15.1.07
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KOSOVA: Police attack on Drenica (funeral, updated coverage)

Drenica buries 24 victims of the massacre

100 thousand people attend, many more are prevented by the police

Likoshan & Çirez, 3 March (ARTA) 2030 CET

Around 100 thousand people participated in the burial of 24 Albanians killed during the last weekend in Drenicë. The burial was postponed till late afternoon, as the corpses of other 14 killed, ten of whom were members of the Ahmeti family, were expected to be brought from Prishtina's morgue. They were delivered from there without prior autopsy.

The reason for the delay was that other members of the Ahmeti family were detained by the police on their way to the morgue.

According to the local activists, a truck, which was headed to collect the bodies, was stopped at Komoran police check-point.

Today, the police didn't allow any vehicles to pass through the main road towards Drenicë. Many people were mistreated at this checkpoint. According to eyewitnesses, the corpses were totally massacred, and some of them were missing even some parts of their bodies.

Three of the corpses had not been identified to that point yet, therefore the activists had called all relatives of those who were suspected dead, to approach the corpses and identify them.

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KOSOVA: Mass protests (Veton Surroi, "KOHA Ditore", interview)

Surroi: "Drenica massacre was one of the worst atrocities that Kosova has seen for decades"

In the interview with the BBC, "Koha Ditore" Albanian daily editor-in-chief, Veton Surroi slams on "FRY" president Milosevic as a person "who is endangering the regional security"

Prishtina, 3 March (ARTA) 2230 CET

"Hundreds of thousands of people wanted to get there, at the funeral. According to our journalists reports, there were at least 100.000 people. Tens of thousands were prevented from the police to get there, including the journalists -- some foreign journalists never made it there", said the editor-in-chief of "KOHA Ditore", Albanian Daily from Prishtina, being asked on the present situation in Prishtina today, after the police massacre in Drenica region, and the yesterday’s mass protests of Kosova Albanians in Prishtina.

"It was a mourning day in Kosova", said Surroi describing the funeral event that took place in the raided Drenica villages.

As for the police attack that caused the massacre, Surroi replied that "out of the 25 people who were killed, I can assure you that all of them -- absolutely all -- were victims of the massacre by the Serbian authorities. This is one of the worst atrocities that Kosova has seen in this decade."

What should be the message from UK Foreign Minister, Robin Cook to Milosevic, at their scheduled meeting for tomorrow in Belgrade? -- was another question, for which Surroi thinks "the message that mr. Cook should have towards Belgrade is not that the EU will not be linking itself with what is called ‘Yugoslavia’ in economic relations, meaning that Belgrade cannot count on good economic relations with EU." Surroi argues that "there should be more offensive approach in telling mr. Milosevic that he is endangering the regional security, and that (Kosova) is becoming a very highlighted matter of interest to Western powers, including, of course, the EU", stating further that Milosevic should count "not only on the financial consequences, but also on political consequences and those concerning questions of security, as well -- meaning the NATO interests in the region.


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KOSOVA: Police attack on Drenica (updated coverage)

Recalling the horror

One of the baskets in the garden, filled with corn, lied overturned. A man, claiming to be related with the Sejdiu family, and who had been in hiding close by, says: "It was hit by an APC". "In that basket was one of the sons of the Sejdiu family, who died then".

Likoshan, Qirez, Drenicë, 2 March (ARTA)

After the police attack on Drenica region, the situation in villages nearby seems to be more quiet today.

There are no police forces to be seen around the region. Roads leading to Gllogoc (settlement 40km east from Prishtinë) are still empty. But, the road linking this part of Drenica with villages of Likoshan and Qirez was full of local people, heading to express their condolences to the families which lost the loved ones.

Total confusion and sorrow continue in the house of Islam Gjeli.

"My children and I hid in the washroom, to avoid the bullets", says the widow of the killed Naser Islam Gjeli (M).

"Naser's father was killed too", said the villagers, gathered in this place. "The old man (72), was in the room located in front of the garden. That's where he was killed", says the widow. "After half an hour, I couldn't stand it anymore, so I got out of the washroom, where I was hiding my children. That's when I saw my husband who was dead by that time...my children saw him too. Then the police took me and my children and sent us to our neighbors house. I don't know what happened with bodies of my husband and his father", she explains, deeply distressed, and eventually loosing her conscience.

Further up the hill were other houses, in which the Serb police had also broken in.

The house of Ahmeti family appeared deserted. There was no information whatsoever on the whereabouts of the 10 men of this family, and their guest.

Blood stains, broken bones and other body parts could be made out in the crossroads, close to the house.

A long column of people was heading towards the village of Qirez, nearly connected to the village of Likoshan. There were rumors that 8 corpses of those killed were in that village.

The Sejdiu family house yard was overcrowded with all of them waiting to get into one of the house's rooms where the bodies of the four killed brothers lied.

One of the baskets in the garden, filled with corn, lied overturned. A man, claiming to be related with the Sejdiu family, and who had been in hiding close by, says: "It was hit by an APC". "In that basket was one of the sons of the Sejdiu family, who died then".

"The other one hid behind the other basket of corn and died after being shot at", he continues.

"The other two Sejdiu sons were killed in the valley, behind the house that is being built, where they tried to hide among the bushes", says his cousin.

"A helicopter circled above the house and people shot from up there during the whole time", say the locals gathered close to the victims' house.

An appalling sight was also in Sefer Nebihu's household, whose son, Naser and his wife, Rukije were killed. He himself suffers severe wounds.

"They entered the garden in an APC and forced their way up to the window", recalls wounded Sefer. "The entire family was gathered: my wife, my son, his wife and our grandchildren", he continues.

"The policemen in the APCs kept shooting, as other policemen broke into the house,ordering us to get out and lie on the ground", he says.

"We freezed on the ground for about four hours, until they were gone. My other son, Ilir, was in his own house when the police took him and we still do not know what happened to him", concludes Sefer.

Sefer was being taken care of by doctors who came to the village in search for the wounded people.

"We have to take him to a hospital", one of them claimed.

Hata, Sefer's wife gave us the same information, only one could make out that she was very distressed.

"They came close to the house with a tank -- or whatever it is -- shooting at us. They killed my son and his wife, and they wounded my husband...", she recalled, turning her head the other way to hide her tears.


