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Kosova Daily Report #1364, 98-03-07
Kosova Information Center
KOSOVA DAILY REPORT #1364
Prishtina, 7 March 1998
First Edition: 13:30 hrs
Second Edition: 15:00 hrs
Third Edition: 19:30 hrs
Fourth Edition: 20:00 hrs
CONTENTS
[01] Redeployment of Serb Forces Underway in Drenica
[02] Situation in Llausha, a Village under Serb Siege
[03] Stories about Atrocities of Serb Forces in Drenica
[04] President Rugova's Aides Arrested in Mitrovica
[05] At Least 25 Albanians Killed in Prekaz and Llausha Identified
[06] Old Albanian Woman Dies in Schock, Watching Her Family Being Arrested
by Serb Forces
[07] Third Day of Serb Armed Attack in Drenica, Shooting Reportedly Dies
Down
[08] At Least 36 Albanians, Including Women and Children, Identified as
Killed by Serb Forces
[09] President Rugova's Aides Released After Being Held up By Serb Police
[10] Serb Army Tanks, Policemen and Soldiers Involved in Drenica Clampdown,
LDK Official Says
[11] Rugova's Spokesman Calls for End of Serb Attacks, Establishment of
Humanitarian Corridor
[12] Albanian Woman, Who Got Out of Serb Siege, Tells Her Story
[13] Children and Women Without Food, Men Exhausted, Foreign Journalist
Says
[14] Albanian Medical Personnel Protest in Front of American Center in
Prishtina
[15] Senior Serb Police Officer Says Action of Serb Forces in Drenica
Continues
[16] U.S. Won't Tolerate Kosova Violence, Albright Says
[17] Kosova Albanians Are Being Repressed by a "Brutal Counterattack by the
Serb Army", Holbrooke Says
[18] HRW Calls on War Crimes Tribunal to Investigate Possible War Crimes in
Kosova
[19] Two Villages in Drenica Still Under Random Serb Fire
[20] President Rugova Receives Diplomats of Contact Group Countries
[21] Brian Donnelly: 'Great Concern about Continued Police Activity in
Drenica'
[22] Serbian Police Shoots at People on the Move, in Their Yards
[23] Serbian Police Wound Albanian at Klina e Ep&rme
[24] Kosovar Health Care Institutions Press for Humanitarian Corridor in
Drenica
[25] 'Milosevic Has Got to Call the Dogs of Repression Back', US Department
Spokesman Says
[26] UNHCR Is Considering Contingency Plans for Kosova
[27] Stern Verbal Warnings Will No Longer Suffice, IHF Says
[01] Redeployment of Serb Forces Underway in Drenica
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) 12:00 hrs - The situation in Drenica, especially
in the Prekaz i Ul&t and Llausha villages of Skenderaj (in Serbian
'Srbica'), continues to be extremely grave in the wake of Serb armed/police
operations launched there two days ago.
Heavy armament, tanks, and helicopter gunships were involved in the attacks
which amounted to a combined police/paramilitary/military operation of Serb
forces in the past two days, targeting first and foremost the Prekaz
village. Scores of Albanians are feared dead, and many other wounded,
although it is impossible to establish the death toll and the number of
wounded.
Today (Saturday) morning, reports indicated that the area is still sealed
off. Surces from a village close to Prekaz, as well as sources from Llausha,
told the Kosova Information Center (KIC) this morning that there was a
cessation of Serb armed attacks since last evening.
Nobody is allowed in, neither political and humanitarian activists, nor
journalists.
It remains to be seen what will ensue, an end or resumption of further
activities on the part of Serb military/police forces against the local
population.
Meanwhile, the residents who have found themselves in the Serb siege are
running out of food supplies, the wounded are without any medical help, the
killed are inside the houses, in yards, but also on the streets and the
fields.
The Serb regime continues its outrageous behavior. Even after two days of
heavy shelling by Serb forces in the Albanian villages, it does not allow
any kind of assistance for the wounded, old men, women and children.
A local source told KIC last night, the medical personnel in the Skenderaj
hospital have found themselves caught in and unable to got out for several
days now.
In the meantime, Serb forces have engaged in all activities to see that the
local people in Drenica flee their homes. Some 5000 Albanians - mostly old
men, women and children - have moved out the area, and moved in villages of
Mitrovica and Vushtrri (in Serbian 'Vucitern').
Reports indicated that during the night and in the course of today there
was increased movement of Serb forces, presumably to redeploy and/or bring
in reinforcements.
At 7:30 this morning, local sources from Mitrovica said 7 cars (six jeeps
and a Niva car) with license plates of Kraljevo and Kragujevac (Serbia)
left Mitrovica heading for Skenderaj. Scores of bearded and long-haired
Serbs were said to be on board the cars.
Meanwhile, at 9:30 hrs three busloads of Serb policemen left Skenderaj for
Mitrovica. This gives weight to reports about Serb intentions to bring in
fresh troops and redeploy the others.
Statements by Serb regime authorities Friday evening that they had wrapped
up the armed operation in Prekaz seem to be aimed at misleading the world.
It is hoped here that the international community will have had enough of
the Serb propaganda mendacity and the ploys of the President of the "FRY"
Slobodan Milosevic.
The Serbian police is keeping under a strict grip a large territory in
Kosova surrounding Drenica.
A foreign TV crew was barred today in Vushtrri from proceeding towards
Drenica.
[02] Situation in Llausha, a Village under Serb Siege
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) 13:15 hrs - A local LDK source told the KIC from
Llausha village by phone at 12:30 hrs the following people have been killed
at this village: Miftar Rrecaj, Sadik Ka^kini (46) and a woman with her two
children, a boy, Gazmend Gashi (15), and a girl, Shukrije Gashi (13).
