Kosova Daily Report #1668, 99-01-19
Kosova Information Center
KOSOVA DAILY REPORT #1668
Prishtina, 19 January 1999
CONTENTS
[01] President Rugova Receives Ambassador Pardew
[02] President Rugova Receives Ambassador Petritsch
[03] Serbian Forces Shell Shtime Villages for Third Day in a Row
[04] Albanian Teacher Killed in Unsolved Circumstances over the Weekend
[05] Belgrade Declares Walker 'Persona Non Grata' in Further Act of
Defiance
[01] President Rugova Receives Ambassador Pardew
PRISHTINA, Jan 19 (KIC) - President of the Republic of Kosova, Dr. Ibrahim
Rugova received yesterday in Prishtina Ambassador James Pardew, U.S.
Special Representative for Kosova Implementation and Military Stabilization
in the Balkans. Participating in the meeting was also Mr. Jack Zetkulic,
Deputy Chief of the U.S. Mission in Belgrade.
Echoing the strong condemnation by President Clinton of the Re^ak massacre,
Ambassador Pardew expressed the outrage of the United States to that act of
atrocity. This crime has to be investigated from the outside, Mr Pardew
said, adding that prevention of the International War Crimes Tribunal
Prosecutor, Louis Arbour to enter into Kosova was unacceptable. The
perpetrators of this crime must be brought before justice, he stressed.
President Rugova said that the Re^ak massacre has added to the already
highly tense and dramatic situation. This crime is in flagrant opposition
to the international efforts to reach a political settlement to the Kosova
problem. Prevention of the International War Crimes Tribunal Prosecutor,
Louis Arbour to come into Kosova to conduct an investigation is yet another
proof that Belgarde lacks readiness to cooperate with the international
community on Kosova, President Rugova said.
President Rugova and the U.S. Ambassador James Pardew also had a lengthy
discussion on the prospects and on the need to intensify the political
process in search of a peaceful settlement to the Kosova issue.
[02] President Rugova Receives Ambassador Petritsch
PRISHTINA, Jan 19 (KIC) - President of the Republic of Kosova, Dr. Ibrahim
Rugova received today in Prishtina Ambassador Wolfgang Petritsch, the EU
Special Envoy to Kosova to discuss the current situation in Kosova and
prospects for intensifying the political process for the solution of the
Kosova crisis.
Ambassador Petrirsch expressed the outrage of the European Union over the
atrocity at the Re^ak village.
President Rugova said that this massacre is in flagrant opposition to the
international efforts to reach a political settlement to the Kosova
problem. He condemned in the strongest possible terms the Belgrade's
decision to expel the KVM head William Walker from Kosova. This decision,
as well as the decision to prevent the International War Crimes Tribunal
Prosecutor, Louis Arbour to come into Kosova to conduct an investigation,
is yet another proof that Belgrade lacks readiness to cooperate with the
international community on Kosova, President Rugova said.
President Rugova and Ambassador Petritsch discussed at length about the
need to intensify of the political process in search of a peaceful
settlement of the Kosova issue.
[03] Serbian Forces Shell Shtime Villages for Third Day in a Row
PRISHTINA, Jan 19 (KIC) - Serbian army and paramilitary police forces
resumed today (Tuesday) morning the shelling of the villages of Petrov& and
Mollopolc, as well as other Albanian villages in the Gryka e Devetakut and
Gryka e Carralev&s (Carraleva gorge) in Shtime area, some 30 km south of
capital Prishtina.
Today is the third day in a row of continued Serb shelling in the area,
where more than 50 Albanians were massacred by Serbian forces last Friday.
Their bodies were removed by Serb forces yesterday, and taken to the
Prishtina town morgue, despite a universal condemnation of the Serb regime
operation.
Today, the Albanian villages were being pounded by Serb forces positioned
in Kodra e G&shtenjave and Kryqi i Belincit, local LDK activist in Shtime
told the KIC.
Eye-witness accounts said the echo of the Serb army and police artillery
was being heard as far as in the town of Ferizaj ('Urosevac'), in southeast
Kosova.
The Albanian population of the area, fearful of fresh Serbian massacres,
has been fleeing the area, sources said.
More than a thousand displaced Albanians spent the last night rough in the
open in the Mollopolc valley.
[04] Albanian Teacher Killed in Unsolved Circumstances over the Weekend
PRISHTINA, Jan 19 (KIC) - On Sunday, members of the OSCE verification
mission in Peja ('Pec') found the body of Muharrem Byty^i (43), a
schoolteacher from the village of Ramun, municipality of Peja.
The Serb press said the Albanian had been shot dead from point- blank range
in a back village road, some 30 metres away from the Peja-Prishtina
highway.
[05] Belgrade Declares Walker 'Persona Non Grata' in Further Act of
Defiance
In Prishtina, Belgrade's decision to expel the KVM head from Kosova is seen
as yet another proof of the sinister schemes of the Serbian occupation
authorites over Kosova - their determination to carry on with their
aggression and massacres of Albanians untroubled by the eyes of the outside
world
PRISHTINA, Jan 19 (KIC) - The Yugoslav government Monday ordered the
U.S. head of the OSCE Kosova Verification Mission (KVM), Ambassador William
Walker, to leave the country within 48 hours, in an act of further defiance
to the international community and its efforts over Kosova.
Belgrade's expulsion order came after Walker accused Serb forces of
massacring 45 ethnic Albanians in the Kosova village of Re^ak, 26 km south
of capital Prishtina, last week.
"The federal government ... has decided to proclaim William Walker an
undesirable person ... which binds him to leave the territory of Yugoslavia
within 48 hours," said an official statement by Belgrade.
In a strongly worded statement, the United States warned Serbian leader
Milosevic on Monday he was "playing with fire" and demanded he reverse the
decision to expel Walker.
National security officials met at the White House to discuss the most
serious Kosova setback since last October, when U.S. special envoy Richard
Holbrooke brokered a deal with Milosevic that averted NATO air strikes
against Serbian military targets, news agencies said.
"The situation is as serious now - perhaps more serious - than it was in
October," Ambassador Holbrooke said in a CNN interview on Monday. He
pointed out that NATO then was "96 hours away from bombing."
Ambassador Walker, saying he was shocked at the decision to expel him, was
quoted by a local radio in Belgrade, "They could have had the decency to
inform me personally about this."
In Prishtina, Belgrade's decision to expel the KVM head from Kosova is seen
as yet another proof of the sinister schemes of the Serbian occupation
authorities over Kosova - their determination to carry on with their
aggression and massacres of Albanians untroubled by the eyes of the outside
world.
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