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KOSOVA: Police attack on Drenica (updated coverage, funeral)

Police executed the entire Ahmeti family men -- from 16 to 50 years old

Ten members of the Ahmeti family and two guests who were found in the house at the moment of the attack were dragged barehanded out of the house, being violently massacred and killed on the 28 March, during the Serb police attack on the village of Likoshan, that took place past weekend: Ahmet Ahmeti (50 M), Gani Ahmeti (46 M), Hilmi Ahmeti (44 M), Hamëz Ahmeti (44 M), Driton Ahmeti (23 M), Naim Ahmeti (22 M), Shemsi Ahmeti (19 M), Lumni Ahmeti (20 M), Basri Ahmeti (19 M), Elhami Ahmeti (16 M), and Behram Fazliu (50 M) Shaban Muja, both of them guests from the nearby village of Gradica

Likoshan 2 March (ARTA) 1328 CET

Corpses of 9 members of the Ahmeti family, arrested and executed during the withdrawal of the Serb police forces from the region of Likoshan, are now in Prishtina's city morgue, unofficial sources claim.

The oldest member of this family is 16 while the oldest 50 years old. Ten members of the Ahmeti family and a guest from Gradica were arrested, according to the information issued on 1 March by CDHRF.

Serbs police massacred the Albanians of Drenica region, in the thorny bushes nearby Ahmeti's house (five meters from the demolished garden gate).

Five or six big blood stains, broken teeth, brains all over the place, a piece of human jaw hanging down from the bushes, bullets of different calibers, are seen at the "scene of the crime",as villagers calls it. The bush is large over 3 m. square.

The police slaughtered them to death using shotguns and other hard and sharp objects, confirms the witnesses.

The corpses of the father, Muhamet Isuf Gjeli (79) and the brother Naser Muhamet Gjeli (39) brought in from the morgue of Prishtina by their relative, Kadri Gjeli, were lying down in the first floor of his house. Kadri’s house close to that of the victims was also attacked by the Serb police.

They were killed in separate rooms, inside of the house. The police got in the house of Muhamet Isuf Gjeli and shot dead Muhamed and Naser, say the villagers.

Signs of the tank chains could be traced in the entrance of Likoshan, coming in front the direction of Gllogoc.

From what it could be seen, the police withdrew entirely from the villages that were a target of the uncontrolled police attack.

Today, at 1200 CET, from the police station of Gllogoc, Fehmi Hasan (Gjeli), and Fatmir Islami (Gjeli), who were kidnaped on Sunday morning (around 1100 CET), were released. Both have severe body injuries.

The exact number of the Drenica massacre victims is still unknown. There are unconfirmed information that at the city morgue in Prishtina lies another corpse that came in from the village of Boks.

There are fears that the total toll of victims will exceed 20.

"Mr.Gelbard is guilty of this, also!"

Likoshan, 2 March (ARTA)

In the villages of Drenica, people were more than depressed. Their faces were tired from the miseries they are facing everyday.

What is going to happen next...? Who is going to save this nation...? are asking people of Drenica...

"Mr. Gelbard has to realize that this is his fault, as well. When he stated that there is terrorism in Kosova, he allowed the opportunity for Serbia to intervene against those he marked as terrorists. What they did was only massacring of innocent people."

"Let Mr. Gelbard for once know: we are not terrorists, after all. We have no weapons, we killed nobody and we don't wish to do that. All we want is to be able to live freely in our own land, own houses, and in our own property...", said an old man.

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KOSOVA: Police attack on Drenica (updated coverage)

"They wanted to kill the entire village"

In the village of Likoshan, the household of the Islamgjeli was overcrowded. "I took my children and hid in the bathroom, trying to escape the bullets", says the wife of the killed Naser Islamgjeli -- "I came out after some time, and I saw my husband laying down, dead"

Likoshan and Çikatovë, Drenicë, 2 March (ARTA) - 2050 CET

Today, the situation in the villages of Drenica region (40 km west of Prishtina) seems calmer, after the crackdown that took place on the late Friday eve and which lasted unitil early Sunday afternoon.

16 Albanian civilians are confirmed killed during the massacre, although the very next day after the raid no policemen were to be seen in an around villages.

The streets of Gllogoc were empty, but the endless line of people was heading for Likoshan and Çikatovë -- to express condolences to the families of the killed Albanians.

In Likoshan, the household of the Islamgjeli was overcrowded. "I took my children and hid in the bathroom, trying to escape the bullets", says the wife of the killed Naser Islamgjeli.

"I came out after some time, and I saw my husband laying down, dead".

"It was then when the police came and took me and my children to our neighbors'. I don't know what happened with my husband's and my father in law's bodies. The latter was also killed, in the other part of the yard", she explains, deeply distressed.

The long chain of people was heading to Qirez.

Here too, there were killed people laying. In the household of the Sejdiu, in one of the rooms were laying the corpses of four killed Sejdiu brothers.

One of the corn baskets was torn down, "it was hit by an armored vehicle", states a youngster, who hid in the stable while the attack took place. "One of the Sejdiu boys was hiding in the basket, and he was killed". Another of the sons was hiding behind another corn basket, while two others were killed as they were running towards some bushes".

Another terrifying scene was that at the Nebiu household. Son Naser and his wife Rukie were killed while father Sefer was wounded.

"They first broke into the garden on the armored vehicle, and came as close as the window frames", says wounded Sefer.

"The whole family was in the room, my wife and I, my son and his wife as well as my grandchildren", he continues.

"They shot once from the APC, and then came the other policemen, who were standing by the window - he tells - and forced us to go out. They told us to lay on our stomachs and not move".

"Thus we laid over four hours, until the police left. Our other son, Ilir, who was in his house, at the other side of the yard, was taken by the police and we don't know what has happened to him", concludes old Sefer. "They wanted to kill the entire village"..


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KOSOVA: Police attack on Drenica (the aftermath, the victims)

28 hours of massacre

Likoshan, Drenicë, 28 Feb -1 March (ARTA)

Since there was no other way to reach Drenicë, we decided to travel by train. In the train traveling in the relation Fushë Kosovë-Gllogovc, where we met some old men from Drenicë, exchanging words about the latest events in their villages. One of the men was from the village of Gllanasellë, an hour away from Likoshan, where the "war" supposedly had begun. We traveled with that man until he arrived to Gllanasella, where he got off, and continued our journey to Likoshan, this time accompanied by youngsters. When we got close to Likoshan we could see columns of people going in the direction of the houses of the destroyed. Only a few minutes past our arrival, a large number of people gathered and started walking on the street, maybe because they felt unsure. Everyone of them gazed at us with doubt as we showed them our journalist ID cards. Immediately after entering the village, it became clear that most of the people had abandoned their houses and that a large number of them were frightened to return to their houses, destroyed by police grenade launchers. A number of them still stayed at the outskirts, where they had gone to hide from the police expedition. "How did the conflict begin?", we asked the local villagers.

