Kosova Daily Report #1368, 98-03-11
Kosova Information Center
KOSOVA DAILY REPORT #1368
Prishtina, 11 March 1998
First Edition: 16:00 hrs
Second Edition: 21:00 hrs
CONTENTS
[01] Summary from President Rugova's Briefings with the Foreign Press
[02] Serb Police Carries Out Threat to Have Victims of Drenica Massacre
Buried without Autopsy and Identification
[03] Hague Tribunal Is Collecting Information on Atrocities in Kosova
[04] Doctors Protest Outraged Serb Regime Treatment of Wounded and Killed
Albanians in Drenica
[05] Russia Supports Quick Dialogue on Kosova, Primakov Says
[06] Situation in Vushtrri Difficult with Lack of Food and Other Supplies
[07] Heavy Serb Forces Keep Mitrovica Under Blockade
[08] More Serbian Forces Deployed to Skenderaj, Wednesday
[09] Serb Forces Snipe at Civilians
[10] What Belgrade Offers Is a Mockery of Dialogue, Senior LDK Official
Says
[11] Albanians Dig Up Graves, Re-bury Their Dead in Prekaz
[12] Sporadic Shooting at Turi^evc, Two Little Girls Reportedly Frozen to
Death
[13] Statement of The Hague Tribunal's Prosecutor on Kosova
[14] Unknown People Toss Bomb at House of Proprietor of 'Dukagjini'
Printing House in Peja
[01] Summary from President Rugova's Briefings with the Foreign Press
PRISHTINA, March 11 (KIC) - Because of the large number of reporters, the
President of the Republic of Kosova Dr. Ibrahim Rugova had two separate
briefings with the foreign press representatives today. There was no room
enough for all the reporters to be in the room simultaneously.
'I am appreciative of your work', the President said at the outset,
recalling that for years "we have had no broadcasting media", which were
shut down by the Serb regime in 1990.
Denouncing in the strongest terms the Serb massacre in Drenica, Dr. Ibrahim
Rugova said the Serb regime authorities prevented yesterday (Tuesday)
Albanian forensics expert and pathologists from going to Skenderaj (in
Serbian 'Srbica') to examine the corpses of Albanians slain by Serb
police/military forces last week. "The victims were exposed to renewed
violence" in this way, he noted.
President Ibrahim Rugova congratulated the citizens of Kosova for the
holding of impressive peaceful demonstrations. In some towns, like in Peja
('Pec') and Istog police intervened and injured and wounded people, he
said.
Kosova President hailed the action plan of the Contact Group meeting,
adopted by the six-nation group in London on Monday. He thanked all the
Group's member countries for having discussed Kosova at such a level, and
urged support of other countries in implementation of the measures adopted
there.
President Ibrahim Rugova pressed for stepped up efforts on behalf of the
international community "to save the people of Kosova, who have been
pursuing their will for freedom and independence" by peaceful means.
The people of Kosova have, at great costs, "set up and maintained an
independent civic society and state", Dr. Ibrahim Rugova said.
He reiterated his call for the world to reward the peaceful struggle of the
people of Kosova, "who should be given the chance to live as an independent
country".
Asked by reporters to comment about an offer on dialogue put forward by the
Serbian government, President Rugova said he had not received anything
official about this. It is not clear what they mean by that 'open' or
'public dialogue', he noted. "We are willing, and indeed have been willing
all along, to engage in meaningful dialogue with the assistance of the
international community", the President said. "This dialogue should be
unconditioned".
We haven never put forward preconditions, the President said, adding that
"the talks process should be well-prepared, and a set of rules for its
conducting to be respected". Kosova needs the help of the West in this, he
emphasized.
Asked to comment on Ambassador Gelbard's suggestion that there be private,
secret talks, President Ibrahim Rugova said all kinds of talks, including
"private" are acceptable.
Autonomy for Kosova within the borders of the so-called 'FRY' is "no
solution", President Ibrahim Rugova said.
