  by  the  better  
armed
    aggressor. 

    We told the world: you do not have  to  come  to defend us, but do 
untie
    our hands and allow us, at least,  to  defend ourselves. While 
they kill
    our children, rape our women, and  destroy  all our relics, do 
recognize
    our right to self - defense. 

    However, the arms embargo  has  remained  in  place until present 
times.
    Practically, with only guns and rifles  in our hands, our 
defenders have
    stood against artillery  and  tanks.  We  have  lost  many  
people. Data
    reports indicate that more than 90% of them have been killed by 
grenades
    and artillery shells. Our  cities  and  villages  have  been left 
at the
    mercy  of  this  powerful  military  technology  in  the  hands  
of  the
    murderers. 

    In the capital of Sarajevo alone, more than 10 000 have been 
killed, and
    more than 50  000  wounded.  There   is  not  a  single  family  
without
    casualties - killed or wounded. 

    To all this, the world has sent us only one message: negotiate. 

    Believing that the only right path  was  to  continue to defend 
our land
    and in this just struggle  to  be  supported  by  the  peace and 
freedom
    loving world, we refused to negotiate with war criminals for a 
very long
    time. 

    Finally, faced  with  the  unbearable  plight  of  our  people  
and  the
    indifference of the  world,  and  without  any  choice,  we 
accepted the
    negotiations. 

    It turned out that the aggressor had only used negotiations as a 
bargain
    for time and a cover up for the continuation of the aggression. 

    In March, 1993, after long  and  painful  negotiations,  and with 
many a
    concession from our side, we signed the Vance / Owen Plan. The 
aggressor
    rejected it. 

    The next bloody round of war came  about,  followed  by another 
round of
    negotiations. 

    As a result was a Peace Plan  of  July  5,  1994,  by the Contact 
Group,
    consisting of the world's 5 most powerful  states, (USA, United 
Kingdom,
    France, Germany  and  Russian  Federation)  .  This  time again, 
we have
    chosen  peace  and  the  attackers    have,  once  again,  opted  
for  a
    continuation of the war. 

    We have accepted the unjust  peace  offer  in  order  to halt the 
war in
    Bosnia and Herzegovina. We have done so hoping that the injustice 
of the
    peace plan could still be  corrected  in the years of peace. 
Knowing the
    soul of Bosnia, we believed and we still  believe that peace 
rescues and
    war destroys everything that we call Bosnia. 

    And what we call  Bosnia  is  not  only  a  small  peace  of land 
in the
    Balkans. For many of us, Bosnia and  Herzegovina is not just a 
homeland,
    it is an idea. It is a  belief  that  peoples  of  different  
religions,
    nationalities and cultural traditions, can live together. If it 
happened
    that this dream was forever buried, and this idea of tolerance 
among the
    peoples in these areas was  irretrievably  gone, the guilt would 
lie not
    only with the ones who have been relentlessly  killing Bosnia with 
their
    mortars for over  thirty  months,  but  nonetheless,  with  many  
of the
    powerful from the rest of  the  world  who  could  have helped, 
yet have
    chosen to do otherwise. 

    Two days ago, I left Sarajevo.  I  did  not  leave by plane, 
because the
    airport was closed. I had to  take  land  routes  through woods 
that are
    constantly exposed to fire and  where  many people are killed 
daily. For
    days, there is no electricity, water and gas in the city. The 
capital is
    completely blocked and it is virtually dying. 

    Yesterday, after I  had  arrived  to  the  United  Nations  
building,  I
    received a letter from Srebrenica, a  small town on the river 
Drina. The
    letter was supposed to be a report, but it is moreover a cry from 
a real
    human hell. I could find no strength  to read this letter for the 
second
    time. 

    It has been over three  months,  since  a  new  wave of ethnic 
cleansing
    reignited. Thousands of civilians,  whose  only fault was that 
they were
    not Serbs, have been expelled from their homes in Banja Luka, 
Bijeljina,
    Janja and other towns under the control of Karadzic's army. 

    Once again, nothing has been  done.  The  world  seems to have 
gradually
    gotten  accustomed  to  unpunished  violations  of  the  basic  
norms of
    international law. This is an  ill  stage,  that  concerns every 
man and
    every woman in the world, no  matter  how  close or far from 
Bosnia they
    may be. 