Miftar Rrecaj was buried last night after the dusk had set. During the
funeral procession a Serb sniper opened fire on the crowd of people paying
the last honor to their fellow villager.
This source, said at least six people in the village have been targeted by
Serb snipers.
A report from Skenderaj said that 18 members of the extended Jasharaj
family, who had been rounded up and were being held in detention in the
yard of the Skenderaj Game Ammunition Factory, have been released today
(Saturday). The age of those family members ranged from 2 months to 76
years. They have found shelter in the small town of Skenderaj.
In Skenderaj, there is fear the number of the Albanians killed in Prekaz
and Skenderaj exceeds 50. This figure was given by LDK sources in Skenderaj
yesterday. The number of those wounded could be even higher.
The situation in Skenderaj is described as grave and dangerous. The sound
of shooting in Prekaz could be heard in Llausha today morning. A loud
detonation was heard in the A^areva and Vojnika villages at 8:30 hrs.
Movement of people in the small town of Skenderaj has all but ceased, with
the exclusion of course of Serb policemen.
The LDK branch in Skenderaj and other local organizations at Llasusha sent
a dramatic appeal to the international community to act so that this
Serbian terrorist expedition is effectively brought to an end. The final
goal of such Serba actions is to ethnically cleanse Kosova.
The way the Serb attacks have been carried out, the methods used by them,
are tactics by now familiar to the world: they were employed in the Bosnian
war, and the perpetrators of such dreadful atrocities are being tried in
the Hague, LDK branch activists in Skenderaj underlines.
They called for medical staff and international humanitarian organizations
to enter the Drenica area and offer the necessary assistance to the wounded
and ensure that the dead are buried.
[03] Stories about Atrocities of Serb Forces in Drenica
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - Covering the ongoing attack of the Serb forces
in Drenica, the two Prishtina-based Albanian-language daily newspapers
Bujku and Koha ditore have carried today shocking stories and testimonies
of survivors.
Bujku has interviewed a resident of Prekaz, Zen& Jashari, who was able to
leave the village. Zen& Jashari (43) said his wife and his son Abdullah
were killed by Serbs, whereas two other kids of his, Bajram and Dula, were
captured by Serb forces. He was not able to learn a thing about their fate
ever since.
Zen& Jashari said that he had also seen the police killing his neighbours
Halit (Jashari) and his wife, Zymer (Jashari), with his two children, as
well as other neighbours of his.
The house of Shaban Jashari was shelled and burned to the ground, and two
Serb armoured vehicles moved on in its ruins subsequently, he said. If the
family members of Shaban Jashari were inside as it was said, then there is
no doubt none of them is alive, Zen& Jashari told Bujku correspondent in
Skenderaj.
Sources have said that Shaban Jashari and at least three other Albanians of
Prekaz and Llausha have refused to vacate their houses in advance of and
during the attack of Serb forces.
Bujku has quoted an Albanian from Skenderaj, Shaban Gashi, as saying that
he had seen himself a woman and her teen-age son and daughter being killed
near a Serb check-point just outside the small town of Skenderaj. They were
killed by the Serb police while in an attempt to move out of the area, he
said.
Koha ditore has quoted evacuees from Prekaz village as saying that they had
made a narrow escape and that they had witnessed dreadful atrocities. "In
Prekaz village the Serbs cut the throat of a 12- year-old boy in front of
his mother", evacuees said. They told this to the Koha reporter in
condition of anonymity, fearing further Serb reprisals later, the newspaper
said.
[04] President Rugova's Aides Arrested in Mitrovica
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - Three close aides of President Ibrahim Rugova of
Kosova were arrested by Serb police in Mitrovica early afternoon today
(Saturday), reportedly around 12:00 hrs.
Dr. Alush Gashi, Presidential adviser for health and humanitarian issues,
and two members of the Democratic League of Kosova (LDK) Presidency, Dr.
Rexhep Gjergji and Mr. Basri Musmurati, were arrested today together with
their driver, Mr. Lulzim Makolli.
Presidential adviser Gashi and LDK leaders were on their way to Mitrovica
and Skenderaj (in Serbian 'Srbica') to get first-hand information about the
most recent situation in this part of Kosova.
Villages in the Skenderaj municipality, in the region of Drenica, have been
under continued attack by Serb forces, equipped with military equipment.
Scores of civilian Albanians, including women and children, have been
reported killed in Drenica during Serb police/military crackdown.
Thousands of Albanians - mostly old men, women and children - have fled
their homes from the area surrounding the Drenica region.
[05] At Least 25 Albanians Killed in Prekaz and Llausha Identified
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - The KIC sources in Vushtrri ('Vucitrn' in
Serbian), Skenderaj ('Srbica'), Llausha and Mitrovica, as well as the Bujku
daily newspaper, have been able to obtain the names of some of the persons
killed during the Serb forces's attack in Drenica.
Among them are: Nazmi Jashari, age 27; Qazim Jashari, teacher, together
with his son (name and age could not be obtained); Zuk& Jashari, age 67;
Sherif Jashari, age 46; Shaban Jashari, age 76; Habib Jashari; Faik
Jashari; Ali Jashari, and another person originally from Luboveci, but
residing in Prekaz village, his name unknown; Zen& Jasharit, his wife age
43 (her name could not be obtained), and his son Abdullahu Jashari, age
unknown; two members of Jashari family, cousins of Zen& Jashari; Halit
Jashari together with his wife; two sons of Zymber Jasharit, and some of
his neighbours; Hamide Jashari (f), age 70. All of them are natives of
Prekaz village.
