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Pastimes : Kosovo -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Nikole Wollerstein who wrote (14538)9/18/1999 4:41:00 PM
From: George Papadopoulos  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17770
 
Heavily-armed gangs throw out Italian
families to seize control of the criminal
underworld in Milan

Nick Hopkins, Crime Correspondent
Tuesday September 7, 1999
The Guardian
newsunlimited.co.uk

The Albanian mafia is targeting Britain in an effort to expand
its European-wide illegal immigration, drug trafficking and arms
dealing operations, security experts warned yesterday.

According to the national criminal intelligence service, heavily
armed Albanian gangs have established footholds in Germany,
Switzerland, Greece and Italy and in recent months there have
been signs of "organised criminal activity" in Britain.

NCIS investigators said the power of the groups, which recently
took control of the criminal underworld in Milan after a two-year
power struggle, must not be underestimated.

"They threw out the Italian mafia families," said an NCIS source.
"That is how violent they are." Ian Morrison, head of NCIS's
south-east region, said many Albanians seeking asylum in Britain
were criminals posing as refugees.

"There is evidence from customs and excise that this is
happening. It stands to reason that some criminal groups will
start to become established here. The same thing has happened in
mainland Europe. The experience on the continent is that they are
very aggressive. They present a serious and growing threat."

The Albanian mafia is regarded as the fastest growing in Europe.

It is thought to control many of the people-smuggling routes from
east to west and has muscled in on the heroin trafficking trade
run by Turkish mafias.

Like traditional Sicilian mafias, the Albanian organisations are
built around families. Every mafia member observes the Besa - a
strict oath of trust and loyalty.

Albanian gangs have been particularly active in Italy.

Earlier this year, Pier Luigi Vigna, Italy's senior mafia
prosecutor, chaired a summit in Bari to discuss how to tackle a
crime wave that included the reported smuggling of 10 containers
of radioactive material for sale on the black market.

In November last year, police at Brindisi boarded a boat from
Albania and seized four kilograms of liquid mercury which was
being shipped to western Europe, probably for illegal weapons
manufacture.

Albanian gangs are also thought to have taken control of
prostitution, gambling and drug dealing along Italy's Adriatic
coast.

The potential threat posed by the groups to Britain emerged
yesterday when NCIS published its annual report.

John Abbott, the director general, said the trafficking of
illegal immigrants into Britain was currently controlled by 50
gangs, who charged up to £10,000 for each person.

Nearly all of the gangs were run by Britons.

He said many immigrants found themselves press-ganged into
prostitution, forced labour or criminal activity, to pay for
their travel.

"The last five years has seen a tremendous growth in illegal
immigration, we see no reason to predict that it is going to
decrease," Mr Abbott said.

"The number of gangs in volved in this kind of activity has
increased enormously in the last two years."

A criminal intelligence service assessment of the level of
organised crime in Britain has been compiled in a confidential
report for police chiefs and the home office.

Mr Abbott refused to reveal details of the study, but said: "The
threat is increasing and we need a robust response."

He added: "Serious and organised crime is becoming more
international, faster moving and more sophisticated, and its
effects are increasingly felt in every local community throughout
the UK."

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 1999




To: Nikole Wollerstein who wrote (14538)9/18/1999 4:43:00 PM
From: George Papadopoulos  Respond to of 17770
 
Albanian gangs 'ready to move into Britain'
=================================

BY STEWART TENDLER,
CRIME CORRESPONDENT
September 7 1999
The Times (UK)
the-times.co.uk

ALBANIAN gangsters are preparing to move into Britain,
according to a report sent to ministers and senior police.

Albanian criminals running drug, illegal immigration, protection
and prostitution rackets have challenged home-grown gangs and
police in Italy, Germany and Switzerland. In Milan, Albanian
gangs are reported to have taken over the drugs underworld.

The National Criminal Intelligence Service now believes that they
will try to infiltrate Britain. The service says that police
already have evidence of links between Albanian groups and
Turkish gangs in Britain that control heroin imports. The
potential risks from the Albanian gangs have been spelt out in a
confidential assessment delivered by the service to Home Office
ministers, senior officials and chief constables.

Launching the service's annual report yesterday, Roger Gasper,
director of intelligence, said that Albanian criminals had been
involved so far only at a low level in Britain, but in mainland
Europe their gangs were "well organised, violent and ruthless".

Ian Morrison, head of the service's southeast region, said there
was no doubt that there were criminals among illegal immigrants
in Britain and that the pattern of organised crime in continental
Europe could be repeated here.

"With the number we have got coming into the UK, there's a worry
that some criminal gangs will start to become established. The
experience on the Continent is that they are very aggressive. It
presents a serious threat," he said.