The "conflict" by the Six Oaks..

On 28 February, claim the villagers, a "Passat" was parked close to the school, side by side with another vehicle full of policemen. That is where the chase of supposed members of KLA began, only to end up in the village of Likoshan, in a place the locals call "Six Oaks". That is where, the locals assert, the fighting began between the police and a group of young people the locals referred to as "ours".

That is the scene where heavy shooting took place, and a couple of policemen were killed, according to the villagers.

Since a short time after the group of young people went into the forest, the police started shooting in the direction of the houses nearby. In a very short time, helicopters along with 39 APCs arrived in the village of Likoshan. Heavy shooting, mostly from helicopters, began against the houses of defenseless civilians. Only in the villages of Likoshan and Qirez, 11 people were shot dead, claim the villagers.

During this attack, Muhamet I. Xheli (age unknown, M) and Naser M. Xheli (age unknown, M), father and son were shot dead, and their corpses were taken by the police. The blood stains on the floor confirm that their bodies were dragged by the police. From Adem Ahmeti's (age unknown, M) household, all male members of the family above age 15 were taken. It's presumed that there were over ten persons. This village was object of heavy shooting, and the villagers were also mistreated by the police.

Someone had resisted during the whole time.

The villagers assert that two men, about which we still have no information, were tied to poles and were beaten to death. Their whereabouts are still unknown. Unidentified persons had resisted the police during the whole time, claim the local inhabitants. The real massacre, say the villagers, was in the village of Qirez, where houses were attacked from APCs. Beqir Sjediu (31, M), Nazmi Sejdiu (1975, M), Bedri Sejdiu (1975, M), Bekim Sejdiu (1974, M), all brothers, were killed in their own houses. Xhemshir S. Nebihu and his wife Rukije Nebihu, and Rexhep Rexhepi (M), and Beqir Rexhepi (M), uncle and nephew, were also killed in the same village.

Innocent passers-by in these villages were detained by the police. The villagers notify that the police detained Tahir Tahiri (M), in Qirez, Rexhep Ajeti (a guest) was taken while standing in Ahmet Ahmeti's garden, whereas Idriz Tahiri was taken while selling cigarettes in Qirez.

Not one house was spared from bullets of different calibers.

A harsh "war" took place in the village of Likoshan, more precisely in the place called "Six Oaks", in Krasmirovc, Polac and other villages where many were killed, claim the inhabitants. The population of these villages, was alarmed the whole time, whereas a big number of them escaped in the mountains surrounding the village, from where they observed the action.

The most horrible event took place in the house of Skënder (Muharrem) Xheli (age unknown, M)

His house was used by the police as a place to rest, says Skënder. "While the police was singing, eating and drinking, I along with Fatmir (M) and Fehmi (M) Xheli hid in the attic of the house. This went on for 24 hours", ends Skënder Xheli from the village Qirez.


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KOSOVA: Police attack on Drenica (operation ends)

Police operation ends -- death toll rises to 20

Albanian civilians killed in recent police attack

Prishtina 1 March (ARTA) -- 2000 CET

Numerous police and military APCs, numbering several hundreds of policemen and reportedly VJ soldiers withdrew from the region of Drenica (40 km west of Prishtina) around 1700 CET, as local human rights groups and media report on over 14 Albanian civilian victims -- the death toll of the two-day operation.

It is claimed that the joint operation of Serb security forces and military units -- which started on the eve of the last weekend (Friday 27 Feb.), continuing until late hours of Sunday, 1 March -- overrun several villages of Likoshan, Çikatovë e Re, Çikatovë e Vjetër, Qirez, and many other settlements in the surrounding of Gllogoc and Skenderaj, main towns of this 95 per cent Albanian-inhabited region.

14 Albanians are killed, the CDHRF reports. The Serbian Ministry of the Interior , has reported that 4 policemen and 16 Albanians ("terrorists") were killed. The number of killed may be larger.

The number of wounded remains unknown, as witnesses claim of dozens of Albanian villagers, who were brought in local Prishtina clinics, in critical condition from firearm wounds.

According to information from the field, the situation in the attacked region is calming down as the Serb police withdrawal continues.



KOSOVA: Police attack on Drenica (death toll rises)

Four brothers killed instantly

Prishtinë, 1 March (ARTA) - 2030 CET

According to the Human Rights Council (CDHRF) updated information, during the Serb police attack on Drenica (40 km west of Prishtina), names of 3 following Albanians, killed in the village of Likoshan, are reported:

1. Muhamet Xhela (70) (M)
2. Naser (Muhamet) Xhela (37) (M)
3. Rexhep Ajeti (60) (M)

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Also, in the village of Qirez, the following Albanian civilians were killed:

1. Beqir Sejdiu (M) (age unknown)
2. Bekim Sejdiu (M) -/-
3. Bedri Sejdiu (M) -/-
4. Nazmi Sejdiu (M) -/-, and
5. Xhemshir Nebihu (M) -/-
6. Rukije Nebihu (M) -/-

Albanian Sefer Sejdiu was reported severely wounded, whereas there is no information on Xhemshir Nebihu's brother, Nebi.

The police gunfire caused the wounding of Hajdin Makolli (58), Albanian from the village Çikatova e Vjetër.

The following Albanians were arrested in Likoshan: Ahmet Ahmeti (50, male), Gani Ahmeti (46, male), Elmi Ahmeti (44, male), Hamëz Ahmeti (44, male), Driton Ahmeti (23, male), Naim Ahmeti (22, male), Lumni Ahmeti (20, male), Shemsi Ahmeti (19, male), Basri Ahmeti (19, male), Elhami Ahmeti (16, male), and Behram Fazliu (50, male), from the village of Gradica.

The overall death toll remains unknown, as local sources report of around 20 killed Albanians.

It is also reported that the massive police forces started withdrawing from the region in the late afternoon hours.