    For a very long period of time, I  have  rejected - and still 
reject- "a
    theory of conspiracy", that is,  that  all this that has befallen 
Bosnia
    is because the majority nation  is  a  Muslim  people and that 
there are
    some  dark  powers  who  have  consciously   pushed  Serbs  
towards  the
    extermination of Bosnian Muslims. 

    Those who claim so, have their own arguments  . I believe You have 
heard
    them before : namely,  an  obvious  aggression,  followed  by  
genocide,
    concentration camps and other forms  of the darkest fascism are on 
stage
    in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The world can only be blind not to see 
it. Is
    it blind, or does it  consciously  accept  all  these evils? Blind 
it is
    not, therefore, the other  possibility  remains.  This is their 
argument
    that has gained ever more supporters. 

    It will not be good if  a  billion  Muslims  in  the  world  
accept this
    argument. 

    The latest events in and around the Plan of the Contact Group have 
given
    the supporters of "theory of conspiracy" an additional argument. 

    Namely, Bosnia and Herzegovina  has  been  offered  a  proposal 
that was
    backed by five major  powers,  and  therefore,  by  the  majority 
in the
    international  community.  It  was  clearly  stated  that  the  
side who
    rejected the plan would  be  punished,  while  the side who 
accepted the
    plan would be protected. 

    The opposite  happened:  Serbs  rejected  the  Plan  and  they 
have been
    rewarded by the suspension of  sanctions.  We have accepted the 
Plan and
    we have been punished by a complete blockade of Sarajevo. Both 
processes
    ran parallelly and simultaneously. 

    These  days,  the  highest  United  Nation's   civilian   and   
military
    authorities are warning us: If you demand  and succeed in the 
lifting of
    the arms embargo, UNPROFOR will pull out from the Republic of 
Bosnia and
    Herzegovina, etc., etc. 

    I have, certainly, not undertaken this long and arduous trip from 
Bosnia
    to America only to convey the facts that may be known to the 
majority of
    you. 

    We, in Bosnia believe that  Good  and  Justice,  despite  the 
hardships,
    cannot be defeated. We do not  give  up  faith  that  the world 
could be
    better and that we should all work  and  we should all try over 
and over
    again in order to make it better. 

    With this conviction, I have  come  to  speak  before you and to 
present
    some of our proposals, despite all our disappointments and 
frustrations. 

    From this General Assembly and the Security Council, we ask: 

    1. That all  Resolutions  on  Bosnia  and  Herzegovina  adopted  
by  the
    Security Council and General Assembly be implemented; 

    2. That measures be taken in  order  to  effectively  monitor the 
border
    between Serbia and Montenegro on one side, and Bosnia and 
Herzegovina on
    the other side, so that any  transport  of  troops, weapons and 
military
    equipment over this border be prevented or timely detected; 

    3. Should this transport occur, that  the decision on suspension 
of some
    of the sanctions  against  Serbia  and  Montenegro  (  Security  
Council
    resolution 943/1994)  be  immediately  recalled  and  tightened 
sanction
    measures be imposed in accordance with  the Plan of the Contact 
Group of
    July, 1994; 

    4. That there will be no further easing  of the sanctions towards 
Serbia
    and Montenegro until they  recognize  Bosnia and Herzegovina and 
Croatia
    within its internationally recognized borders; 

    5. That a resolution be adopted,  without  delay, which would 
strengthen
    the protection of and mandate  the  extension  of  the  safe areas 
as in
    Security  Council  Resolutions  824  and  836,  and  in  
accordance with
    provisions of Article 6, of the Contact Group Plan; 

    6. That decisions be taken that  would  prevent  and ensure an 
immediate
    end to  the  strangulation  of  Sarajevo.  As  an  integral  part, 
these
    measures  should  envisage  the  opening  of  the  city  along the 
north
    communication route ( road  and  highway),  by  creating a 
demilitarized
    belt , 2,5 kilometers  wide,  on  both  sides  of  these routes. 
In this
    demilitarized belt,  only  the  United  Nations  troops  and  
police may
    remain. Potential use of force against the strangulation of 
Sarajevo, as
    is envisaged under Article 4, of the NATO decision of February 9, 
1994. 


