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Kosova Daily Report #1552, 98-09-14
Kosova Information Center
KOSOVA DAILY REPORT #1552
Prishtina, 14 September 1998
CONTENTS
[01] FOCUS: - Milosevic Is Destroying Kosova Piecemeal, 'Western Policy
Working'
[02] Serb Burn Communities in Klina after Red Cross Workers Leave Area
[03] Serbs Pound Albanian Hamlets North-West of Prishtina
[04] Serbs Shoot Dead Albanian in His Place in Vushtrri
[05] Montenegrin Authorities Deport Thousands of Kosovr Refugees to
Albania
[06] Half a Dozen Villages in Fush&-Kosova Given Three-Day Deadline to
Surrender Weapons
[07] Refugees Sheltered in Rugova Mountains in Urgent Need for Food and
Clothes
[08] Serb Police Beat Wounded Albanians in Hospital
[09] Serb Police Removes Patient from Hospital, His Whereabouts Unknown
[10] Serb Military and Police Roam the Streets, Provoke Citizens in
Mitrovica
[11] 6,000 Albanian Refugees Camping Out in Qirez, Skenderaj
[01] FOCUS: - Milosevic Is Destroying Kosova Piecemeal, 'Western Policy
Working'
The West should know the Serb dictator does not have to take 'more
aggressive action' to actually turn Kosova into a wasteland PRISHTINA, Sept
14 (KIC) - "More aggressive action by the Serbs would trigger" the use of
force in Kosova, Mr. Keneth Bacon, the spokesman of the Department of
Defense said during a briefing in Washington on 10 September, after having
reiterated the now familiar - the use of force to end the fighting has not
'been ruled out'.
"We are dealing with a problem where people are being displaced from their
homes [in Kosova], and their houses are sometimes being destroyed", Mr.
Bacon told reporters in Washington.
Senior U.S. officials who have toured Kosova in the past couple of weeks -
including Julia Taft, John Shatuck and Bob Dole - have said they were
appalled by the scale of destruction in Kosova and the atrocities being
committed here. They did not speak of homes being 'sometimes destroyed',
nor did they resort to the kind of language intent on playing down the
scale of destruction caused by Serb military and the sense of urgency of
the situation.
Asked by reporters to be specific about what would trigger a NATO use of
force in Kosova, Bacon said, "Well, certainly more aggressive action by the
Serbs would trigger it. If we reach a conclusion that the Serbs are not at
all serious about a diplomatic settlement, that could trigger it...This is
going to be a NATO issue. It's NATO that has come up with the military
options, and NATO will have to make a decision about what triggers the use
of force."
The problem is Milosevic, the man who masterminded the wars of attrition in
Bosnia and Croatia, is now destroying Kosova piecemeal while the West, NATO
and U.S, are hibernating.
More than 1,200 Kosovar Albanians have been killed this year, more than 40,
000 houses destroyed, more than 400,000 people turned to refugees. Half of
Kosova has been affected directly by the Serb military and paramilitary
offensive in the past seven months.
Yet, the West sees some success in this. It is basking in self- adulation.
The Kosova crisis has been contained and Western policy is working, a
Western diplomatic observer in Kosova said on Sunday, Reuter news agency
reported.
"The goal has been to erect a fire-break around Kosovo, to prevent the
conflict here from destabilising (neighboring) Albania and Macedonia and
igniting a wider war", said the diplomatic observer on condition of
anonymity.
"Measured against that standard, the policy is working. One could object
that it is a cold and calculating policy dressed up in rhetorical concern
for human rights and vague threats against Belgrade to make it more
palatable."
"But at the end of the day, we have managed to avoid air strikes and any
deployment of troops. The dollar cost of our effort can be measured in tens
of millions, not in billions as happened in Bosnia. And there is no great
public outcry.", Reuters quoted the Western diplomatic observer as saying.