KOSOVA: Police attack on Drenica (analysis)

Kosova has 13.000 Serb police forces -- 25.000 reinforcement units can be transferred from central Serbia within 72 hours

Prishtina, 1 March (ARTA)

In Kosova, Serbian Interior Ministry has around 13,000 policemen armed with paramilitary equipment, including APCs and armed helicopters. Around 25,000 police reinforcements and reserve units could be transferred from central Serbia within 72 hours.

Yugoslav Army has around 6,500 men in Kosova, mainly around the border and in four major garrisons.

Plans for deployment foresee 10,000 troops from Nis, Leskovac and Uzice, as the first wave which is to include 4,000 men from the reserve units, theoretically, ready for action in Kosova.

But in practice, the army has expressed it's reluctance to undertake such actions since Kosova is considered to be an internal and political issue, meaning that it is in the competence of the police.

The third and most unpredictable element of the Serbian forces are the volunteers and the paramilitary. Even though most of the police units that operated in Croatia and Bosnia have been dispersed, at least two of those are ready for Kosova if their "bosses" decide for action. The best organized police, that has already withdrawn, but according to reports is "ready" for action in Kosova, is the Serbian Volunteer Guard (SDG), better known as "Tigrovi" ("Tigers"), under the command of Zeljko (Arkan) Raznjatovic. "The Tigers", consisting of about 400 hostile fighters with considerable experience and proved to have committed ethnic cleansing, can be called in for operations which neither the police nor the Army want to be connected to. The only other organization that could organize a police would be Vojislav Seselj's extreme rightist party, Radical Party of Serbia (SRS).

There is no doubt that the Ministry of Interior has enough manpower and equipment to encompass all of Kosova, but it's decision not to undertake action, reflects the lack of clear politics and indirectly implies that the Interior Ministry's units are not prepared, or trained to confront the opposing terrorists or guerrillas, let alone some mass uprising such as an Intifada.

There are many clear signs that Serb politicians are pressuring the interior ministry for actions, but, the two operations they undertook in the region of Drenica by the end of January, prove that the method to resist KLA has not yet been found. In both cases, Serbian police convoys with APCs and around 100 armed policemen have surrounded houses in the village outskirts and opened fire for several hours, killing at least one person and wounding several others. After such confrontations, the Interior Ministry has raided several private houses, arresting men over the age of sixteen, confiscating arms, but not being able to obstruct KLA activities. It seems that the Ministry has realized the futility of such an approach and has given it up.

On the other hand, the decreasing number of Serbian police in Kosova, has encouraged the local inhabitants of the region of Drenica to overestimate their power and significance. Drenica is a region of around 1200 square kilometers, with a population of about 60,000, 95 percent of whom are Albanians. The region is mountainous with some forests and can be reached by six roads. It is totally unsuitable for a serious guerilla headquarters: the main road that connects Kosova with the plain of Dukagjin and Montenegro, divides the region in two and Serbia would not allow any impediment in traffic. Also, north of Drenica is Serbia, that makes strategic withdrawal impossible. This could be considered as KLA's operation to "demonstrate force" in order to boost the will of Kosova Albanians and force the Serbs to act. Courageous tactic, militarily shrewd, since whatever the Serbs do, they cannot win.

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Kosova: Police attack over Drenica

Drenica under police/military siege -- Fightings reported around Çiçavica mountain

Prishtina, 1 March (ARTA) -- 16.00 CET

The Prishtina Human Rights Council HRC confirms 5 names out of over 15 Albanians who were killed during the massive police attack over Drenica region (40 km northwest of Prishtina)

All reported victims came from the same village, Qirez (15 km from Gllogoc - main settlement in Drenica):



1. Rexhep Ajet Rexhepi (M)

2. Xhemshir Sejdiu (M)

3. Rukije Sejdiu (F)

4. Nazmi Nebihu (M)

5. Bekim Nebihu (M)



The fire broke out this morning (around 7.00 CET), HRC in Prishtina reports. Two buses carrying policemen were reported heading towards Skenderaj (settlement 20 km north of Gllogoc), as from Mitrovica (town 35 km north of Prishtina) other police forces in two APCs, followed by various vehicles were heading towards Skenderaj.

Around 8.00 CET, from Komoran (25 km west of Prishtina) -- where the main police roadblock in the area was stationed weeks ago -- numerous police forces, numbering over 30 APCs, including few military tanks were seen heading towards the villages of Likoshan and Poklek i Ri.

There are also confirmations by the local whitnesses stating presence of Serb paramilitary units of the war-crime wanted Serb criminal, Zeljko Raznatovic-Arkan.

In the sourrounding villages of Zabel i Poshtem and Korrotica, police started demolishing Albanian houses in search of "terrorists".

Meanwhile, reports from Klina (70 km west of Prishtina), state that numerous police forces were seen penetrating Drenica region from this area. It is said that police APCs, among others, were carrying special sniper police units.

The attack on Drenica -- which started on the eve of 27 Feb. -- was restarted on Saturday (20.30 CET) in Skenderaj and its sourrounding.

According to local whitnesses, first gunshots were heard from the former Ammunition Factory building "Trepca", followed by those heard in the yard of the local high school, presently occupied with Serb refugees from Croatia.

KOSOVA: Police attack over Drenica - reactions (16.50 CET)

Civilian Albanians mostly found killed in the villages of Likoshan and Qirez

Prishtina, 1 March (ARTA)

A delegation from The Democratic League of Kosova (main political party in Kosova) visited today the Drenica region, hit by joint police and military attack.

The closest settlement they could get in was the village of Polac (10 km from Gllogoc, main settlement of the region).

Abdyl Ramaj, LDK, confirmed that in the village of Qirez two members are reported killed. Nazmi and Bekim Sejdiu (M) were in the house when heavy machinegun fire started. Other Albanian victims from this village are Xhemshir Nebiu and his wife, as Sefer, father, is in critical condition, severely wounded. There is no information about his other son, Ilir, who is believed killed.

Rexhep Rexhepi, Albanian from Qirez was reported killed in the Likoshan, and there is no knowledge of the whereabouts of Ibush T. Rama.

An Albanian house was raided from a police helicopter in the village of Prellovc, around 12.00 CET today. Three persons, whose identity has not yet been confirmed, were wounded.

Ramaj states that most of the houses in this 98 percent Albanian area are completely destroyed. Bodies of people lie "all around, in the gardens, inside the houses, in the field.

Fatmir Sejdiu, LDK, stated that "police attacks have intensified past months, whereas the past two days they became exceptionally concentrated. Three villages in the area between cities of Gllogoc and Skenderaj are entirely isolated and under heavy fire".