The warning about Albanian criminals came as the service
identified a growing trade in illegal immigrants. Officials said
there had been a noticeable expansion in gangland operations in
the past five years as organised groups exploited immigration
rackets.

At least 50 groups, most of whose members are British by birth or
adoption, have been identified by Home Office officials and
police. The gangs are often formed from family and ethnic
networks. Research suggests that new areas for illegal
immigration will develop in parts of Africa and Asia.

The service believes that illegal immigration routes are now
highly organised. Mr Morrison said that the gangs can provide
false identities in Britain, including driving licences, national
insurance numbers and papers entitling them to benefits.

Mr Gasper and John Abbott, director-general of the service, said
yesterday that drug-running, fraud and money-laundering remained
the top priority for the agency, which seeks to raise its annual
£42 million budget by £25 million over the next three years.

The latest National Criminal Intelligence Service threat
assessment shows:

London family gangs have cornered the market in counterfeiting.
Sterling is getting harder to copy and they are now moving into
counterfeiting consumer goods such as designer clothing.

Jamaican Yardie gangs, prime movers of crack cocaine, are
now building up interests in prostitution.

West African gangs are big players in fraud scams, including
"advance fee" rackets. Nigerians also run prostitution rings
linked to Europe.

Chinese Triad gangs have extensive protection rackets in the
Chinese community and run illegal immigration rings using
kidnappings and beatings to force victims to pay up.

Biker gangs have become major distributors of drugs in the
South East.

Turkish-Iranian gangs have control of most of the heroin brought
into Britain in an alliance that includes Kurds and
Turkish-Cypriots.



To: Nikole Wollerstein who wrote (14538)9/20/1999 10:28:00 PM
From: George Papadopoulos  Respond to of 17770
 
Another piece on those wonderful Albanian KLA mafia thugs...we should have let the Serbs destroy this cancer, instead we helped them...and now the region will have to live with the consequences...until some years down the road when Nato troops leave and these bandits will be terminated...by then the blood mayhem will make this one seem like nothing...and this how the Balkans go...

London Telegraph, 9/5/99, By Julius Strauss in Pristina

THE Albanian mafia, among Europe's most feared, is consolidating its
grip on Kosovo, imposing taxes on lorries, taking over flats and
houses, running drugs and targeting the burgeoning and well-financed
aid community.

Taking full advantage of Kosovo's open border with Albania, the
gangsters have swiftly filled the power vacuum left by Serb police and
militia, setting up operations together with local criminals. Albania
has long been an incubation house for organised crime. The north is
controlled by rival heavily-armed gangs who operate out of village
bases.

During the Nato air strikes they prospered by fleecing the huge number
of international aid workers, journalists and government officials who
moved into the area as Kosovar refugees fled over the border. Once
Serb forces pulled out, the streets of Pristina and other large towns
teemed with swarthy men in four-by-fours with number plates from
Tirana and the gangster towns of Vlorë and Bajram Curri.

The mafia is thought to have made a huge profit taking over Serb
flats, using ethnic retribution as a convenient cover. Soaring
property prices have multiplied their gains. ... With most Serb flats
now occupied and their contents looted, the organised criminals have
begun to target ethnic Albanians and internationals. ...

The Albanian mafia is perhaps Europe's fastest growing. ... The mafias
control many of the people-smuggling routes into Europe, as well as
running drugs from Asia.

When war broke out between Nato and Yugoslavia in March, the Kosovo
Liberation Army, which had always used Albania as a supply point,
poured most of its resources into a cross-border campaign against the
Serbs. Links between KLA elements and the Albanian mafia were
strengthened, and there are reports that some KLA commanders promised
gangsters concessions in a post-war Kosovo in exchange for guns. ...

The woeful inadequacy of the United Nations police force - now
responsible for law and order in Pristina and set to take over other
parts of the country - is apparent to even the casual observer. There
is no system of fines or other effective deterrence. ...

These conditions provide the mafia with easy pickings. Near the
Albanian border lorries have been made to pay "fines" to gunmen who
melt away as soon as a Nato patrol approaches. Ethnic Albanians
looking after Serb flats for their owners have been told to hand them
over. One Kosovo Albanian student commented: "We didn't want to be in
Serbia, but we certainly don't want to become part of Albania."



To: Nikole Wollerstein who wrote (14538)9/20/1999 10:42:00 PM
From: George Papadopoulos  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17770
 
Another lie uncovered...

War In the Balkans
Rajmonda
The Truth About Rajmonda
A KLA Soldier Lies for the Cause.

Nancy Durham For the past year, the CBC's Nancy Durham has been
sending dispatches from a small Kosovar Albanian village.