In Llausha the Serbian forces killed Miftar Rrecaj; Sadik Ka^kini age 46;
an Albanian woman together with her two children, Gazmend Gashi, age 15,
and Shukrije Gashin (f) age 13.
[06] Old Albanian Woman Dies in Schock, Watching Her Family Being Arrested
by Serb Forces
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - Sources in Skenedarj said three Albanians from
Prekaz village, arrested by the Serb forces on Friday, were released after
having been held in custody for 24 hours.
The LDK Information Commission in Skenderaj said that Serb police and
military forces arrested yesterday an unspecified number of resident in
Prakaz i Ult& village. They had their eyes concealed and taken to the Game
Ammunition Factory, outside Skenderaj.
Amongst the apprehended Albanians were Naser Jashari (36), teacher, Bekim
Jashari (26) together with three women and 14 children, as well Maliq
Jashari with daughter-in-law and her three kids.
Maliq Jashari's wife, Hamide Jashari (70) died of fear and terror while the
Serb forces were rounding up her family.
The three Albanian men Naser Jashari, Bekim Jashari, Maliq Jashari were
later taken to the police station in Skenderaj where they were harassed for
one day and one night. They were quoted as saying that yesterday when
transferred to the police stion, Serb policemen with knifes in their hands
were waiting for them in front of the doors, swearimng they's slaugher
them. One of the polic officers tolld his men they no arsm were found in
the housed of the three datainees which made them back off from
slaughtering, the Commission said.
[07] Third Day of Serb Armed Attack in Drenica, Shooting Reportedly Dies
Down
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - A local, speaking from Llausha village of
Skenderaj ('Srbica') told the Kosova Information Center (KIC) on the phone
at 17:00 hrs, the Serb shooting had died down in the afternoon.
The sound of firing was heard earlier in the day from Prekaz, as well as
the Turi^evc and Vojnik& villages, where two Albanians, father and son,
were reportedly shot and wounded.
This source told KIC the presence of Serb forces seemed to be less
ubiquitous today. He added though that there was movement of police forces
from and to Mitrovica and Gllogovc.
There have been reports throughout the day about forces moving in and out,
which makes local sources conclude Serb forces are only redeploying.
A senior Serbian police officer, Ljubinko Cvetic, told reporters in
Prishtina today (Saturday) Serb armed operations against Albanian
'terrorists' in Drenica will continue.
[08] At Least 36 Albanians, Including Women and Children, Identified as
Killed by Serb Forces
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - The KIC sources in Vushtrri (Vucitern in
Serbian), Skenderaj (Srbica), Llausha and Mitrovica, Bujku newspaper and
the Council for the Defence of Human Rights and Freedoms in Prishtina, have
acquired the names of some of the persons killed during the Serb forces's
attack in Drenica.
Among them are: Habib Jashari; Faik Jashari; Hajzer Zymer Jashari (aged
29); Murtez Zymer Jashari (aged 16); Ali Jashari; a mother together with
her son and a daughter, (names could not be obtained); Zuk& Jashari aged
67; Zen& Jashari, his wife (name could not be obtained), his-twelve-year-
old daughter, and his son Abdullah Jashari; Sherif Jashari; Shaban Jashari
aged 72; Qemajl Sherif Jashari; Qazim Jashari and his son (name could not
be obtained); Naim Zuk& Jashari; Halit Jashari aged 60 and his wife
(name could not be obtained); Fehmi Muhamet Lushtaku; Valdet Zen& Jashari
age 13; Adem Shaban Jashari 42 and his wife Mrs. Adile Jashari; Hamit
Jashari aged 60; the wife of Maliq Jashari (name and age could not be
obtained); Isak Feriz Halili aged 65, Nazmi Jashari aged 27 and Ali Jashari,
all natives of Prekaz i Posht&m village.
Albanian mother and her two children Shukrije Gashi (f) aged 12 and Gazmend
Gashi age 16, natives of Sk&nderaj, and Hamide Jashari (f) aged 70; Sadik
Kaqkini aged 46 and Miftar Rrecaj aged 43, natives of Llaush& village.
Meanwhile, the Belgrade-based Serbian pro-government daily "Politika" said
Saturday that the Serb forces, besides Adem Jashari 43, have killed also
Rexhep Selimi, aged 29, together with twenty others, suspected members of
the so-called Kosova Liberation Army (U^K).
A senior LDK official, Rexhep Gjergji, said today he had seen scattered
bodies of Albanians in Prekaz.
The number of Albanians killed in Serb attacks is feared to exceed
considerably the number of those already identified.
[09] President Rugova's Aides Released After Being Held up By Serb Police
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - Dr. Rexhep Gjergji and Mr. Basri Musmurati,
members of the Democratic League of Kosova (LDK) Presidency, and Dr. Alush
Gashi, President Ibrahim Rugova's advisors for health and humanitarian
issues, were arrested and held up by Serb police in Vushtrri ('Vucitern')
today afternoon while on their way back from Drenica.
They told reporters they were stopped by Serb police in a fresh check-point
and taken to the police station, where they were held for 45 minutes.
"We told them who we were", one of them told KIC.
The three, close aides of President Rugova of Kosova and his party, the LDK,
had been to Drenica, in the near vicinity of the villages which have been
attacked by Serb forces for the third day in a row.
[10] Serb Army Tanks, Policemen and Soldiers Involved in Drenica Clampdown,
LDK Official Says
Rugova's aides, Gjergji, Musmurati, Gashi speak to the press PRISHTINA,
March 7 (KIC) - Dr. Rexhep Gjergji and Mr. Basri Musmurati, members of the
LDK Presidency, and Dr. Alush Gashi, President Ibrahim Rugova's advisors
for health and humanitarian issues, who managed today to get close to the
Prekaz village, the target of huge Serb military/police operations against
local Albanians for the third day in a row, spoke to the press in
Prishtina this afternoon about what they saw and learned there.