There are information that the villages are evacuated, although there are no information on the death toll, which is presumed much higher.

The LDK delegation was stopped by the police at the sourrounding roadblocks, being held for an hour of interrogation.

Fehmi Agani, vice-chairman to LDK said, that Albanian population deals "with precisely prepared police actions actions, timed intentionally for the weekend, when all the relevant intenrational institutions affiliates and diplomatic services and representatives are away on weekend."

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At least fifteen dead

Albanian Council for Defence of Human Rights and Freedom confirms 14 victims

Prishtinë, 1 March (ARTA)

Albanian Council for the Defence of Human Rights and Freedoms in Prishtina (CDHRF) notifies about the rising tensions in the villages of Drenica municipality. Other than the five Albanians killed yesterday in the village of Likoshan, Gllogovc municipality, they claim that seven Albanians were killed in the village of Çirez, Skenderaj municipality. Also, two Albanians were killed in village of Çikatovë e re, Gllogovc municipality. This makes the total of 14 Albanians dead even though they presume the number to be much higher. Albanian sources notify that there has been extreme intensification of police and Arkan's paramilitary forces in this region, and that the shootings today started at around 7 am.

Journalists of local daily, "Koha ditore", editor in chief, Veton Surroi, and editors Ylber Hysa and Baton Haxhiu, were prevented from going to the scene.




Massacre in Drenica - aftermath (corpses toll, updated with the morgue)

Over 11 children, 11 women and 5 old people among 46 corpses

Skënderaj, march 9 (ARTA) 1600 CET

46 human corpses, including 11 children (from 3 to 10 years old), 11 women and 5 old people (above 70), is the present toll of the Serb police attack on the village of Prekaz, in the troubled Kosova region of Drenicë, (40 km west of Prishtina), local "Koha Ditore" souces confirms.

29 out of 46 corpses, all local Albanian villagers, are identified, while three others corpses cannot be identified, since being completely burnt.

Three other victims are placed in a nearby house, CDHRF office in Skënderaj reports, while the burial of another victim took place in the village of Llausha on Sunday.

The corpses are exposed at a construction material depot, guarded by the Serb police in Skënderaj. Most of the bodies have wounds presumable caused by large calibre weapons, as well as burning marks. Police in Skënderaj expects two more corpses to be brought from the Prishtina morgue, stating that the number of slaughtered could be higher, including those suspected to have died while running away at a nearby forests.



Following is the list of 29 identified corpses:

1) Qazim Osman Jashari
2) Nazmi Zukë Jashari
3) Sinan R. Jashari
4) Zarife Jashari (female)
5) Zaha Jashari (female)
6) Kushtrim Jashari
7) Ali Jashari
8) Osman Geci
9) Faik Jashari
10) Adem Shaban Jashari
11) Beqir Jashari
12) Sherif Jashari
13) Hazer Jashari
14) Halit Jashari
15) Halil Jashari
16) Bahrije Jashari (female)
17) Ferid Jashari
18) Besim Hamzë Jashari
19) Blerim Zemë Jashari
20) Bujar Zemë Jashari
21) Abdullah Zemë Jashari
22) Elhame Jashari (female)
23) Murtez Zymer Jashari
24) Fatime Gashi (female)
25) Makvirete Bajrami (female)
26) Gazmend Bajram Gashi
27) Sadik Miran Kaqkini
28) Myftar Rreci
29) Isak Halili (from Dubovc, a guest in Prekaz)



Names of other victims, as well as the precise age, sex and profile of all killed people will be provided in our forthcoming reports.




To see the pictures klickMost be over 18 here



Kosova: Drenica massacre - aftermath (victims)

Corpses of over 50 victims sent to Drenica

Their burial is scheduled for tomorrow

Skënderaj, 9 March (ARTA) -- 1530 CET

Skënderaj received on Monday the corps of the victims of the five-day Serb police crackdown in Prekaz, the village in Drenica,

Corpses were until Monday at Prishtina city morgue.

At around 2200CET, Sunday, Serb police informed the representatives of the local branch of the Council for the Defence of Human Rights and Freedoms (CDHRF) and the head of the medical unit in Skënderaj, to come and pick up the corpses of the victims.

The corpses were transported on a truck and, according to unconfirmed sources, there are about 60 victims. However, as our sources inform, the police does not have the precise list of the victims. It is even believed that more than the half of them are unidentified.

The police demanded the CDHRF to bring in citizens and relatives for the identification of the victims, so they can be buried. The police have guaranteed safety to them. However, the police also said that the victims have to be taken away as soon as possible and they have to be buried all in one place. Our sources in CDHRF's branch in Skënderaj say that they are trying to inform the relatives as soon as possible, but keeping in mind the difficult circumstances (last night there were shootings from snipers), they find it very difficult to accomplish this.

The victims, taken from the Serb police at the Prishtina morgue, like the ones from the Likoshan massacre, a week ago, have not been subjected to autopsy.

"Koha Ditore" was informed in Skënderaj that the identification of the victims will be very difficult, because they are severely disfigured.


Marre Nga http://www.alb-net.com/warcrimes-img/prekaz.htm
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posted by Drobeshi at 19:11 0 comments
EU and KOSOVO

The EU is preparing for an enhanced role in Kosovo. In this context, the Council decided on 10 April 2006 to establish an EU planning team regarding a possible future EU crisis management operation in the field of rule of law and possible other areas in Kosovo.




Marre Nga http://www.eupt-kosovo.eu/
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posted by Drobeshi at 19:09 0 comments
Resolution 1203 (1998)
Adopted by the Security Council at its 3937th meeting, on 24 October 1998


-------------------------------------------------------

The Security Council,

Recalling its resolutions 1160 (1998) of 31 March 1998 and 1199 (1998) of 23 September 1998, and the importance of the peaceful resolution of the problem of Kosovo, Federal Republic of Yugoslavia,

Having considered the reports of the Secretary-General pursuant to those resolutions, in particular his report of 5 October 1998 (S/1998/912),

Welcoming the agreement signed in Belgrade on 16 October 1998 by the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the Chairman-in-Office of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) providing for the OSCE to establish a verification mission in Kosovo (S/1998/978), including the undertaking of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to comply with resolutions 1160 (1998) and 1199 (1998),