    Provided that the above conditions  be  fulfilled,  and with a 
condition
    that UNPROFOR continues to carry out  its mission, the Government 
of the
    Republic of Bosnia and  Herzegovina  would  be  willing to accept 
a new,
    modified formula for the problem of the arms embargo. 

    Namely, we would limit our demand  for  the  lifting of the arms 
embargo
    only to the adoption of formal  decision,  while its application, 
or its
    consequences, would be deferred for another six months. 

    In this case, UNPROFOR troops  could  remain  in Bosnia and 
Herzegovina,
    the Contact Group would fulfill  its  promise, and a clear message 
would
    be conveyed to Karadzic's Serbs. 

    At the end, we would also like to state our two commitments: 

    1. Our irrevocable objective is  a  democratic  Bosnia  and  
Herzegovina
    within its  internationally  recognized  borders,  and with full 
ethnic,
    religious and political  rights  for  all  its  citizens.  Within 
a such
    Bosnia and Herzegovina as envisioned,  the Serbs will have all 
rights up
    to the highest level of autonomy, but  they cannot have a state 
within a
    state. 

    2. We consider that as all other nations,  we have the unalienable 
right
    to self-defense. Therefore,  should  for  any  reason,  our 
compromising
    proposal on the arms embargo  be  rejected,  we  will then seek 
from our
    friends that this embargo be lifted immediately, and even 
unilaterally. 

    In closing this statement,  I  take  this  opportunity  to  
express  our
    sincere gratitude to  all  friends  of  Bosnia  who  have  
supported its
    struggle for survival and freedom. 

    I thank You, Mr. President. 




 2. Charter (Original Text)
................................................... 


    The purpose of this newsgroup is to  provide prompt & timely 
information
    on Bosnia. This may include variety  of items including, summary 
of news
    reports,  upcoming  events,  nato    briefing,  coverage  of  
Bosnia  by
    international press, international  news  agencies,  wire news 
services,
    announcements & info  by  U.S.  state   department,  listing  of  
relief
    organization and much more. 




 3. List of Relief Agencies
................................................... 



 BENEVOLENCE INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION
 P.O.Box 548 Worth, IL 60482 USA
 Tel:708-233-0062
 Fax:708-233-0069
 e-mail:mermaa@engvms.unl.edu



 MERCY INTERNATIONAL-USA
        P.O. Box 248, Garden City, 
 Michigan 48136-0248 U.S.A.
        Telephone: (313)421-2273
        FAX:       (313)421-2022
        Tax Id. Number (38-2846307) Contributions are tax deductable.

 FRIENDS OF BOSNIA
 47 East Street
 Hadley, MA  01035
 Tel: 413-586-6450
 Fax: 413-586-2415
 Email: visualcom@igc.apc.org

 THE BOSNIA RELIEF FUND USA INC.
        Mailing : PO Box 91825 Elk Grove Village, IL 60009-1825
        Shipping: 1024 Fairway Dr., Bensenville,  IL 601016 USA
        Telephone: (708) 616-8223
        Fax      : (708) 616-8389

 NEW ENGLAND BOSNIAN RELIEF COMMITTEE
        54 Ellery St Boston, MA 02127
        (617) 269-5555 voice             
 (617) 464-4406 fax
        lpingel@shore.net

 WOMEN FOR WOMEN IN BOSNIA
        P.O. Box 9733
        Alexandria, VA 22304

 STUDENTS AGAINST GENOCIDE-Project Bosnia
 (SAGE Contact) sherilee@leland.stanford.edu
 Phone: 415-725-SAGE

 MN COALITION FOR PEACE & HUMAN RIGHTS IN FORMER YUGOLAVIA
 Melis Arik
 c/o Institute for Education and Advocacy
 1219 University Avenue SE
 Minneapolis, MN 55414
 (612) 378-9114
 (612) 378-9132 (FAX)

    GLOBAL CHILDREN'S ORGANIZATION
 GCO Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovnia, Ms. Elma
 Kucukalic-Selimovic TEL. (011 387 71) 444-296
 GCO Zagreb, Croatia, Mr. Zoran Ivancic,
 TEL/FAX (011 385 41) 382-660
 GCO Berkeley, California, Ms Edie Heartshorne 
    TEL.  (510) 526-4476



Courtesy: Islamic Information & News Network (Muslims@Asuacad.Bitnet)
          File:Bosnia Relief Agencies






 4. Bosnia News on Internet
................................................... 


    BOSNET (English) 

    'Bosnet' is Bosnia News Network. It publishes daily event over 
internet.
    BOSNET publications  are  posted  to   several  news  groups  on  
USENET
    including 'misc.news.bosnia.'  One  may  subscribe  to  it by 
writing to
    'bosnews-request@doc.ic.ac.uk.' 


