Yugoslavia Reports Massive Bombing
Tuesday, 27 April 1999 B E L G R A D E , Y U G O S L A V I A (AP)
A RED Cross team, including a doctor, was allowed to visit three captive American soldiers Tuesday, leaving with letters for their families. NATO jets pounded Serb forces in round-the-clock attacks, and one struck a civilian community in southern Serbia.
Local authorities in Surdulica, 200 miles south of Belgrade, said at least 17 people were killed and 11 wounded when NATO missiles struck the agricultural community Tuesday afternoon. The dead and injured included women and children. Officials said about 50 houses were destroyed and 600 others were damaged.
An Associated Press reporter, taken to the scene by Serb police, saw dazed rescuers trying to retrieve body parts from the wreckage as bulldozers cleared huge mounds of concrete rubble searching for more victims.
Most of the dead had been blown apart, and rescuers were trying to assemble body parts for identification. Rescue workers said 11 people, including five children, were believed trapped in the basement of one house.
Serbian state television, itself the target of an attack last week that killed at least nine station employees, accused NATO of a "barbaric and destructive bombing" on the town of 15,000.
Residents said a military garrison about 500 yards away has been abandoned since a NATO attack early this month. It was unclear if that was the intended target.
In Belgrade, air-raid sirens went off early Wednesday and a series of explosions could be heard. The state-run Tanjug news agency said "planes of the enemy NATO alliance, in a massive onslaught, bombed the wider regions of Belgrade" but gave no details.
The private Beta news agency said NATO jets attacked a military barracks in Belgrade's Topcider residential district, on the capital's southern edge. Residents of the nearby Dedinje district, where Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic and other senior officials live, said the explosions shattered windows in their homes.
In Moscow, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott met Tuesday with Russian officials to determine whether the Russians made progress in brokering a settlement to the five-week confrontation.
But former Premier Viktor Chernomyrdin, Russia's chief mediator on the Yugoslav crisis, said NATO must halt airstrikes to clear the way for talks, a condition rejected repeatedly by the alliance.
Chernomyrdin said Belgrade would accept an "international presence" in Kosovo with Russia's participation, but acknowledged that such a group, which would be unarmed or only lightly armed, fell far short of what NATO is demanding.
Allied terms include the key demand of international peacekeeping troops in Kosovo, an end to atrocities against ethnic Albanian civilians, autonomy for the majority Albanian province and the return of all refugees.
The American soldiers, when seen on Serbian television after their March 31 capture in Macedonia's border area, had cuts and bruises on their faces. After Tuesday's private meeting in Belgrade, officials of the International Committee of the Red Cross refused to discuss their conditions.
ICRC chief Cornelio Sommaruga said only that the men were examined by a physician and allowed to hand over letters to their families.
Sommaruga also saw the three briefly on Monday. The visit Tuesday was the first "official" contact as provided for under the Geneva Conventions for prisoners of war.
The ICRC also conducted a second visit with a Yugoslav officer captured by Kosovo Albanian rebels and held at a U.S. military base in Mannheim, Germany.
The Americans - Christopher J. Stone, 25, of Smiths Creek, Mich.; Andrew A. Ramirez, 24, of Los Angeles; and Steven M. Gonzales, 21, of Huntsville, Texas - were seized in disputed circumstances along the Yugoslav-Macedonian border on March 31, seven days after NATO launched its bombing campaign.
In Los Angeles, Ramirez's family released a statement saying it had received its first message from him, adding that "the news came after a doctor was allowed a 30-minute-plus private visit with each of the three American POWs."
"Vivian Ramirez said it was a relief to finally hear from her son," the statement said. "She said that Andy wrote that the messages from home brought him much happiness and that he was happy to know that so many people are supporting the family."
Chris Bowers of the ICRC said the Red Cross was promised regular access to the prisoners - seen as a possible sign Belgrade was seeking a way out of the crisis and the widespread destruction of bridges, factories, oil depots and other key infrastructure.
In another possible overture, Yugoslav Deputy Premier Vuk Draskovic urged the government to admit it cannot defeat NATO. Draskovic, a former opposition leader with a reputation for maverick stands, said he believed Milosevic was prepared to accept a U.N. force in Kosovo.
Draskovic pulled back in his comments Tuesday, acknowledging he had not discussed the issue with Milosevic.
But Draskovic then denounced Milosevic's Socialist party and the Party of the Yugoslav Left, led by Milosevic's wife, accusing them of putting their party interests ahead of "our fatherland."
Also Tuesday, the Party of the Yugoslav Left, part of Milosevic's ruling coalition, endorsed calls for a U.N.-supervised "international presence" in Kosovo but made no mention of "armed troops" as demanded by NATO.
It said an end to the NATO air campaign was a precondition for a settlement, something else the Western alliance rejects. But the Serbian Radical Party, also part of the coalition, rejected any foreign troops and denounced "careerist politicians," a clear reference to Draskovic.
The possibility of cracks in the Yugoslav government has raised hopes for a diplomatic settlement, with Russia expected to play an important role.
"We believe that possibilities for finding a way out of (the Kosovo crisis) are available," Russian Foreign Minister Ivan Ivanov said after meeting U.S. envoy Talbott. But he gave no details.
The allies have promised to intensify their bombings until Milosevic accepts a peace plan for Kosovo, a province of Yugoslavia's main republic Serbia. On Tuesday, President Clinton also authorized the call-up of as many as 33,000 U.S. reservists.
NATO commander Gen. Wesley Clark contended Tuesday that the air campaign is eroding the morale of Yugoslav forces, leading soldiers to desert.
"Dissent is growing louder and louder," Clark said. |