Welcoming also the agreement signed in Belgrade on 15 October 1998 by the Chief of General Staff of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the Supreme Allied Commander, Europe, of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) providing for the establishment of an air verification mission over Kosovo (S/1998/991, annex), complementing the OSCE Verification Mission,

Welcoming also the decision of the Permanent Council of the OSCE of 15 October 1998 (S/1998/959, annex),

Welcoming the decision of the Secretary-General to send a mission to the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to establish a first-hand capacity to assess developments on the ground in Kosovo,

Reaffirming that, under the Charter of the United Nations, primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security is conferred on the Security Council,

Recalling the objectives of resolution 1160 (1998), in which the Council expressed support for a peaceful resolution of the Kosovo problem which would include an enhanced status for Kosovo, a substantially greater degree of autonomy, and meaningful self-administration,

Condemning all acts of violence by any party, as well as terrorism in pursuit of political goals by any group or individual, and all external support for such activities in Kosovo, including the supply of arms and training for terrorist activities in Kosovo, and expressing concern at the reports of continuing violations of the prohibitions imposed by resolution 1160 (1998),

Deeply concerned at the recent closure by the authorities of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia of independent media outlets in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, and emphasizing the need for these to be allowed freely to resume their operations,

Deeply alarmed and concerned at the continuing grave humanitarian situation throughout Kosovo and the impending humanitarian catastrophe, and re-emphasizing the need to prevent this from happening,

Stressing the importance of proper coordination of humanitarian initiatives undertaken by States, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and international organizations in Kosovo,

Emphasizing the need to ensure the safety and security of members of the Verification Mission in Kosovo and the Air Verification Mission over Kosovo,

Reaffirming the commitment of all Member States to the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia,

Affirming that the unresolved situation in Kosovo, Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, constitutes a continuing threat to peace and security in the region,

Acting under Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations,

Endorses and supports the agreements signed in Belgrade on 16 October 1998 between the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the OSCE, and on 15 October 1998 between the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and NATO, concerning the verification of compliance by the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and all others concerned in Kosovo with the requirements of its resolution 1199 (1998), and demands the full and prompt implementation of these agreements by the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia;

Notes the endorsement by the Government of Serbia of the accord reached by the President of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the United States Special Envoy (S/1998/953, annex), and the public commitment of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to complete negotiations on a framework for a political settlement by 2 November 1998, and calls for the full implementation of these commitments;

Demands that the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia comply fully and swiftly with resolutions 1160 (1998) and 1199 (1998) and cooperate fully with the OSCE Verification Mission in Kosovo and the NATO Air Verification Mission over Kosovo according to the terms of the agreements referred to in paragraph 1 above;

Demands also that the Kosovo Albanian leadership and all other elements of the Kosovo Albanian community comply fully and swiftly with resolutions 1160 (1998) and 1199 (1998) and cooperate fully with the OSCE Verification Mission in Kosovo;

Stresses the urgent need for the authorities in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the Kosovo Albanian leadership to enter immediately into a meaningful dialogue without preconditions and with international involvement, and to a clear timetable, leading to an end of the crisis and to a negotiated political solution to the issue of Kosovo;

Demands that the authorities of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, the Kosovo Albanian leadership and all others concerned respect the freedom of movement of the OSCE Verification Mission and other international personnel;

Urges States and international organizations to make available personnel to the OSCE Verification Mission in Kosovo;

Reminds the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia that it has the primary responsibility for the safety and security of all diplomatic personnel accredited to the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, including members of the OSCE Verification Mission, as well as the safety and security of all international and non-governmental humanitarian personnel in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, and calls upon the authorities of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, and all others concerned throughout the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia including the Kosovo Albanian leadership, to take all appropriate steps to ensure that personnel performing functions under this resolution and the agreements referred to in paragraph 1 above are not subject to the threat or use of force or interference of any kind;

Welcomes in this context the commitment of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to guarantee the safety and security of the Verification Missions as contained in the agreements referred to in paragraph 1 above, notes that, to this end, the OSCE is considering arrangements to be implemented in cooperation with other organizations, and affirms that, in the event of an emergency, action may be needed to ensure their safety and freedom of movement as envisaged in the agreements referred to in paragraph 1 above;

Insists that the Kosovo Albanian leadership condemn all terrorist actions, demands that such actions cease immediately and emphasizes that all elements in the Kosovo Albanian community should pursue their goals by peaceful means only;

Demands immediate action from the authorities of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the Kosovo Albanian leadership to cooperate with international efforts to improve the humanitarian situation and to avert the impending humanitarian catastrophe;

Reaffirms the right of all refugees and displaced persons to return to their homes in safety, and underlines the responsibility of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia for creating the conditions which allow them to do so;

Urges Member States and others concerned to provide adequate resources for humanitarian assistance in the region and to respond promptly and generously to the United Nations Consolidated Inter-Agency Appeal for Humanitarian Assistance Related to the Kosovo crisis;

Calls for prompt and complete investigation, including international supervision and participation, of all atrocities committed against civilians and full cooperation with the International Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, including compliance with its orders, requests for information and investigations;

Decides that the prohibitions imposed by paragraph 8 of resolution 1160 (1998) shall not apply to relevant equipment for the sole use of the Verification Missions in accordance with the agreements referred to in paragraph 1 above;

Requests the Secretary-General, acting in consultation with the parties concerned with the agreements referred to in paragraph 1 above, to report regularly to the Council regarding implementation of this resolution;

Decides to remain seized of the matter.

Marre Nga http://www.nato.int/kfor/kfor/documents/unscr1203.htm
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posted by Drobeshi at 19:06 0 comments
American led task force gets new commander



CAMP BONDSTEEL, Kosovo -- The transfer of authority ceremony for Multinational Task Force East took place at Camp Bondsteel, December 6.

U.S. Army Brigadier General Douglas B. Earhart assumed command from Army Brigadier General Darren G. Owens during a ceremony presided over by Commander Kosovo Forces Lieutenant General Roland Kather.


General Kather praised the actions of task force during its time in Kosovo. He said that MNTF E always sent a clear message to those who would threaten the safe and secure environment and that KFOR was willing and determined to respond immediately to any kind of violence - and that people got the message. Soldiers of 29th Infantry Division also replaced those from the 36th Infantry Division. Brig. Gen.

Owens tasked the soldiers with carrying on the relationships built by their predecessors with the Kosovo citizens. They were asked to be part of this time of hope, a time where people can hope for a better future for all the citizens of Kosovo.