They penetrated today to the Prekaz i Ep&rm village, very close to the line
where the strong Serb siege of the neighboring Prekaz i Ul&t village
starts.
Mr. Basri Musmurati said most of the houses of the Jasharaj family compound
(totalling 29 houses) have been ruined.
He quoted a local resident - who spent two nights hidden in the garret of
his house and managed to get out of the village eventually - as saying that
the houses of Halit Jashari, Hamit Jashari, Qazim Jashari, Shaban Jashari
and Kajtaz Jashari, bad been burned down.
This local, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the police had forced
his 64-year-old mother, his wife and three children at gun point and then
entered inside the house for searches.
Today morning, at 7:15 hrs, the house of Zen& Jashari was shelled, set on
fire, and burned down, Musmurati said, quoting locals who saw this.
Basri Musmurati said he himself and Dr. Alush Gashi and Dr. Rexhep Gjergji
witnessed, around 12:15 hrs today, when the house of Tahir Jashari was hit
and set in flames. He said the family three family compounds (Nezaj, Brahaj
and Dushkaj) were being fired at, whereas family compounds in the Prekazi i
Ep&rm were targeted likewise.
Dr. Alush Gashi explained that they were around 200-300 meters close to the
area where Serbs were firing occurred in the past three days. Serb forces
have placed a strong grip around the villages, he said.
Dr. Gashi, a medical professor, said the local residents were trying to do
their best to help one another in these hard times.
Dr. Rexhep Gjergji, who claimed to have gotten closer than his two
companions, said he saw Serb army tanks near the Jasharaj and Lushtaku
family compounds. He said he saw Serb policemen and soldiers there, too.
Dr. Gjergji, a mathematics professor, said Serb forces had dug up trenches
around the family compounds.
He said he saw bodies of killed Albanians scattered about the fields. "The
shooting was sporadic now, while the some Jsharaj family compound houses
were still burning".
[11] Rugova's Spokesman Calls for End of Serb Attacks, Establishment of
Humanitarian Corridor
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - "We urge the international community step in so
that Belgrade is pressed upon to bring an end to the outrageous Serb
attacks against Albanian villages in Drenica", Xhemail Mustafa, President
Ibrahim Rugova's spokesman said today in Prishtina.
The Serb siege of the area should be lifted, and a "humanitarian corridor"
established to assist the people in the affected area, Mr. Mustafa said.
Such a humanitarian corridor, under an international monitoring, is
necessary to assist the people who are suffering amidst the ongoing Serb
armed attacks there, as well as those who have fled the area, he
concluded.
[12] Albanian Woman, Who Got Out of Serb Siege, Tells Her Story
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - An Albanian woman from Prekaz of Skenderaj
('Srbica') who managed to get out of the Serb siege, told domestic and
foreign reporters Saturday that the Serb police and military forces had
fired indiscriminately at her fellow villagers.
Mahije Kodra (37), mother to five, told reporters in Prishtina that she
only realized that her husband was killed when reaching Prishtina.
Mahije Kodra spoke in details about her ordeal, and how she made to to the
Kosova capital. "I cannot understand how can those mothers [policemen's
mothers] let their sons kill innocent children of other people", she said.
Mrs Kodra said that on Thursday morning at about 5 a.m, shelling targeting
her village started "out of blue'. Most of the villagers were still asleep,
she said.
When realizing that houses in the neighboring part of the village were
already in fire, the woman said she grabbed her kids trying to go as far
away as she could. Indiscriminate fire from all the directions and all
kinds of armament was being discharged in the village.
She said that she had seen three rings of Serb forces cordoning off her
village: the first being heavily armed men in 'iron clothes', as she put
it; the next were disguised men in black with knives in their hands, and
the third were policemen with a bit lighter uniforms and lighter armament.
She ran through the fields and woods, holding her 5-year-old son on her
arms while the four other followed her. "My boy fainted. I though he was
dead. Only when I sprayed his face with water near a stream he came back to
senses", Mahije Kodra said.
The woman told reporters she spent two cold nights in basements of two
abandoned houses with her starving kids. The sound of heavy shooting was
heard all time, so she did not dare go out.
At some stage, she asked for shelter at some houses but the people were
reluctant to let her in, fearing the police were after her, and that they
would execute them all for letting in a fugitive.
"We have never done anything wrong to anybody, we have never killed
anyone's kids, so why they are doing this to us..." Mahije Kodra said
before fainting in front of reporters in Prishtina.
[13] Children and Women Without Food, Men Exhausted, Foreign Journalist
Says
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - A foreign journalist, who managed to get close
to Prekaz today, had this to say to KIC about his/her experience there.
S/he spoke to KIC on condition of anonymity: "You could see the smoke near
this armaments factory. We ran into about ninety-three women and children
that were in a house. They were from Polac and Prekaz, they said. There
were about fifteen to twenty-five babies. One woman has just given birth
this morning at seven a.m., another woman had a two month-old baby. They
don't have enough food or water. There were about forty children and the
rest were women. The men up there looked tired, exhausted. They'd been
hiding in the woods. They said they were scared to go back to their
cities.
We could see some APCs that were near this armaments factory and in between
near where the brick factory is. You could also see some police down in
groups, with binoculars.
These women are in ^i^avica in a house in two sixteen-by-sixteen meter
rooms."
[14] Albanian Medical Personnel Protest in Front of American Center in
Prishtina
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - Around 500 Kosovar Albanian doctors, nurses and
other medical personnel gathered Saturday afternoon in front of the United
States Information Service (USIS) Office to urge the U.S. and international
organizations to intervene with the Belgrade authorities in allowing a
humanitarian corridor to Drenica.