An independent country would be a source of stability in this part of
Europe. "It would calm down the region, the neighboring countries, Albania
and Macedonia, but also Serbia, although it is not at present willing to
accept this", the President emphasized.
We have not been pressing for change of borders ("Kosova has its own
borders"). "Kosova was part of a federation which has ceased to exist" and
the other federal units have been allowed to emerge as independent
countries, Dr. Ibrahim Rugova pointed out.
The President said it was "positive" that the Contact Group picked up
Felipe Gonzales as the OSCE envoy for this part of the world, including
Kosova, and pressed Belgrade into accepting Gonzales as an intermediator.
We are determined to press ahead with our national elections, President
Rugova said. Regarding the planned date, 22 March, he said the
deteriorating situation in the wake of tragic events in Drenica will be
taken into consideration. "We will notify you about it" in the next couple
of days, President Ibrahim Rugova concluded.
[02] Serb Police Carries Out Threat to Have Victims of Drenica Massacre
Buried without Autopsy and Identification
PRISHTINA, March 11 (KIC) - The Serbian authorities carried out their
earlier threat they would have the victims of Drenica massacred buried
during the day of yesterday (Tuesday) despite the fact post mortem autopsy
was not conducted and even identification not completed.
Serb forces collected yesterday at 5 p.m. the bodies of the slain Albanians
and forced a small number of Albanians to have them buried.
Reportedly, citizens were coerced to take part in this hasty funeral
procession. They were forced to carry the coffins with the bodies to the
Prekaz i Ul&t village.
In fact some LDK and Council for the Human rights (CDHRF) activists and a
few family members were involved in this coercive burial.
The burial 'ceremony' itself was carried under uniformed and plain- clothes
policemen threat. An armored vehicle and a lorry was near the burial
place.
The victims were buried in graves that had been opened earlier, but without
following any kind of rules, ignoring even numbers of identification.
At least 17 corpses of slain Albanians were buried without having been
identified.
Most of the graves were covered with an excavator. Ten graves were left
uncovered.
The slain Albanians were literally buried, under Serb threat. The evidence
was buried literally, too. This was the intention of the Serb
police/military regime which killed them in the first place.
The 49 dead bodies were transported by the Serbian police from the
Prishtina morgue Monday and Tuesday and dropped at a construction material
warehouse in Skenderaj ('Srbica') to be picked up by relatives or families
for burial.
Those who had identified their dead yesterday refused to bury them without
an internationally authorized independent forensic expertise.
Serbian police had told Albanian residents in Skenderaj they could complete
the burial today by covering the graves that were left opened. They said
they would permit some 60 local Albanians to participate in the
continuation of the burial proceedings, still under the Serb forces' strict
control, sources in Skenderaj told KIC this morning.
There were 13 children (9 boys and 4 girls), 12 women (one of the them
pregnant) and 7 old men among the killed and massacred, during the Serb
forces' attack on several Albanian family compounds in Prekaz i Ul&t
village of Drenica, from 5 through 7 March.
[03] Hague Tribunal Is Collecting Information on Atrocities in Kosova
PRISHTINA, March (KIC) - Louise Arbour, chief prosecutor of the
International Criminal Tribunal on the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) has stated
her office is currently gathering information and evidence relating to
allegations on atrocities committed by the Serb forces in Kosova over the
past days, news agencies said.
Reuters said that Louse Arbour stated at the Hague on Tuesday the tribunal
has the jurisdiction to prosecute suspect involved in the recent violence
in Kosova.
The Contact Group foreign ministers in a meeting on Kosova on Monday urged
the office of the ICTFY Prosecutor "to begin gathering information related
to the violence in Kosovo that may fall within its jurisdiction".
In a statement to the press in Prishtina on Tuesday, Robert S.