    BOSNET (Bosnian Language) 

    'Bosnet' is also available in Bosnian  language. To request 
subscription
    write to: 'bosnet-request@gnu.ai.mit.edu.' 


    MISC.NEWS.BOSNIA Mailing List 

    Posting made to news group  'misc.news.bosnia'  may be received as 
email
    message. If interested write to: 

    'misc-news-bosnia-request@gnu.ai.mit.edu' 
    >> Not available to date << 




 5. FTP Sites for Bosnia Info
................................................. 


    The info on Bosnia is located at the following anonymous FTP 
sites: 


                Login:          anonymous
                Password:       _your_email_address_


        A -  SITE:      triples.math.mcgill.ca
             Directory: /pub/bosnia

        B -  SITE:      ftp.cco.caltech.edu
             Directory: /pub/calmsa/bosnia
 





 6. Need for this Newsgroup
................................................... 


    Bosnia problem is over four years old  by now and doesn't show 
much hope
    of going away. A newsgroup can  reach  a  lot more people than a 
mailing
    list. 

    The information on Bosnia is scattered over different newsgroups 
in bits
    & pieces, some mailing lists give a  weekly report on Bosnia. This 
group
    will also attempt bring all news  &  info  on  Bosnia in this 
newsgroup.
    Daily postings & updates on Bosnia will be posted on this 
newsgroup 

    Discussions on Bosnia already take place  on soc.culture.bosna-
herzgvna.
    Current proposed newsgroup will be  news  &  info oriented 
newsgroup and
    also to avoid junk appearing in  this  newsgroup,  the newsgroup 
will be
    moderated. 




 Announcements
................................................................


 7. Moderation Policy
......................................................... 


    Misc.News.Bosnia is group moderated. 

    Moderators will post only news & info  related directly or 
indirectly to
    Bosnia. 

    Rejected items  will  include,  discussions,  test  messages,  
anonymous
    message & posting which are not in proper USENET format, (to spell 
out),
    80 characters in width & more quoted text than original. 




 8. Moderators List & Guidelines
.............................................. 



 LIST OF CHARTER MODERATORS for misc.news.bosnia
 _______________________________________________
 Dated: September 05, 1994

 irfan@cisco.com   Syed Irfan Ashraf  
 iraj@gnu.ai.mit.edu  Iraj Ali-Mughal
 erkocevc@devm.crl.sony.co.jp  Murat Erkocevc 

 Additional Moderators Dated: October 03, 1994

 kirac@systems.caltech.edu  Ahmet Kirac
 mughal@alumni.caltech.edu Asim Mughal 


 GUIDELINES:


    To  spell  out  guidelines,  moderators   may  resign  
voluntarily,  new
    moderators may be selected by the preceding ones. 


    MODERATION SETUP: 

    As pointed out, this newsgroup is group  moderated. Submissions 
are sent
    to one of the active moderatos. The moderator reviews the 
submission and
    takes appropriate action. 

    The moderation is based at 'gnu.ai.mit.edu' site. The articles 
submitted
    are forwarded from the above site to  the moderators. The 
moderators use
    Automatic  Posting  Scripts  to   faciliate  the  review  &  
posting  of
    submissions. 

    In addition to the moderators, the newsgroup has two facilitators. 
Ahmet
    Kirac          (kirac@systems.caltech.edu)      and    Asim    
Mughal
    (mughal@alumni.caltech.edu), for advice & coordination among 
moderators.
    The newsgroup host site,  Automatic  Posting  Script  & this 
document is
    maintained by Asim Mughal. 




