EASTERN EUROPEAN INTELLIGENCER

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
02882315
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
U
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
March 8, 2023
Document Release Date: 
September 24, 2019
Sequence Number: 
Case Number: 
F-2018-00903
Publication Date: 
May 13, 1968
File: 
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PDF icon EASTERN EUROPEAN INTELLIG[15690321].pdf146.69 KB
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Approved for Release: 2019/08/02 CO2882315 CON I'l DEN I 1AL 105 EASTERN EUROPEAN INTELLIGENCER Yugoslav Foreign Minister Visits Czechoslovakia OCI #0717/68 13 May 1968 Yugoslav Foreign Minister Marko Nikezic voiced Yugo- slavia's "special interest and sympathies" for current events in Czechoslovakia on his arrival in Prague on 13 May. Nikezic's visit will precede by a few days that of Yugo- slav Deputy Premier Kiro Gligorov, the guiding hand behind Belgrade's economic reform. The visits probably signal the start of closer cooperation between the two regimes. Nikezic undoubtedly will advise the reformist Czechoslovak regime on ways to deal with Soviet, Polish, and East German Pressure as well as ways Belgrade might help. Bulgarian Leadership Examines Drought Areas At least six top Bulgarian party leaders fanned out to various okrugs over the weekend for a first hand examination of the effects of the drought. Bulgarian officials have de- scribed the drought to US embassy officers as the worst in memory. On 10 May Sofia Radio admitted that the loss of grain crops in one okrug alone (there are 28 okrugs) will amount to 15 million leva (2 leva=US $1). The Bulgarian leadership undoubtedly is concerned over the unsettling effects of the drought on the populace who are already discontented over the Tanuary rise in consumer prices. Yugoslav Church-State Conflict Party leaders in predominantly Catholic Slovenia and Croatia, alarmed over the recent upsurge of religious in- fluence there, have recently taken steps to curb political discussion in the church. An editor of a Zagreb newspaper has been sentenced to nine months imprisonment for his articles concerning religious societies in socialist countries, and a religious monthly has been banned for criticizing the regime's stance on Vietnam and the treatment of Jews in the USSR. The Croatian mass organization (the Socialist Workers' Alliance) recently pro- posed at a meeting on 18 March that its members form committees GROUP I Excluded from automatic down- grading and declassification X.(34T-P-1-WEN-IffrAt7 Approved for Release: 2019/08/02 CO2882315 Approved for Release: 2019/08/02 CO2882315 AJ1N 1' ILMIN 111AL, -2- to deal with religious matters at local levels. A Slovenian Catholic priest, Ivan Petrie, was tried and convicted last October for allegedly using religion for political purposes. He had eulogized a young Yugoslav killed fighting in the US army in Vietnam as having fallen in a "holy and just cause". This was the first such trial in many years, and was a sudden departure from the careful treatment accorded Catholic officials since Belgrade re- newed quasi-diplomatic relations with the Vatican in 1966. Slovenian and Croatian Party officials, a large number of whom have favored a benevolent attitude toward Catholi- cism, now find themselves fighting an uphill battle to cur- tail the rapid reassertion of church influence, especially among the young people. Unless the republic parties are willing to resort to more repressive measures however,-- which is unlikely--the steps already taken or proposed will probably have little effect in curbing the spread of religious influence. Czechoslovak Minister of Heavy Industry Speaks Against Strikes Increasing wage demands backed by strikes in Pisek, Opava, and other places are unfounded, according to Minister Krejci. Speaking at a meeting of Slovak enterprise managers, Krejci also condemned the apparent informal creation of "groups of producers according to their branch interests." He said that the official transition to a new organizational arrangement of companies would be effected as of 1 January 1969, but would, in exceptional cases, be implemented on 1 July this year. Kreici's message seems to be "wait for us." Hungary To Send Four-Five Thousand More Workers To The GDR Jozsef Rozsa, manpower chief of the Hungarian Ministry of Labor, announced on 4 May that Hungary would send four to five thousand more laborers to the GDR in 1968. Last year Hungary sent three thousand unskilled workers to the GDR for a three year apprenticeship. Apparently the arrange- ment proved satisfactory for both countries. _Geli+FtErticr= Approved for Release: 2019/08/02 CO2882315 Approved for Release: 2019/08/02 CO2882315 -GON-F4-4F-?'4=Ft7t- -3- Rozsa disaayed some sensitivity to charges that un- employment in Hungary is behind this arrangement. He countered such charges with the claim that some Hungarian industries were complaining of labor shortages. It is probably true that Hungarian industries could use more skilled laborers but there are few job prospects for un- skilled youths in Hungary. Gyorgy Lukacs Strikes Again Gyorgy Lukacs, Hungary's foremost Marxist philosopher, is again tweeking the noses of would-be ideologists in the Hungarian party leadership. In an article in the literary journal Kortars, Lukacs replied to a recent attack on his- theories by Gyorgy Aczel, the regime's cultural watchdog, by calling for the elimination of "slightly improved and modernized dogmm, and the uncritical adoption of even the most stupid Western crazes." Lukacs, whose communist credentials date from the Bela Kun regime of 1919, has been a constant embarrassment to the Kadar regime. In 1956 he joined Imre Nagy's cabinet and was subsequently excommunicated. Even though Lukacs refused to publicly repent, he was readmitted to the party last year, although with the clear understanding that his readmission did not imply party approval of his theories. Recently, Lukacs published several articles in foreign magazines attacking both Stalinist die-hards and the desertion of Marxist principles. On 27 April, Aczel published a pettifogging attack on Lukacs' formulas which, far from dis- crediting them, only gave them increased publicity and be- gan a dialogue in which Aczel can only come out second best. NOTE: THE VIEWS EXPRESSED ABOVE REPRESENT ONLY THE ANALYSIS OF THE EE DIVISION �CaN;-P.1-130�Eil'iPh4Ct- Approved for Release: 2019/08/02 CO2882315