Gelbard, President Clinton's envoy for Balkans said the mandate of ICTFY
"clearly covers Kosovo now", noting that the Tribunal was requested to
"begin gathering information whether crimes have indeed committed" in
Kosova.
[04] Doctors Protest Outraged Serb Regime Treatment of Wounded and Killed
Albanians in Drenica
PRISHTINA, March 11 (KIC) - Over 500 Kosovar Albanian doctors and health
care activists gathered Wednesday in front of the Medical Faculty in
Prishtina to protest the outrageous and intolerable treatment by the Serb
regime of the Albanians, wounded and killed by Serb forces in Drenica over
the past days.
The Kosova doctors said they were appalled by the fact they were denied
access to Drenica and prevented from treating the wounded people and
carrying autopsy on the bodies of the victims.
They noted that over the past days they have persistently asked for
permission to enter the area but were all the time denied by the Serb
forces.
In a statement addressed to international public opinion the Kosova doctors
said "the aim of the Serb regime is but clear: prevent Albanian doctors
from witnessing that Albanian victims were massacred in a cold blood".
The Kosovars Albanian doctors and other medical personnel gathered likewise
last week in front of the USIS Office in Prishtian to call on the U.S.
intervene with the Belgrade regime so as to allow them a humanitarian
corridor to Drenica.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has likewise on a
number of occasions tried access to Drenica but was all the time denied by
the Serb authorities.
"For a week we have been demanding from different authorities the access to
the region but we have failed to get any response yet", Christine Palladino
of the ICRC in Prishtina has told the France- Press Agency (AFP).
[05] Russia Supports Quick Dialogue on Kosova, Primakov Says
PRISHTINA, March 11 (KIC) - Russia is in favor of a quick start of dialogue
between Belgrade and Prishtina in seeking a settlement for the Kosova issue,
the Reuters news agency has quoted Russia's Foreign Minister Yevgeny
Primakov as saying on Tuesday.
"We may have different views and approaches to various problems but that in
no way destroys relations between the members of the Contact Group,"
Primakov told reporters in a press briefing in Moscow, Reuters said.
Foreign ministers of the six-member Contact Group - U.S., Britain, Germany,
France, Italy and Russian Federation - in a meeting in London on Monday
adopted a 10-element statement on Kosova which includes a range of measures
to be pursued in bringing to an end violence in Kosova and beginning of a
process of dialogue.
Russia's representative in the meeting noted that the Russian Federation
"cannot support immediately" some of the measures contained in the
declaration, including more sanctions on the FRY.
[06] Situation in Vushtrri Difficult with Lack of Food and Other Supplies
PRISHTINA, March 11 (KIC) - Some 4300 displaced persons from the Drenica
region found shelter in the neighboring municipality of Vushtrri.
Ibush Januzi, vice chairman of the local LDK branch in Vushtrri said
"Mother Theresa" charitable association has already provided some support
but the situation continues to be grave. There is lack of food and other
supplies, he said.
Sk&nder Kastrati, member of the LDK presidency visited the region Tuesday
and said the meager assistance which has been provide is not enough for the
big number of people sheltered in the municipality. The Serbian police
stationed throughout Kosova have been making it extremely difficult for the
aid to pass through, he said.
[07] Heavy Serb Forces Keep Mitrovica Under Blockade
PRISHTINA, March 11 (KIC) - There has been an increased presence and
movements of the Serbian police in Mitrovica since morning today. Police
patrols have been stationed in all the key-points in the town, inspecting
and scrutinizing every person.
LDK sources in Mitrovica said the police have been beating and ill-
treating scores of Albanian from Mitrovica.
[08] More Serbian Forces Deployed to Skenderaj, Wednesday
PRISHTINA, March 11 (KIC) - This morning at 9.30 a.m., and 11 a.m., three
busloads of Serb policemen were seen leaving Mitrovica heading in the
direction of Skenderaj in Drenica region.
Along with buses them also went two armored vehicles, two lorries and four
Serbian police vehicles, sources in Mitrovica reported.