Dr. Hashim Maloku, Dean of the Medical Faculty of the Prishtina University,
said that reports from Drenica speak of a large number of wounded people
being in a desperate need for medical assistance.
He called on world organizations to help the people of Kosova, to send
medical equipment and medication and assist in establishing a humanitarian
corridor to the affected area which has been under the Serb forces's siege
since Thursday morning.
The USIS Director Richard Huckaby told the crowd that the US State
department is deeply distressed over the recent situation in Kosova and
that Belgrade has been pressurized upon so to bring to an and the ongoing
attacks and allow humanitarian and medical agencies have access to
Drenica.
[15] Senior Serb Police Officer Says Action of Serb Forces in Drenica
Continues
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - Ljubinko Cvetic, a colonel of Serb police, and
Veljko Odalovic, a senior official of the Serbian occupation authorities in
Kosova, held a press conference in Prishtina today to try to justify the
outrageous Serbian armed operations against the local Albanian population
in Drenica as "fighting Albanian terrorism".
Scores of Albanians have been slain by Serb forces in their own homes and
yards, including women and children, during a huge armed military/police
operation, in which heavy shelling and helicopters were used against entire
family compounds in the village of Prekaz.
The Serb police officer spoke about both the Serb armed actions of last
week-end at Likoshan (in which 25 Albanians, among ten members of the
Albanian Ahmeti family, women and people in their mid-teens were killed)
and the attacks launched by Serb forces on 5 March in the Skenderaj
(Srbica) region.
Serb forces clashed with terrorists at Prekaz i Ul&t village, he said. The
police had information indicating that the "core of the terrorist gangs,
led by the notorious terrorist Adem Jashari were there".
Around 20 'terrorists' were killed and armament was found there, according
to Cvetic.
The Serb police officer said "the action in Prekaz i Ul&t (in Serbian Donje
Prekaze') is continuing".
In this way, he contradicted Serb regime statements of last night that the
operations of Serb forces in Drenica had been rapped up.
"We have not liquidated all the terrorist yet", he said.
The journalists have not been allowed in the Drenica region for "security
reasons". Serb military did not take part in the operations, the Serb
police officer said.
He tried to refute credible reports that Albanians have been massacred, and
that people who had been rounded up had been summarily executed by Serb
forces.
[16] U.S. Won't Tolerate Kosova Violence, Albright Says
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said
Saturday the United States would not tolerate a return to bloodshed in the
former Yugoslavia and believed Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic was
responsible for the Kosova problem, Reuters news agency reported.
Ms Albright said armed intervention by Western states in Kosova was not
discussed in her talks with Italian Foreign Minister Lamberto Dini, but she
did not exclude any sort of response.
"We did not discuss armed intervention...we do not rule out anything out,"
Albright was quoted as saying during a joint news conference with Dini
ahead of an audience with Pope John Paul and meeting with Italian Prime
Minister Romano Prodi later Saturday.
"We are not going to tolerate any return to the politics of divide and rule
in any part of former Yugoslavia," she added.
"We condemn the violence. We believe President Milosevic bears
responsibility for this," Albright said. "We believe there should be a
peaceful pursuit of the legitimate political rights of the people of
Kosovo."
The Reuters news agency concluded that "diplomats say Milosevic apparently
took an earlier U.S. decision to brand the KLA [Kosova Liberation Army,
KIC] as a terrorist organization as a green light to crack down on Kosovo's
Albanian militants."
[17] Kosova Albanians Are Being Repressed by a "Brutal Counterattack by the
Serb Army", Holbrooke Says
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - Former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Richard
Holbrooke, the chief U.S. negotiator of the Dayton Accord that ended the
war in Bosnia, told Judu Woodruff, the CNN anchor Friday, said the lessons
of the 1991-92 has been learned, referring to the time of the start of
Bosnian war.
Asked by CNN about the Kosova situation, Mr. Holbrooke said initially that
from 1991 on, "the greatest fear of all American policymakers was that
Kosovo would explode."
Since it has not exploded before Dayton, it [Kosova] will not affect Bosnia
right now because Dayton, the Dayton peace process, "is definitely
working." he said.
"However, it nonetheless remains true that Kosovo has always been our
dreaded flash point. You may recall that President Bush issued a warning on
it in his last month as president and President Clinton reaffirmed it in
his first month as president."
We appear to have reached the most dangerous moment, Ambassador Holbrooke
said, noting that 90 percent of the people in Kosovo are Albanian, "but the
Serbs consider it most sacred territory because in 1389 the Serbs lost the
battle there to the Turks."
"The Albanians of Kosova are being repressed by a brutal counterattack by
the Serb army", he said. This has nothing to do with Bosnia directly, "but
it comes from the same legacy.", Holbrooke added.
Asked by CNN about whether it is a case of rooting out the terrorists, as
the Serbs are saying, or it is ethnic cleansing as the Albanians are saying,
Holbrooke replied: "The Kosovo Albanian Muslims have been repressed
brutally by the Serbs who are only 10 percent of the population for years.
There may be some terrorists among the people fighting for some degree of
autonomy in Kosovo, that's not the issue. The issue is that the Serbs are
using helicopters, gunships, they're killing people. And for this reason
the United States, yesterday, quite correctly, started to reimpose some
sanctions or, to put it another way, to take away some of the carrots
they've recently been giving Milosevic and the Serbs in Belgrade because
Milosevic has been helping out in Bosnia."