So in June, when NATO's Kosovo Force - KFOR - opened Kosovo to the
outside world Nancy headed straight for Shale to see how the people
there had managed during the NATO bombardment. And for the first
time, in 18 months of covering the war over Kosovo, she was able to
move freely throughout the region.

As a result, Nancy uncovered much more than she expected. Here is
the story in her own words.

I returned to Kosovo in June, three days after the arrival of NATO's
Kosovo Force, KFOR.

It was a thrilling time, and suspenseful too.

I had come to Shale, a village I haven't named until now. During the
war I was asked not to. The people wanted to protect their Kosovo
Liberation Army run hospital.

I returned to Shale not only to see who survived, and how they managed
to, but also to learn more about one person in particular.

During the war here it was impossible to move freely and therefore
difficult to get answers to all my questions.

I am looking for Rajmonda Rreci.

I met her for the first time, a year ago, in Shale's KLA hospital. I
was told she was being treated for trauma, because she witnessed the
killing of her sister, apparently by Serbs in an attack on her
village.

"And maybe I will be a part of the Kosovo liberation army because
that's the only way for us except if the world help us," she said at
the time.

The next time I saw Rajmonda - last December - it was at the KLA's
mountain headquarters in Drenica.

She was dressed for her new part, and vowing to die for Kosovo's
independence.

Ramonda with AK-47 "It's a Kalashnikov and it's just like one member
of my family. this is for me everything," she told me.

Rajmonda's story was riveting. Everyone could understand her wish to
avenge her sister's killing.

I asked her about my visiting Qendresa's grave.

"Even I don't know where it is", she said. "It's hard, too hard.
really really hard."

When we parted that winter night, I had doubts about Rajmonda's
ability to survive. Her Kalashnikov rifle was no match for the
Yugoslav army. But I had underestimated Rajmonda.

In June, I found her still on the mountain. This 19-year-old girl had
made it through war. She was staying at the KLA's logisitics house,
and still a soldier, but on her day off I stayed the night and
Rajmonda talked me through the last months of war. She showed me how
she spent her leisure time between battles.

"We sleep 12 girls, in this room, 60 in whole house," she said, "we
sleep just like sardines.

I asked what she did in her leisure time, between battles. She
unrolled a drawing of a girl on beach. Rajmonda's drawing "It's just
like my dreams," she said. "We always dreamed to finish the war and
then we can go to the beach and have a holiday far away from this
place because we saw too much and everything."

Rajmonda seemed more like a child to me than a battle hardened
soldier.

"When you see all those that we saw, all those massacres, all the
people. When you see that they don't have enough to eat. All the
burned houses [so] they stay only in the land, they don't have
nothing. ..You don't have time to think that you killed a man or
something else. You only want to kill, to kill him because you know
what he done to your family. And for me all the people from Kosovo,
not only for me but all people for Kosovo are our family."

Rajmonda Rajmonda Rajmonda

"Do you think about your sister?" I ask. "I'm thinking about her but I
told you I said one time you have to lose something that you love, you
really love to have the freedom," she replies.

Rajmonda may have won her freedom but she still belonged to the KLA.
She was both loyal soldier, and teenage girl and she had begun to open
up a little. Rajmonda admitted she hid things from me; that she
already was a member of the KLA when we first met. What else was there
to this elusive girl?

The war was over, but Rajmonda was still an obedient soldier.

Last December I had wanted to go to Rajmonda's village to learn more
about her. I wanted to gather all the details I could to understand a
young girl who had lost her innocence so tragically. Rajmonda asked me
not to go there. She said she was worried it might endanger her family
if I visited them.

It seemed a reasonable request.

It was a very tense time.

But in June with the retreat of the Yugoslav army, it was at last safe
for me to visit her home in Skenderaj.

I wasn't optimistic about finding anyone at home because Rajmonda had
told me her family was now in Albania. But this wasn't true.

Qendressa I found Rajmonda's mother, Barhije, at home along with two
other daughters. Two year old Ilirida and, to my astonishment,
Rajmonda's nine year old sister, Qendresa. The sister who was supposed
to be dead.

I was shocked, but Rajmonda's mother offered a novel explanation.
There was a murdered sister, she said, but Rajmonda got her name
wrong. It was Dafina who died.

I spent an awkward hour. We looked at the family album. I saw Rajmonda
as a toddler on a Montenegran beach holiday. There was no trace of
Dafina. I had a sinking feeling. Perhaps there never was a Dafina.
Perhaps there was no murdered sister at all. Had I been used for the
cause?

Six weeks later, in August, I got my chance to find out. I returned to
Kosovo to confront Rajmonda. I found her still near Shale but at
another KLA base.

Rajmonda in uniform "Yeah, I lied to you," she said.