The 29th Division joins soldiers from Greece, Armenia, Romania, Poland, Ukraine and Lithuania in their mission to secure the MNTF E area of responsibility. Brig. Gen. Earhart purposed that the 29th Division’s patch could serve as a symbol of hope to the people of Kosovo.

“It represents the blue and the gray – the north and south – two cultures with divergent perspectives and beliefs. There was a time when it seemed these two groups would never settle their differences, but these people now work together toward a common good in the United States.”
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posted by Drobeshi at 19:04 0 comments
I am grateful for this opportunity to present to you the views of Kosovo on its final status process. This is the second time that an elected representative of Kosovo has been permitted to address members of the Security Council, even though Kosovo has been discussed regularly in the Security Council since before the war of 1999. I speak to you as the President of Kosovo and head of the multi-party delegation on final status, which we have dubbed the Unity Team, involving both the ruling coalition and the main opposition parties.

Kosovo has been in a limbo for a long time. More than seven years have elapsed since the war ended in 1999, after NATO stepped in to bring an end to the Serbian ethnic cleansing campaign against the Kosovar Albanians. The uncertainty – or the ambiguity of status, if you will – has not helped Kosovo.

A lot has been achieved in the post-war Kosovo, in its reconstruction and institution building in the first place. However, a fully-fledged economic development has not been viable. Lack of its recognition as an independent nation has cost Kosovo a lot economically, proving to be the main obstacle to its economic drive. Kosovo has not been able to offer the guarantees a sovereign government can provide to potential foreign investors. Kosovo has not had the legal status to have access to international lending institutions. Our unemployment rate is very high to this day.

In many respects, though, progress towards EU integration has been achieved, using also the current low profile, but significant, Stabilization and Association Tracking Mechanism that Kosovo has with the European Union. The newly emerging Kosovo economic legislation is in full compliance with EU standards. Kosovo is among a few non-EU entities – the newly independent Montenegro is amongst them too – to have the Euro as the official currency.

The time has come to finish this job of clarifying the status, i.e. of enshrining Kosovo’s independence within the international system.
Under the leadership of President Ahtisaari, UN’s Special Envoy for the status of Kosovo, a whole series of talks on technical issues, mainly pertinent to the Serbian minority’s position, have been held in Vienna, Austria. A summit meeting between the leaders of Kosovo and Serbia was held on July 24th 2006.

There is no more important process for our people than the final status process itself. We have been committed to an open, transparent and above all peaceful process. We have been working closely with the UN Special Envoy, President Ahtisaari, and his team. We have devoted a great deal of effort to producing detailed position papers on the technical issues at stake, which are agreed among all the members of the Kosovo delegation. We have been flexible in the negotiations to date, on the crucial so-called “technical” issues of decentralisation, community rights, cultural heritage, and the economy. We have come up with generous offers in the talks on issues that pertain to minority rights, the Serb community in the first place. On the economy, we have subscribed to a set of criteria for succession that have been applied with other former Yugoslav entities that have emerged as independent nations in the wake of the break-up of the former federation. Therefore, we are ready to assume all the reasonable obligations that arise out of a normal process of succession as well as the full protection of property rights for all our citizens.

We are determined to find best possible solutions to all status-related issues. Nevertheless, I must re-emphasise to you what I said in my July 13th address before this respected international body: the expectation in Kosovo, and the region, is that the process must finish by the end of this year. Kosovo has endured seven years of uncertainty since the terrible events of 1999. That uncertainty has hindered economic development and fed political tension. It would serve no one, in Kosovo or in the wider southeast Europe region, if that uncertainty continued any longer. This process must at last decide Kosovo’s status, for good. We need permanence, not another temporality. Another temporality would breed suspense and uncertainty.

The overwhelming desire of Kosovo’s people for an independent Kosovo is well-known. This has been the will of the large majority of Kosovo’s people for a long time, predating the repression and genocide of the Milosevic years, which saw a dozen thousand Kosovar Albanians killed and over 800.000 deported by the Serbian military and paramilitary police in the spring of 1999.

Despite this history, it is the overwhelming wish of Kosovo’s people to build a multi-ethnic society with a representative government. The desire to establish institutions, laws and norms which build, protect and maintain a multi-ethnic society is the heart of the government’s work to make progress on the so-called Standards for Kosovo: its work to improve the rule of law, minority protection, representation for minorities in Kosovo’s institutions, effective local government and a functioning economy. We have made remarkable progress in these areas.

In the final status process itself, every position we have presented to Special Envoy Ahtisaari is premised on our determination to see an independent, sovereign and democratic Kosovo at the end of the process for the determination of the status. This steadfast determination emanates from the overall political will of the people of Kosovo.

Therefore, as I said here on July 13th, independence is the alpha and omega, the beginning and the end of our position. Independence is our lifeline. It is the desideratum of our sustainable existence as a nation.

In a multi-ethnic society, government must fairly represent all communities. In the Parliament and Government of Kosovo, seats will be guaranteed for Kosovo’s non-Albanian communities. Serbs will have ten guaranteed seats, and the other minorities ten seats in the Parliament of independent Kosova. They may win more, but not less than this number of seats in the new legislature. Thus, they will be over-represented, as has been the case so far, too. On top of this, we have come up with a plan that would give the minorities crucial say over matters that are by definition of vital interest to them. A double majority will be instituted for such ‘vital interest’ pieces of legislation, which means in practice that they cannot be approved unless the majority of minority members of Parliament attending votes for them.
To our great regret, most of the Serb representatives have not yet taken their place and are refusing to participate in our shared task of government. (Part of them has, fortunately). This is often not their own choice, but the result of pressure from Belgrade, which wishes to de-legitimise the Kosovo government.

We have prepared comprehensive and detailed plans for new Serb majority municipalities and devolved government in Kosovo, so that government is at the level where local people can make decisions for themselves. We have presented these plans to President Ahtisaari and his teams, and to the Belgrade side. But, let us stress what the Contact Group has already decided: there can be no creation of separate ethnic entities in Kosovo. We cannot accept solutions that would effectively separate the Serbs and insulate them within an independent Kosova, let alone allow such structures establish vertical links with the government in Belgrade. This would mean ethno-territorial separation along Serb government’s demands. Kosovo must remain a single united territory, with one government for all, albeit with decision-making devolved to local level for many issues, including local services, healthcare, and education.