What the unnamed observer and indeed the Kosova diplomatic observer mission
as a whole - which was born out of a meeting of Russian and Serb leaders in
mid-June in Moscow - may perhaps pride themselves on is the fact that their
official information despatched to and processed by their capitals has been
fashioned to convey the idea of the 'not-so-much destruction' in Kosova.
The cost of billions of dollars in damages caused by the Serb armor to
Kosovar towns and villages is not part of this cold, reasoned, and cynical
calculation. Nor is there any 'great public outcry' over the reality that
half of Kosova has been turned into a wasteland.
There have been quarters which have cried foul over the Western policies,
though.
Senator Bob Dole said Sunday, 6 September, in Prishtina: "American and
European leaders have pledged not to allow the crimes against humanity
which we witnessed in Bosnia to occur in Kosovo. But, from what I have seen
this weekend, such crimes are already happening."
EU Commissioner Emma Bonino warned the ELDR (European Liberal and Reform
Group) at its strategy conference in Venice last week that the 15 member
states should not agree to the Yugoslav leader's plan to run food centers
for Kosovar refugees. "That is like asking Dracula to run a blood bank.
There must never be a European flag over such a concentration camp", she
said referring to a Serb regime plan to open 11 centers where Kosova
Albanian refugees would be supplied with food and building material.
(Senior U.S. officials initially said they would support such a plan, to
only retract it after criticism by the New York Times.)
Mrs Bonino, who visited Kosova recently, and was the keynote speaker in the
Liberal's debate on EU foreign policy, said: "We are witnessing the kind of
ethnic subjugation and violation of human rights which the founding fathers
of the European Union wanted to eradicate from the continent when the
process of European integration began. Milosevic is the only European
leader with any clear project in mind for Kosova - like it or not. He
simply terrorizes the Kosovars when he feels it appropriate".
Now that the West has spared billions of dollars at the expense of hundreds
of killed, thousands of wounded, billions of dollars worth of Kosovar
housing units destroyed by Milosevic, an interim settlement for Kosova has
been floated as the success-to-be.
The irony is this success-to-be is being claimed by three parties.
Milosevic himself, the EU (Brussels), and Ambassador Hill (USA) want each
to be credited for this. The Serb propaganda said the 'FRY' and Socialist
Party of Serbia (SPS) leader has come up with the idea; there has been a
lot of talk of the U.S. (Mr. Hill) having secured a way out by having made
the parties (Milosevic and Rugova) agree to the plan; and, last but not
least, Belgian Foreign Minister Dereycke said last week in Prishtina that
what Ambassador Hill had put forth was something the European Union had
come up with a long time ago.
Belgrade, Washington and Brussels have something to pride themselves on, to
emulate one another on. As Reuters correspondent duly noted, survival, not
independence, will become the all- consuming struggle for many Kosovar
Albanians through the coming winter.
It is only Prishtina, the capital of the 2-million nation of Kosova, that
has nothing to pride itself on. Half of Kosova destroyed, almost a quarter
of the population turned into refugees, etc. etc...
[02] Serb Burn Communities in Klina after Red Cross Workers Leave Area
PRISHTINA, Sept 14 (KIC) - Serb troops set ablaze today (Monday) the few
remaining houses of Albanians in the villages of Volljak&, ^upev& and
Gremnik of Klina, central Kosova, local sources told the KIC.
Heavy Serb troops backed by 30 tanks besieged the village of Sverka today
morning. Once the Red Cross Delegation which was visiting the Panorc
village left, the Serb troops launched a fierce attack against Sverka. Serb
infantry entered into the village later, torching over a dozen houses there,
witnesses said. The local population had fled the village earlier.
[03] Serbs Pound Albanian Hamlets North-West of Prishtina
PRISHTINA, Sept 14 (KIC) - Albanian hamlets - Vidishiq, Melenic& and Zjaq& -
in the Shala a Bajgor&s, region, north-west of Prishtina, came under heavy
Serb fire for many hours on Sunday.
