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Pastimes : Kosovo

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To: goldsnow who wrote (9456)5/22/1999 6:33:00 AM
From: JBL  Read Replies (2) of 17770
 
NATO Won't Release Korisa Evidence

By Steven Pearlstein
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, May 21, 1999; Page A26

BRUSSELS, May 20—When NATO precision-guided bombs killed scores of ethnic Albanians in the Kosovo town of Korisa, alliance spokesmen blamed the deaths on Yugoslav authorities, claiming they had used the refugees as "human shields" by forcing them to spend the night next to a military command post and artillery bunker.

But a week after the embarrassing mishap, NATO's military command today announced that it would not release surveillance photographs and summaries of intercepted radio transmissions to back up its claim that the site was a "legitimate military target."

"Everything that's going to be released on that has been released," said Capt. Steven Warren, a spokesman for Gen. Wesley K. Clark, NATO's top military commander.

Yugoslavia said 87 refugees were killed, making the attack the costliest NATO assault of the war in civilian casualties. The victims were part of a group of several hundred refugees who had been hiding in the Kosovo hills for 10 days.

After the bombing, several group members said they had been directed by Serb police to spend the night at an agricultural cooperative. Contrary to the assertion of military spokesmen here and at the Pentagon, however, the refugees said they saw no signs that the compound was being used as a local military or police command center. Nor did they report seeing any of the artillery pieces located in bunkers that NATO claimed were destroyed in the attack.

A Washington Post reporter who visited the scene and talked to survivors a day after the attack also reported seeing no evidence of recent military presence or pieces of bombed military equipment.

NATO spokesmen have suggested Serbian forces removed military evidence from the scene before Western reporters arrived.
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