A great deal of progress has been made in discussing how we should best protect the cultural heritage of Kosovo’s communities, including churches, monasteries and other sites of religious and cultural significance. On the Kosovo side, our commitment is clear: we will protect and preserve Kosovo’s entire cultural heritage, paying particular attention to the patrimony of Kosovo’s non-Albanian, and thus minority, communities. This is the common heritage of all of Kosovo’s people, and it is our duty, to all of our citizens, to protect and preserve that heritage. In particular, the rights of the Serbian Orthodox Church, its representatives and members, will be fully preserved, and its monasteries and churches protected, in accordance with all relevant international norms, including the Universal Declaration, and many other UN and Council of Europe instruments. Moreover, we have accepted to create protective zones around the most important Serbian religious sites in Kosovo.

Going back to the status, I want to stress that Kosovo has already paid heavily for the uncertainty of its status since 1999. There is high unemployment in Kosovo and considerable economic distress – incomes are among the lowest in Europe. This situation is undoubtedly the result of Kosovo’s indeterminate status which has hindered investment both internally and externally.

Your Excellencies,

It is my firm belief that now is the time to wrap up the process of final status of Kosovo. The Vienna process cannot succeed as long as Serbia remains fixated on the past, and ignores the evident realities of the present and thus misses the opportunity of the future. Serbia may be interested to foot-drag on this. We are not, for we cannot afford to do this, for we cannot afford to fail. Clarity of status in the form of an unqualified independence for Kosovo is key to further progress and the opening of new prospects for peace, stability and economic prosperity for the people of Kosovo and the wider region.
Serbia must recognise unarguable realities: that Kosovo has never been part of Serbia by virtue of its will; that since the horror and misery of 1999, Kosovo has been governed separately from Serbia. The clock of history cannot be turned back. It is the clear and overwhelming wish of the large majority of Kosovo’s people for Kosovo, at last, to be recognised as a sovereign and independent state. That wish cannot be ignored, or negotiated away. There is only one route to the stability we all so fervently desire: a clear and firm decision to make Kosovo at last independent.

The future state of Kosovo will have the fullest range of protections, both constitutional and practical, to ensure the rule of law and protection of rights of all its citizens, the majority Albanian population, as well as the Serb, Turkish, Roma, Ashkali, and Bosniak communities.

Let me re-emphasize that we have no claim or desire for the territory of others, any more than we would tolerate any claim on our own territory. We fully accept the Contact Group’s conditions for the final status process, that just as there can be no separation of Kosovo, there can be no change to its existing borders or territory. As an independent nation, we would be in a position to cooperate fully and openly in all areas with our neighbours and the region. Full regional cooperation is only possible once Kosovo – the last piece of the Balkans puzzle – is, at last, resolved.

We want an independent Kosovo with a light civilian presence for a reasonable period of time. We want also to see the continuation of a NATO-led military presence until we have established a security architecture of our own, which should include the formation of a limited defence force.
On behalf of the people of Kosovo, as President of Kosovo and head of the Unity Team of negotiators, I have officially called for, and invited, such a presence. (To this effect, last month I sent, through President Ahtisaari, a letter of invitation to the main international stakeholders in the Kosovo issue).

We aspire to the democratic values and legal norms embodied in the European Union. This ambition is shared by all our neighbours, including Serbia, although the latter’s aspiration has been less than enthusiastic. Meanwhile, we share a common wish to cooperate with, and eventually become members of, NATO, so that our security is guaranteed within that institution.

This is the opportunity for the future of Kosovo, and of our region. This opportunity can only become real if the final status process results in an independent state of Kosovo. This decision, which you in the Security Council can make, is the only way to close the door on the past, and is the necessary condition to open the door to a new, peaceful and prosperous future for south east Europe.

We desperately need closure on the status issue now. The wars instigated and waged by Belgrade against non-Serbs in the former Yugoslavia are hopefully over. The Serb-dominated Yugoslavia has ceased to exist. New political nations have emerged from the ashes of this doomed federation. They all look towards the West for anchorage.

Now that the international community is willing at long last to wrap up the process of determining the final status of Kosovo, one should recall that pitted against each other are Kosovo’s legal and legitimate bid to independence and sovereignty, on the one hand, and Serbia’s illegal and illegitimate bid to re-claim rights to dominate and/or control the destiny of Kosovo, which had been under Serbian occupation till 1999, on the other.
The world should pursue a solution to the Kosovo issue as a unique case, one that is based on the full respect for the democratic will of the overwhelming majority of the people of Kosovo, while enshrining the highest human rights standards for all the communities living in this land.

It is no denying that there are still difficulties faced by the minorities in Kosovo, but also the majority Albanian population, largely as a result of the long legacy of Serbian/Yugoslav occupation and the bloody war of the 1990s. The wounds of the war take time to heal. It takes time for local Kosovar Serbs, nurtured for decades by their political and Church elites to think of themselves as members of a dominant majority, to disown their culture of dominance. This does not to turn out to be a small psychological problem for them. The Belgrade elites have continued to mislead the Kosovar Serb minority into thinking Belgrade has the right to, and may eventually restore some sort of control over Kosovo.

For the people of Kosovo, I want to express my gratitude to you in the Security Council, and to the United Nations, for your work to help my country. We are particularly grateful for the work of UNMIK. There is more work for us to do in Kosovo’s government to build our institutions so that they provide security, freedom of movement and economic opportunity for all our citizens, from whichever community. This work, which is embodied in the standards process, will remain our highest domestic priority.

We are deeply appreciative of what the international community has done -- what NATO and the UN, what the United States of America and the EU, as well as many individual countries and organizations have done for Kosovo. But the time has come for Kosovo to stand on its own feet, and become a fully-fledged member of the international community. A democratic Kosovo with a representative government, where the rights of all its citizens, including the minorities, are guaranteed to the highest internationally-set standards has been the longstanding dream and goal of the people of Kosovo. We hope this will have become soon a dream come true – a mission achieved.

Integration into the EU and NATO, as well permanent friendship, that is special relationship, with the United States of America, is the prevailing aspiration of all Kosovars.

With Kosovo’s independence, Prishtina and Belgrade, wilfully relinquishing part of their respective sovereignties to Brussels, would be on a par as capitals of equal members of the European Union family, as well as members of the North Atlantic Alliance. Good neighbourly relations, economic, cultural and other relationships, between the two nations would be able to flourish then.
Marrur Nga http://www.kosova.com/
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posted by Drobeshi at 18:41 0 comments