The LDK chapter in Mitrovica said the Serb attack against the Albanian
communities in the area was kicked at around 11 in the morning and lasted
until evening hours.
Immense damage was caused in these villages, it said, failing to say
anything on possible casualties.
[04] Serbs Shoot Dead Albanian in His Place in Vushtrri
PRISHTINA, Sept 14 (KIC) - A 50-year-old Albanian, Amrush Asllani, was shot
dead Sunday evening at his village, Stanoc i Posht&m, of Vushtrri
('Vucitrn') municipality.
The LDK chapter in Vushtrri said Amrush Asllani was killed in his courtyard
around midnight yesterday, when his house was sprayed with machine-gun
bullets from the neighboring Serb village of Prilluzha.
The Prilluzha village has been for months now turned into a stronghold of
Serb troops and paramilitary units, who, in tandem with the local
population, have been repeatedly pounding with fire the outlying Albanian
hamlets.
Residents of Stanoc i Posht&m claimed that their farmhouses were pounded
with machine-gun fire on several occasions yesterday, as well as around
midnight, when their fellow villager Amrush Asllani was killed.
[05] Montenegrin Authorities Deport Thousands of Kosovr Refugees to
Albania
RISHTINA, Sept 14 (KIC) - At least 3,000 Kosovar Albanians who had trekked
on foot to Montenegro during the past few days were deported to Albania by
the Montenegrin authorities on Sunday.
Between 5 to 7 thousand Albanians from western Kosova, among whom women,
children, sick and wounded, who had fled the Serb attacks, attempted to
cross into the neighboring Montenegro via Bjeshket e Nemuna mountains.
About 3,000 were trapped in the mountains since Friday night when Serb and
Montenegrin forces prevented them from proceeding towards the Plav& area.
Still unconfirmed reports said that at least 14 were killed in the Bjeshket
e Nemuna when ambushed by Serb troops.
An activist with the local aid groups in Plav& (Montenegro) told the KIC
that between 3,000 and 4,000 Kosovar refugees were forced on buses, trucks
and means of transportation, and sent into Albania through the Vermosh
border crossing.
Local authorities in Shkodra (Albania) said that the many Kosovar refugees
had already reached north of the country yesterday evening, failing to say
where they were sheltered.
Reuters quoted a UNCHR spokesman as saying that three thousand Kosovars who
crossed on foot Montenegro on Friday after three days and nights of travel
through the mountains were taken in trucks to Albania. Fernando del Mundo
added that another 3,000 were stuck in the mountains just inside Kosova,
unable to enter Montenegro after the border was closed to refugees on
Saturday.
Sources in Plava said today that around 250 Kosovar refugees sheltered in
Alpine summer huts not very far from Plava have been trapped in the
mountains, and denied access to the town by the Montenegrin authorities.
The Montenegrin government decided late last week to cut the flow of
refugees from Kosova into the republic.
Around 8500 registered Kosovar refugees had sought shelter in Plava by last
week, while thousands of others are reported in other places across
Montenegro, mainly in the costal town of Ulqin.
On Sunday, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees sent a letter to
Montenegro's President Milo Djukanovic, reminding him of an earlier promise
to provide a safe haven for those trying to escape the Kosova fighting, the
Associated Press reported.
[06] Half a Dozen Villages in Fush&-Kosova Given Three-Day Deadline to
Surrender Weapons
PRISHTINA, Sept 14 (KIC) - Residents of half a dozen villages in the
municipality of Fush&-Kosova ('Kosovo Polje') have been given a three-day-
ultimatum to hand over weapons they allegedly possessed or else risk brutal
reprisals.
Representatives, two to three each, of the villages of Harilaq, Sllatin& e
Madhe, Henc, Miradi e Ep&rme, Vragoli were detained by Serb police on
Friday. They were told to persuade their fellow villagers to surrender all
weapons by Tuesday, or else Serb troops would do the job.
LDK activists in the municipality say the Serb regime warning has caused
anxiety amongst the population, who are fearful of a Serb forces'
crackdown.