Asked by the CNN about what is to prevent this from becoming another Bosnia
"that drags on for years and costs thousands and thousands of lives?",
Ambassador Holbrooke said he "talked to Secretary Albright and her party
and to the acting secretary of state about this, and what I would like to
say, very clearly, is that they have learned the lesson of 1991-92."
In that case the previous administration left Yugoslavia alone "while the
Europeans fiddled around and nothing happened.", Holbrooke stressed.
Madeleine Albright is flying to London Monday to meet with the British,
French, German, Russian and Italian foreign ministers and others to deal
with the Kosova situation, he said. "The U.S. government is assembling a
very strong package of actions which it will try to push through with our
allies and friends. The Russians have already objected, but that's
traditional. The Russians will always object to anything which hurts their
fellow Slavs, Serbs".
The real point "is that we are not going to sit back passively", Ambassador
Holbrooke stressed, adding that he believed it was clear that the lessons
of the early 90s, "when neglect and ambivalence at the beginning led to a
horrendous tragedy have been absorbed".
Asked by the CNN, whether this will require military intervention from the
outside in any way, Holbrooke said "only the president can ever make a
decision like that... The president has shown in the past that he's ready
to take decisive action to maintain stability in this terribly dangerous
part of the world."
Replying to a question about the possibility of the Kosova crisis being can
be headed off by diplomacy, Holbrooke said it should be tried. "The only
way we finally ended the war in Bosnia was when we were ready to confront
and people ready to confront the need to use force. And I think the
president showed in Bosnia two years ago, and in Iraq a week ago, that he
is ready to use that if necessary. And I do not think the Serbs should go
around thinking this is 1991-92 all over again when the U.S. said we don't
have a dog in that hunt. We have 8,000 troops in Bosnia, 500 in Macedonia,
and we care about stability in that area."
[18] HRW Calls on War Crimes Tribunal to Investigate Possible War Crimes in
Kosova
PRISHTINA, March 7 (KIC) - The New York-based organization, Human Rights
Watch (HRW) called Saturday on the International Criminal Tribunal for the
former Yugoslavia to launch an immediate investigation into possible war
crimes being committed by Serbian security forces in Kosovo.
In an open letter addressed to Louise Arbour, Chief Prosecutor of the
Tribunal, HRW Executive Director Kenneth Roth said the organization has
received reports that Serbian police, military and paramilitary forces have
indiscriminately attacked civilians and have committed extrajudicial
killings in Drenica region of Kosova.
"Evidence strongly suggests that war crimes are being committed, including
arbitrary and indiscriminate attacks against civilians and the summary
execution of detainees", the letter said, calling on the Tribunal to launch
an immediate investigation of these apparent atrocities, to prosecute those
responsible, and help deter further atrocities and save lives.
"On February 28, 1998, Serbian police, paramilitaries, and possibly army
units began a massive assault on a triangle of villages in Kosovo's Drenica
region, believed to be a base for the Kosova Liberation Army (KLA). Tanks
and attack helicopters have been used in what the Yugoslav government
describes as "a sweep for terrorists." Human Rights Watch has received
highly credible reports that Serbian forces have indiscriminately attacked
civilians and other non-combatants, especially in the villages of ^irez,
Likosan, Prekaz, and Lausha..."
"Foreign journalists have seen the bodies of six victims, including a
pregnant woman, Rukia Nebihi, who had been shot in the face, and four
brothers from the Sejdiu family, two of whom had been shot in the back" the
letter said and added that precise number of casualties is unknown since
humanitarian aid organizations and journalists have been denied access to
the region.
Quoting Kosovar human rights groups the HRW said "ten members of the Ahmeti
family and two of their guests, Behram Fazliu and Shaban Muja, were killed
by Serbian security forces after having been detained, although this has
not been independently confirmed" Noting that the Serbian security forces
reportedly came under fire from unidentified individuals, possibly from the
so-called Liberation Army members the letter said that the "Serbian police
confiscated a large amount of weapons and arrested a number of people,
although their whereabouts and the charges against them are currently
unknown. Four Serbian policemen were also killed during the action", the
letter says.
"Human Rights Watch recognizes that the authorities may have to use force
when confronted with an armed attack, but attacks against civilians and the
summary execution of anyone in detention is a war crime, a severe violation
of international humanitarian law. Given the level of armed conflict that
has now broken out in Kosovo, common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions,
which governs internal armed conflicts, clearly applies. It requires that
civilians and other protected persons be treated humanely, with specific
prohibitions of murder, torture, and cruel, humiliating or degrading
treatment, the letter read.
The Director of the Human Rights Watch recalled that pursuant to the
statute of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
"the Tribunal has the power to prosecute individuals who have committed
violations of international humanitarian law on the "territory of the
former Yugoslavia since 1991." There is no end point to this temporal
jurisdiction, Roth noted.
[19] Two Villages in Drenica Still Under Random Serb Fire
PRISHTINA, March 6 (KIC) - A source from Llausha village (Skenderaj) told
Kosova Information Center (KIC) at around 18:00 today that the village was
still sealed off by Serb forces.
There were random shootings from sniper and automatic rifles, the source
said.
The neighboring Prekaz village was under random shelling and shooting today,
the source said. Shooting from automatic rifles was still heard in Prekaz
village in the late afternoon hours.
Meanwhile, a 17-year-old Albanian, Riad Jashari, native of Prekaz, who has
been able to leave the village has described the way the Serb forces have
clamped down on the houses of Albanians.
Mr. Jashari, who has found shelter at Oshlan village of Vushtrri (in
Serbian 'Vucitern') has told a foreign reporter that masked Serbs raided
his house furiously on Thursday. There were 30 people in the house, he
said. The women and children were forced to leave the house one by one,
while the three males were executed by the Serbs. Two died, while the third
was only wounded but let inside the house, he said
Riad Jashari said he could leave the house as he had been disguised in
women's clothes. When realizing later that he was not a female, Serbs
opened fire. He was wounded, but he made a narrow escape.