[09] Serb Forces Snipe at Civilians
PRISHTINA, March 11 (KIC) - The town of Skenderaj itself and the villages
which have been under Serb forces siege have been under constant scrutiny
of snipers situated in numerous key positions.
Scores of snipers have been reportedly seen in Skenderaj, as well as around
Llausha and a couple of other villages as well as Braboniq of Mitrovica.
All the roads in Drenica region are have been kept under strict control of
Serb forces. Drunk Serbs sing Chetnik songs have been roaming in the area,
sources in Mitrovica reported.
[10] What Belgrade Offers Is a Mockery of Dialogue, Senior LDK Official
Says
PRISHTINA, March 11 (KIC) - The Serbian state-run television (RTS) said
this evening (Wednesday) the Serbian government is sending down to
Prishtina, capital of Kosova, what it described as a 'government
delegation' to talk to Albanians about problems in Kosova.
Ratko Markovic, Ratomir Vico, Andrea Milosavljevic and Ivan Sedlak were
said to be the Serb delegation which would be visiting Prishtina Thursday
(12 March).
This evening's announcement bears striking similarity to yesterday's
'offer' of dialogue by the Serb government, transmitted by Serb media,
which contained a strong support for the Serb forces' expedition in Drenica
this past week, which saw over 80 Albanians slain, including women,
children and elderly people.
Yesterday's offer of open dialogue was addressed to "the appropriate
representatives of the Albanian national minority to address all concrete
problems", because, according to the Belgrade government, this "is the only
path to make progress in the political process, so as to solve issues of
vital importance to the citizens in our province".
Yesterday's offer of dialogue, and the way it was done, was considered by
political factors in Kosova as "not serious".
The President of the Republic of Kosova Dr. Ibrahim Rugova said earlier
today (Wednesday) during a press conference in Prishtina that from the
public offer in Serbia it was not clear what it was about, because no kind
of offer of dialogue has been forwarded to Prishtina through official
channels.
In this press conference, President Rugova said "we are ready for a
meaningful, serious, well-prepared, and unconditioned dialogue with the
assistance of the international community."
Dr. Fehmi Agani, the vice-president of the Democratic League of Kosova
(LDK), called "not serious" the offers aired by broadcasting media or
carried by the press. He said yesterday's (Tuesday's) offer of dialogue was
put forward in tandem with a strong support the Belgrade government gave to
the outrageous massacre committed in Drenica. In addition, yesterday's
offer spoke about dialogue on human and civic rights of the 'Albanian
national minority', and not about the status of Kosova, which is what the
Action Plan of the Contact Group calls for, Agani said.
Commenting on this evening's report about the designation by Belgrade of a
delegation of 'Serb government ministers' with a mandate to speak "to all
those Albanians who want to talk", Dr. Fehmi Agani said the government in
Belgrade does not in fact wish to engage in meaningful dialogue. In this
way, Serbia wants to play-act as if it was willing to do that.
This is a mockery of dialogue, he said.
The Kosova state and political institutions have not received anything
official about this Serbian 'offer'.
[11] Albanians Dig Up Graves, Re-bury Their Dead in Prekaz
PRISHTINA, March 11 (KIC) - The local Albanians, family members and other
others, dug up graves and re-buried their dead honoring local ceremonies.
An LDK sources from Skenderaj ('Srbica') told the Kosova Information Center
(KIC) said several hundred people could reach the burial place, dug them up,
and re-buried 49 dead Albanians.
Serb police had forced local Albanians and some local LDK and CDHRF
activists bury the dead late Tuesday afternoon.
The families were asking for independent forensics experts to carry on
autopsies in order to see the cause of death of Albanians who were slain by
Serb forces on 5 through 7 March in Drenica.
LDK sources said 15 corpses, badly damaged, could not be identified.
A considerable number of local residents in Skenderaj have fled the small
town, sources said.