Hundreds of Albanians displaced from the Drenica region, who have found
shelter in Fush&-Kosova villages, left during the last weekend to look for
safer places.
Meawnhile, sources in Prizren said Serbs have issued similar ultimatums to
the Albanian population in the region. Serb police drove on repeated
occasions the main square of Dushanova village on Sunday calling through a
megaphone on the local residents to give in weapons, or else face
bombardment. Similar ultimatums have been issued to the residents of the
Tusus suburb of Prizren.
[07] Refugees Sheltered in Rugova Mountains in Urgent Need for Food and
Clothes
PRISHTINA, Sept 14 (KIC) - At least 2,000 Albanians driven from their homes
in the Lugu i Baranit (Barani valley) area, south-east of Peja, have found
shelter in the Rugova, a mountainous region in western Kosova, local
sources said.
LDK activists in Rugova told the KIC today morning that the refugees were
in a vulnerable situation. There are many weak and sick persons who need
urgently food and medical supplies, as well as clothing, as the air
temperatures in mountains have already fallen down significantly, they
noted.
[08] Serb Police Beat Wounded Albanians in Hospital
PRISHTINA, Sept 14 (KIC) - Four wounded Albanians who were taken by workers
of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to the Prishtina
hospital on Friday were reported maltreated physically by Serb police in
the clinic.
Sources in the Surgery Dept of Prishtina hospital named the four wounded
Albanians as Xhon Ndreca, Arsim Tolaj, Yll Morina and Ms Fatime Dodaj. The
ICRC representatives who brought the wounded Albanians to the hospital were
denied access to the hospital.
The three wounded men, Xhon Ndreca, Arsim Tolaj, Yll Morina, were beaten up
brutally by Serb police officers who interrogated them in the clinic. They
are being held in the vascular surgery ward, with Serb police tightly
guarding their rooms, witneses said.
[09] Serb Police Removes Patient from Hospital, His Whereabouts Unknown
PRISHTINA, Sept 14 (KIC) - A wounded Albanian who was being treated in the
Prishtina hospital was removed by Serb police and taken away to an unknown
place last Friday.
Qerim Jetishi, wounded two months ago somewhere in south-west Kosova, got
treated for some days in a Gjakava clinc before being transferred to the
Prishtina hospital. While in clinics in both the towns, he was guarded
constantly by Serb police.
Sources in the Prishtina hospital said his legs were still in plaster, and
he was still sick on Friday when Serb police officers took him. There has
been no word about his whereabouts ever since.
[10] Serb Military and Police Roam the Streets, Provoke Citizens in
Mitrovica
PRISHTINA, Sept 14 (KIC) - A convoy of Serb military and police consisting
of 5 tanks, 10 lorries, 30 jeeps and five landrovers full of soldiers and
policemen backed up by heavy artillery pieces passed through Mitrovica
heading in the direction of Prishtina late in the morning today (Monday).
The convoy came from Skenderaj ('Srbica'), the LDK chapter in Mitrovica
said.
At half past 12:00, more Serb military and police equipment and personnel
arrived in Mitrovica. They patrolled the streets of the aiming their guns
at Albanian passers-by.
At noon, three Serb tanks, two armored cars, three lorries, and other
vehicles with soldiers on board left Mitrovica for Stant&rg ('Stari Trg'),
LDK sources said.
[11] 6,000 Albanian Refugees Camping Out in Qirez, Skenderaj
PRISHTINA, Sept 14 (KIC) - Some 6,000 Albanians, driven from villages
shelled by Serb forces in Drenica, have found refugee and shelter in the
open at a location called "Fush&-moll&", in the premises of the local
mosque and the elementary school at Qirez village of Skenderaj ('Srbica'),
LDK sources in Vushtrri said.
They are in an appalling situation, most of them spending days and nights
rough in the open.
The refugees in this make-shift camp lack everything, food, clothes,
medication, sources said.
Kosova Information Center
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