Huge Serb police and military forces launched Thursday early in the morning
an attack against several villages in Drenica region, central Kosova.
According to Serb Ministry of police, 20 Albanians were killed. Yet
unconfirmed sources says that the number of fatalities has reached 50.
[20] President Rugova Receives Diplomats of Contact Group Countries
PRISHTINA, March 6 (KIC) - The President of the Republic of Kosova Dr
Ibrahim Rugova met for talks this afternoon with a delegation of the
Belgrade-based diplomats of the countries making the Contact Group:
Ambassador Richard Miles, Charge Affairs of U.S. Mission, German ambassador
Wilfried Gruber, Italian ambassador Riccardo Sessa, UK ambassador Brian
Donnelly, Mr. G^Ārard Fauveau, First Counsellor in the French Embassy, and
Mr. Oleg Levitin, First Secretary in the Russian Embassy. Participating in
the meeting were also Mr. Robert Norman and Mrs Rossella Franchini,
political counsellors in the U.S. and Italian embassies, respectively.
The diplomats representing the Contact Group conveyed the position of their
government, expressing deep concerns and strong condemnation of actions of
Serb forces in the Drenica region. The diplomats expressed their own
sympathies for the suffering of the people in Drenica amidst these violent
developments.
President Ibrahim Rugova said the situation in Kosova has deteriorated
dangerously in the wake of the attacks Serb police and military forces have
launched against the local Albanian population in Drenica.
Dr. Ibrahim Rugova urged for international pressure to make Belgrade bring
an end to Serb police/military crackdown. He urged in addition for the
international community to establish a presence of all possible forms in
Kosova so as to create the conditions necessary to pursue a political
resolution of the Kosova issue.
The people of Kosova have been committed all along for a political and
negotiated settlement to the Kosova crisis, President Rugova underlined,
pressing for steppe-up international efforts to secure that a talks process
between Kosova and Serbia, under an effective intermediation, is
established in pursuit of a peaceful settlement.
"Of the highest urgency now, however, is to get the Serbs bring an end to
the outrageous operations in Drenica and allow medical and humanitarian
relief in", President Rugova emphasized.
The diplomats of the Contact Group countries were in Prishtina today in the
run-up to a ministerial level meeting of the Group in London on Monday to
discuss the situation in Kosova.
[21] Brian Donnelly: 'Great Concern about Continued Police Activity in
Drenica'
PRISHTINA, March 6 (KIC) - Friday afternoon in Prishtina, after the meeting
of a delegation of the Contact Group with President Ibrahim Rugova, Brian
Donnelly, the UK Ambassador to Belgrade, spoke to the press.
Following is his statement on behalf of the delegation: "As you know, the
ministers of the Contact Group countries will be meeting Monday in London
to discuss the situation in Kosovo. We've come to get first-hand
information on the situation here. We would like to underline our great
concern about continued police activity in the Drenica region. We have
asked the Serb authorities to cease all actions and to allow free access to
the international media and humanitarian agencies. We would like to urge
all sides to abandon violence and to devote all their energies to seek a
peaceful solution to the problems here.
In this context, we support very much the efforts of Mr. Paglia, and
believe that the implementation of the Education Agreement will be an
important first step to rebuilding confidence."
[22] Serbian Police Shoots at People on the Move, in Their Yards
PRISHTINA, March 6 (KIC) - The CDHRF chapter and LDK sources in Mitrovica
said today Serb police snipers have been shooting at people on the move.
The Serbian police shot with automatic rifle in the direction of Ismet
Hasani at Lusht& village.
Meanwhile, at noon, a Serbian police sniper, stationed at Klin& e Ep&rme,
made an attempt on the life of Aziz Bajraktari, who was on his yard.
Sources in Mitrovica reported late afternoon that Serbian police have
occupied, and turned Albanian homes into their base. They occupied the
homes of Ismet Bekteshi, Fek& Kadriu and Ismet Osmani at Klin& e Poshtme
village of Sk&nderaj (in Serbian 'Srbica').
Nearly all the residents of the villages which have been placed under siege
have fled their homes and found shelter in villages outside the police
siege, with the exception of some families who have refused to abandon
their homes.
[23] Serbian Police Wound Albanian at Klina e Ep&rme
PRISHTINA, March 6 (KIC) - Yesterday (Thursday) morning the Serbian police
shot and wounded Raif Bajrami at Klina e Ep&rme village, LDK sources in
Mitrovica reported.
Mr. Bajrami was in his yard when he was shot by the police from a
distance.
The Serbian police opened fire in the direction of Mr. Bajrami's daughters,
Safete Bajrami (20) and Hava Bajrami (16). Fortunately, they were not hit.
[24] Kosovar Health Care Institutions Press for Humanitarian Corridor in
Drenica
PRISHTINA, March 6 (KIC) - Kosova Albanian doctors have appealed today for
a humanitarian corridor be established in Drenica so to be able to provide
medical assistance to the affected population in the area.
In an appeal addressed today to the Geneva-based World Health Organization
(WHO), Dr. Binak Kastrati, chairman of the Doctors Association of Kosova,
Dr. Isuf Dedushaj, chairman of the Kosova Red Cross, and Dr. Hashim Maloku,
Dean of the Medical Faculty of the Prishtina University say they have
credible information that wounded people are suffering under the ruined
houses in Drenica, targeted by Serb artillery on Thursday.