 9. Administrativa 001: Oct 03, 1994
.......................................... 


    ADMINISTRATIVA 001: Oct 03, 1994 Facilitators appointed Moderators 


To: Readership of 'misc.news.bosnia'
From: Moderators (Irfan Ashraf, Iraj Ali-Mughal, Murat Erkocevc) 


    The  moderators  of   misc.news.bosnia,  in  accordance  with  the 
voted
    moderation policy,  excerise  their  right  to  appoint  two  
additional
    moderators for the news group 'misc.news.bosnia.' 

    The  moderators  of   misc.news.bosnia,   hereby,  appoint  the  
current
    facilitators, as listed as below as  the moderators of 
misc.news.bosnia,
    making a total of five (5) moderators. 



Moderator-4 :  Asim Mughal (mughal@alumni.caltech.edu)
Moderator-5 :  Ahmet Kirac  (kirac@systems.caltech.edu)



    UPDATED COMPLETE LIST OF MODERATORS: as of Oct 04, 1994 

 irfan@cisco.com   Syed Irfan Ashraf  
 iraj@gnu.ai.mit.edu  Iraj Ali-Mughal
 erkocevc@devm.crl.sony.co.jp  Murat Erkocevc 
 mughal@alumni.caltech.edu  Asim Mughal
 kirac@systems.caltech.edu Ahmet Kirac


    RELEVANT VOTED GUIDELINES: 

    " To spell  out  guidelines,  moderators  may  resign  
voluntarily,  new
    moderators may be selected by the preceding ones. " 


    LIST OF FACILITATORS: from FAQ 

    "In addition to the  moderators,  the  newsgroup  has  two 
facilitators.
    Ahmet     Kirac     (kirac@systems.caltech.edu)    and   Asim   
Mughal
    (mughal@caltech.edu), for advice & coordination among moderators. 

    The newsgroup host site, Automatic Posting  Script & this document 
(FAQ)
    is maintained by Asim Mughal." 


    End of Administrativa 001: Oct 03, 1994. 




10. Where & How to send your submissions
...................................... 


    There are two ways to do so: 

    A- Thru USENET 

    While reading newsgroup 'misc.news.bosnia' simply respond to the 
artilce
    or post a new article. The article  will  be automatically routed 
to one
    of the active moderators for review. 

    B- Thru E-MAIL 

    You may submit your article  to  the   following  address.  Again,  
your
    article will reach one of the moderators for review. 

    The e-mail address is: 

      misc-news-bosnia@gnu.ai.mit.edu 


11. How to reach Moderators & Facilitators
.................................... 



    If you wish to reach moderators &  facilitators  of  this 
newsgroup. You
    may send email to: 

  misc-news-bosnia-request@gnu.ai.mit.edu 





12. History of this newsgroup
................................................. 



    Newsgroup: misc.news.bosnia 
    Description: News, Articles, Reports & Info on Bosnia. 


    Status: moderated

    Proponent:                          Ahmet Kirac
(kirac@systems.caltech.edu) 
    Sponsor:    Caltech MSA (calmsa@cco.caltech.edu)

    Request for Discussion:             June 21, 1994
    Call for Votes:                     August 12, 1994
    Voting Ended:                       September 03, 1994 23:59:59 
UTC
    Vote Taker:                         UVV
    Votes:                              XXX in favor, XX against






13. This FAQ: Archive Info, History & Credits
................................. 


    ARCHIVE INFO: This FAQ is archived &  availble thru anonymous FTP 
& thru
    world-wide web. 


        Anonymous FTP:
        -------------

        1. SITE:        rtfm.mit.edu
           Directory:   /pub/usenet/news.answers/bosnia-news-faq.Z

        2. SITE:        ftp.uu.net
           Directory:   /pub/usenet/news.answers/bosnia-news-faq.Z

        3. SITE:        ftp.cco.caltech.edu
           Directory:   /pub/calmsa/bosnia/bosnia-news-faq.Z


Word-Wide Web:
-------------

URL for USENET FAQs:

        http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/top.html

URL for this FAQ:

http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/bosnia-news-
faq/faq.html



HISTORY:

Version 1.1  Released  Oct  20, '94:  Expanded from 8 to 13 items. 
Version 1.0  Released  Sept 05, '94:     



## End of misc.news.bosnia FAQ ## 