Reportedly, there is lack of medicines and shortages of food supplies in
the town. Only a couple of shops reopened today.
Meanwhile, Prekaz, Llausha and several villages in Drenica continue to be
sealed off by Serb forces.
An LDK source from Llausha told KIC by phone there were reports about a
stepped up presence of Serb forces at Turi^evc, in the area between this
village and Llausha.
Speaking about the consequence under police siege, food supplies and
medicines lacking, the source said Adem Rrecaj, a 75-year man form the
village, who was sick, died, having nobody to offer him any medical
assistance.
[12] Sporadic Shooting at Turi^evc, Two Little Girls Reportedly Frozen to
Death
PRISHTINA, March 11 (KIC) - LDK sources in the small town of Klina, quoting
local sources, said sound of shooting was heard at Turi^evc village of
Skenderaj ('Srbica') today.
These sources said that 100 women and children, who fled Borja village, are
being held hostage by Serb police.
Two little girls, whose age was not made known, were frozen to death in the
woods, fleeing. They are Fatmir Hoxha's and Ram& Sejdijaj's girls, LDK
sources said. There were no other sources available to KIC to confirm
this.
It was reported from Klina that today, around 9:30 hrs, the police brought
four women to the Health Center in Klina: Sel& Hajdini, who received wounds
in her leg and signs of other lighter wounds about the body, Ajete Hoti,
who received wounds in the chest, and two girls, Zyrafete Kasstrati and
Nexhmije Hajdari, who suffered terrible shocks from violence they had been
exposed to.
They were said to have been offered the first aid in Klina and then
transferred to Peja (in Serbian 'Pec').
[13] Statement of The Hague Tribunal's Prosecutor on Kosova
PRISHTINA, March 11 (KIC) - The Office of the Prosecutor of the
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTFY) in a
statement issued on Tuesday said the Tribunal has the jurisdiction to
prosecute suspects involved in possible atrocities in Kosova.
The Office has already started gathering information related to the recent
Serb forces crackdown in Drenica which left at least 80 Albanians killed
and massacred.
Following is the Prosecutor's Statement regarding the tribunal's
jurisdiction over Kosova: "The Prosecutor of the International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia has in the past made it a practice not
to on ongoing investigations. However, recent events in Kosovo are an
exceptional circumstance and the Prosecutor wishes to point out that the
Statute of the Tribunal, which was adopted by the United Nations Security
Council in May 1993, empowers the Tribunal to prosecute persons responsible
for serious violations of international humanitarian law committed in the
territory of the former Yugoslavia since 1991. This jurisdiction is ongoing
and covers the recent violence in Kosovo.
In this regard, the Prosecutor is currently gathering information and
evidence in relation to the Kosovo incidents and will continue to monitor
any subsequent developments. Following her recent visit to Belgrade, the
Prosecutor expects the full co-operation of the authorities of the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia in respect of investigations into the Kosovo
situation".
The Contact Group foreign ministers in a meeting in London on Kosova Monday
urged the office of the ICTFY Prosecutor "to begin gathering information
related to the violence in Kosovo that may fall within its jurisdiction".
In a statement to the press in Prishtina on Tuesday, Robert S.
Gelbard, President Clinton's envoy for Balkans said the mandate of ICTFY
"clearly covers Kosovo now".
[14] Unknown People Toss Bomb at House of Proprietor of 'Dukagjini'
Printing House in Peja
PRISHTINA, March 11 (KIC) - Unknown people tossed a hand grenade in front
of the house of Ekrem Lluka in Peja (in Serbian 'Pec') Tuesday at 23:30
hrs.
An eye-witness said a Zastava-made (Serbian) car with Peja license plates
had stopped, one of the two men in it got out and tossed the hand grenade
in front of Mr. Lluka's house, where the printing house of his "Dukagjini"
firm is located.
Then, the unknown persons run away, heading towards the town park.
Damage was reported, but no casualties.
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