Rajmonda admits she lied about Qendresa, but claims it didn't start
out as a lie. She said she was misinformed.

"In the beginning it was a mistake," she said, "because I spoke when I
was not sure. I believed my sister was killed when I was not sure but
I believe because we are in war and in war happen everything."

But why didn't Rajmonda put the record straight on my subsequent
visits?

"I think about that and I said to myself. 'Why I have to tell her my
sister is alive when there are so many girls and mothers who lost the
childrens, the sisters, the family. they don't have the chance to give
interview.'"

Rajmonda doesn't take all the credit for her strategy.

She claims the doctors at the field hospital encouraged her to lie.

Shpetim Robaj was one of those doctors. He was killed shortly after I
met Rajmonda, when his Red Cross vehicle hit a landmine.

Selimi But Fitim Selimi, the KLA doctor who treated Rajmonda in
September and then took me up the mountain to find her in winter, did
survive the war. He appeared completely taken aback by the story, when
I found him in Pristina in his new role as director of hospitals for
all of Kosovo.

He insisted this was the first he knew of any lie.

"Maybe she thought the job she was doing was too little," he said. "So
to show Kosovo she was doing much more she said she lost her sister
and to show our suffering maybe she was even capable of saying she
lost others."

"I said to myself she is just a journalist and she lives in England
and she don't care about us," Rajmonda said. "They don't care about
us, how we live, and how we die. they are coming here just to make
interview for their career and for their interest."

Ramonda and Qendressa In August, Rajmonda returned to Skenderaj with
me to see her family. She hugs Qendresa, now with her hair cut short.
The little girl is oblivious to the story about her death. but
fascinated with the photos of her soldier sister. Pictures from our
encounter last winter on the mountain and pictures from long ago.

"I just wish to be again a little girl....only to be a happy child,
happy kid like I was," Rajmonda said.

A happy child like Qendresa, perhaps, whose supposed murder had been
the foundation of Rajmonda's story.

A story that had played around the world, and in at least a dozen
countries, and each time it was told it reported Qendresa's death.

I wondered how Rajmonda's father, Aslan Rreci, feels about his
daughter being used in propaganda.

"We didn't try to do any propaganda," he said. "But against the Serbs
you had to fight in every way, even with propaganda like this. but
this was only by accident, this wasn't a propaganda on purpose."

"I'm glad it was effective in one condition," Rajmnonda says, "if this
was not my story this story belonged to someone else here."

I have reflected on the five days I spent with Shpetim Robaj in
September 1998--the week before he died-- the week I first met
Rajmonda.

Could he have played a part in this, like Rajmonda claims?

One afternoon he and I stood right at the cemetary in Pristina, just a
few metres from where he'd soon be buried. We watched villages burn in
the distance. Kosovo was on fire but the story dominating the news was
the Clinton-Lewinsky affair. To many Kosovar Albanians, it seemed the
outside world had forgotten them.

Ilir Tolaj thought it had. He was Shpetim's close friend and
colleague. One year ago he appealed to the West to intervene. He's
never met Rajmonda - except on video tape - but he admits he's
impressed with her performance.

"If this is a lie - don't know if it's small or big," he said. "Maybe
from my point it's small, from the point of the journalist it's very
big and unacceptable. But if this small lie from my point of view made
some kind of impact in what west country did in Kosovo then it's worth
it."

The fact is that Rajmonda didn't need a story about a dead sister to
explain her motivation. She was born in Drenica in the very place
where 18 years later, the war would began. The first fires of Kosovo's
war were set in Prekaz, just a short walk from Rajmonda's home.

Grave board In March 1998, Serb forces launched an attack against what
they called Albanian terrorists.

It was the assault which alerted the world to the Kosovo conflict.

Children were among the 53 members of the Jashari clan who died.

Rajmonda walked among the Jashari graves in a meadow.

"My best friend was in the same class," she said. "and when the
Jasharis were killed...I went in Prekaz. I saw the victims and I saw
her... and when I saw her, then I said to myself now it's the moment
I'm gonna take the gun and I'm gonna became a member of KLA."

"How do i know that's story's true?" I asked.

"Oh you will find it, it's easy," she replied.

Of course finding the truth here is not at all easy. I chose to cover
the war in Kosovo by following the people I had come to know through
Shpetim Robaj. It's hard for me to believe he played any witting part
in perpetrating Rajmonda's lie. In fact often he corrected fellow
Kosovars when they told exaggerated stories of suffering. He helped me
get started on telling the story of war through the eyes of ordinary
people. It was partly because of his death that I wanted to return to
those he'd introduced me to. It's by returning repeatedly to Kosovo
that I uncovered Rajmonda's lie. But hers is just one. How many other
lies will remain buried?