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Pastimes : Kosovo

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To: goldsnow who wrote (14555)9/18/1999 3:58:00 PM
From: George Papadopoulos  Read Replies (2) of 17770
 
Kosovo Looks More Like Greater Albania Every Day

Pogrom of Gorans- "More Terror will Come

NATO's multicultural paradise in Kosovo looks more and more like
Greater Albania. Lest we suspect a religious component motivating the
racist assaults and dispossession conducted by NATO-supported KLA
pogromists, recall that many of their victims - Gorans, ethnic Turks
and Egyptians - are also Muslim...

Radio Free Europe
24-08-99

By Jolyon Naegele

There is wide knowledge of the harsh treatment facing Serbs and Roma
in Kosovo. But RFE/RL's Jolyon Naegele visits the southwestern Gora
region and reports that the local Goran minority is also facing harsh
treatment at the hands of ethnic Albanians. He files this report from
the district capital, Dragash.

Dragash, Kosovo; 24 August 1999 (RFE/RL) -- Gora is one of the least
populated and most inaccessible districts in Kosovo. The area
encompasses a cluster of mountains and steep valleys wedged between
Albania and Macedonia that are home to two ethnic groups -- the
Albanians and the Gorans.

The Gorans are a small minority who, according to the last census in
1991, numbered about 20,000 in Gora and a further 25,000 elsewhere in
the former Yugoslavia. They speak a transitional Serbo-Macedonian
dialect and were largely converted to Islam from Orthodoxy in the
early 18th century. The Gorans have their own customs and traditions,
but share some folk customs with their Albanian neighbors.

At the outset of the NATO airstrikes against Yugoslavia last March,
Serbian authorities launched a selective campaign of expulsions and
retentions. In the local Albanian villages, mainly in the northern
parts of Dragash district, Serbian forces expelled all the Albanians
on March 30, giving them 30 minutes to pack and leave. The Serbs
forced most of the Gorans to stay by issuing their men mobilization
orders.

But some Gorans also went to Belgrade to demonstrate against NATO air
strikes and in support of the regime of Yugoslav President Slobodan
Milosevic. This did not endear them to their Albanian neighbors in
exile in Macedonia and Albania.

The Turkish KFOR commander in Dragash, Izzet Cetingoz, says that when
his forces arrived in the district, anger among ethnic Albanians
toward the Gorans was pronounced.

"When we arrived here more than one month ago it was said among the
[Albanians] that some of the Gorans had supported the Serb military
here during the war. They alleged that some of them had taken part
with the Serb paramilitary forces in their activities. ....There was a
very strong repression against these people and the Albanians were
saying that the Gorans were all Serb collaborators and were putting a
lot of pressure on them. We managed to stop this repression and bring
these two groups together and start a dialog."

Cetingoz notes that the Gorans insist they are innocent of any
collaboration with the Serbs or wrongdoing against the Albanians. He
says the Albanians should accept that whatever crimes were committed
were individual rather than collective.

A Gora intellectual, speaking to RFE/RL on condition of anonymity for
fear of retribution, says there is no evidence that Gorans killed,
raped or burned down anyone's house during the war.

German KFOR troops, who control southwestern Kosovo, gave the Dragash
district low priority on the grounds that ethnic relations, though
difficult, were nowhere near as tense as elsewhere in the German zone
such as in Prizren, Suva Reka, and Orahovac. Several weeks after KFOR
began moving into Kosovo in June, Turkish KFOR troops were deployed in
Dragash.

A German KFOR spokesman in Prizren told RFE/RL over the weekend that
all minorities in Kosovo regardless of their size are under pressure
to leave the province.

The spokesman says the ethnic Albanian Kosovo Liberation Army (UCK)
appears to be building up pressure to create an ethnically pure
Albanian Kosovo -- first by chasing out the Serbs and Roma and
subsequently the Turks and Gora. As a result, the area has experienced
what Gora residents say were several dozen ethnically-based incidents.
These included redistribution in Dragash of Goran-owned apartments in
one building to Albanian families.

Many Gorans have emigrated this year to other parts of Serbia,
Montenegro, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Italy, and Austria. The outflow began
the day the air strikes started on March 24 but turned into a flood
after the fighting ended. More than half the estimated 20,000 Gorans
in Gora have left. The massive outflow is caused by economic as well
as security reasons. Most Gorans are now unemployed.

The Goran intellectual says he will not flee and would prefer to share
a common life with Kosovo's Serbs and Albanians. But his bloodshot
eyes and tense face all betray his fear of what lies ahead.

He and other remaining Gorans say they are not satisfied with how they
are being protected by KFOR. In his words, German KFOR troops sit in
bars in Dragash and Prizren and ridicule how their French counterparts
in Mitrovica are unable to resolve the Serb-Albanian divisions in
Mitrovica in northern Kosovo while they themselves are failing to
prevent ethnic harassment in their own zone.

As in many other parts of Kosovo, UN police have been slow in taking
up their duties in Gora. Although 50 UN police officers are supposed
to be patrolling Gora, only one has arrived so far.

Last Friday was market day in Dragash. A number of Albanians dressed
all in black descended on the town from nearby villages and in the
course of the day beat up some seven Gorans.

One UN official, speaking on condition of anonymity, says the UCK
organized Friday's assaults in Dragash, sending people into bars and
shops to stir up trouble by accusing Gorans of being "paramilitaries"
or of having collaborated with the Serbs. Turkish KFOR troops
intervened in at least two instances, questioning but releasing those
involved and telling them not to return to Dragash. However, at UN
insistence Turkish soldiers detained four men -- two Albanians and two
Gorans and took them for further questioning.

The UN and KFOR called a meeting that evening with ethnic Albanian and
Goran representatives in a bid to cool tensions and asked the UCK to
keep its men out of Dragash.

The UCK rejects the allegations made by UN staffers. A local UCK
spokesman, squad commander Ymredin Halimi, tells RFE/RL that Friday's
incidents were between civilians and had nothing to do with the UCK.
But asked what reassurance the UCK can offer the Gorans, Halimi says
the Gorans must decide their own fate:

"We lived together with the Gorans for centuries. But they did not
flee with us when we fled. We were pushed to flee from our homes. But
they remained and supported the Serb regime."

Some UN officials criticize the Turkish KFOR soldiers in Dragash for
failing to stop many incidents or crack down on crime. As with most
other KFOR units throughout Kosovo, the Turkish battalion lacks police
training to deal with such incidents.

But the UN officials say that had the Turkish soldiers not been
present in Dragash on Friday the violence would have been far worse.
As one UN official put it, international forces must quickly provide
better security for minorities. Otherwise, he says, "more terror will
come."

24-08-99

rferl.org

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