The Serb-run medical institution have not "shown any sign of will to fulfil
their duty", whereas Albanian medical crews have been denied access to the
area which has sealed off by Serb forces.
The Kosova doctors warn that Albanian population in 14 Drenica villages of
Drenica under the siege of Serb forces have urgently need medical and
sanitary equipment, as well as food supplies.
"We rally count on your urgent support and solidarity", reads the appeal of
the Kosova doctors sent to WHO.
[25] 'Milosevic Has Got to Call the Dogs of Repression Back', US Department
Spokesman Says
PRISHTINA, March 6 (KIC) - The situation in Kosovo is very serious and
there will be serious negative consequences for the Belgrade regime as a
result of this latest outrage operations, the US State Department James
Foley said in a press briefing on Thursday.
The first step will be the withdrawal of the positive measures Special
Representative Gelbard previewed with Mr. Milosevic during a visit in
Belgrade last week, Foley said. "We will explore with the Contact Group
Ministers on Monday in London additional coordinated measures in response
to these events," he said.
James Foley said that the U.S. has proposed that independent outside
authorities investigate the deaths of a number of Kosovar Albanians who
were killed in violence last weekend. "There are credible reports that they
were, in fact, executed while in the custody of Serb police", he said, and
added that according to credible reports Serb police operations have been
going on in Kosova.
"The United States strongly condemns the violence in Kosovo this weekend,
particularly the excessive use of force by Serbian police.
This violence results from the failure of Serbian authorities to recognize
the legitimate grievances of the Kosovar-Albanian population", Foley said.
The State Department said that the U.S. message to both parties is that
difficulties in Kosovo cannot be solved through the use of force. "But we
believe that the Kosovar people - Albanian Kosovars in Kosovo have
legitimate political grievances. They have a right to an enhanced status
within the FRY, to greater self-administration. These are fundamental
political rights and grievances which have not been addressed, and which
are the ultimate source of the violence which has occurred in the last
days" her said.
"Without wanting to exaggerate, the situation is very grave. Some terrible,
repressive acts have occurred. Innocent people have been killed. That's why
we're calling for independent outside authorities to investigate those
killings", James Foley said, noting that all the sides have been urged to
remain calm and exercise restraint.
Speaking of the seriousness of conflict spillover, Mr Foley said the U.S.
has "always believed that Kosovo has implications beyond Kosovo, beyond the
FRY region-wide. That's why the situation there is so critical, and that's
why we are going to be meeting in the Contact Group on this basis, to deal
with this issue. We think, indeed, that violence in Kosovo can have an
impact beyond Kosovo, and it is critical that the international community
come together, as they will on Monday, and make it crystal clear to Mr.
Milosevic that he's got to call the dogs of repression back and must sit
down and negotiate with the Kosovar Albanians - the moderate leadership
there - on the kinds of reforms that will be necessary to diffuse the
situation.
Asked whether U.S. has recognized Milosevic's systematic effort to
destabilize Kosovo, Mr. Foley said: "He has shown a record over the last
decade as a tactician of some ability, but not usually demonstrated an
ability to think long-term, to think about the long-term interests of his
people in the region; although we have recognized positive steps on Dayton
implementation when he has taken those.
"Whether it involves a conscious long-range design or mere tactical
maneuvers, the fact of the matter is that the repression that is taking
place is totally unacceptable to the international community and will have
the most severe consequences.
Mr Foley did not rule in or out the United States or Europe role in a
dialogue between Belgrade and Pristina.
"I think, as far as the United States is concerned, what is important is
not so much who is doing the mediating as the fact that the two sides are
coming together and sitting down at the table and discussing differences,
and discussing the implementation of the real reforms that will address the
root cause of the violence and address the just grievances of the Kosovar
Albanian people" James Foley said.
[26] UNHCR Is Considering Contingency Plans for Kosova
PRISHTINA, March 6 (KIC) - UNHCR and other Geneva-based aid agencies were
making contingency plans in case the violence in Kosova spreads and leads
to an exodus of refugees, the news agency Reuters said today.
Reuters has quoted the UNHCR spokesman Kris Janowski as saying that "the
UNHCR is extremely alarmed by the upsurge in violence in Kosovo" and there
is fear that the kind of ethnic bloodshed seen in Bosnia may occur there.
Janowski said that there were reports that large numbers of women and
children have fled Drenica but it could not confirm them as three
municipalities, Skenderaj (Srbica), Gllogovc and Klina remained sealed off
by Serb security forces.
[27] Stern Verbal Warnings Will No Longer Suffice, IHF Says
PRISHTINA, March 6 (KIC) - The International Helsinki Federation for Human
Rights (IHF) and its affiliates from Serbia, Kosova, Montenegro,
Netherlands, Norway, and Sweden called upon the Contact Group and the
United Nations Security Council to take immediate steps to prevent further
summary executions, torture, and ethnic cleansing by Serbian police units
in Kosova.
The IHF recommended that the Contact Group members agree on a common
strategy, one that will lead to an end to the police terror and armed
violence on both sides and to internationally mediate negotiations aimed at
a political solution for Kosova.
"The Contact Group members cannot allow diverging approaches and inertia to
render them powerless, to the advantage of those who would undertake
systematic murder and ethnic cleansing with impunity. Stern verbal warnings
will no longer suffice.
The IHF called for a "Dayton-like" process, adding that only a similar
investment of political energy can prevent further massive human rights
violations and violations of international human rights and humanitarian
law.
"The IHF fears that recent and ongoing murders and terror by Serbian police
units are premeditated elements of a program of ethnic cleansing aimed at
driving Albanians into a new political reality, leaving a rump Kosovo free
of Albanians, said IHF in a statement issued Friday.
Kosova Information Center
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