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


To: goldsnow who wrote (14555)9/18/1999 3:58:00 PM
From: George Papadopoulos  Read Replies (2) | Respond to 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




To: goldsnow who wrote (14555)9/18/1999 4:08:00 PM
From: George Papadopoulos  Respond to of 17770
 
I added the bold stuff...This is sad...brutal thugs are winning:(

The Globe and Mail
Tuesday, Aug 31

Targets of terrorism, Pristina's Jews forced to flee
Members of centuries-old Kosovo community
mistaken for Serbs or Serb collaborators
by vengeful Albanian paramilitaries

MILOVAN MRACEVICH
Special to The Globe and Mail
Tuesday, August 31, 1999

Belgrade -- In a seedy hotel across the street from Belgrade's Jewish
Museum, the head of Kosovo's tiny Jewish community recalls the day two
months ago when Albanian paramilitaries armed with submachine guns
came to the door of the Pristina apartment where he and his family
lived.

"He told us to get out," said Cedomir Prlincevic, 61, a small,
white-haired man who worked as director of the Pristina regional
archive. "We asked him why. He said, 'My house was burned.' I said,
'But I'm not the one who did it.' He said, 'I'm not interested. Get
out or I'll slaughter you.' "

By the end of June, four generations of the Prlincevic family and
other Jews were forced to flee Pristina, almost bringing to an end
five centuries of Jewish settlement in Kosovo.

While this flight of about 40 people represented but a drop in the sea
of an estimated 300,000 non-Albanians who have fled Kosovo -- mostly
Serbs, Gypsies, and Montenegrins -- their departure diminishes the
former multifaith character of the region.

Many Jews thought they would be spared. When ethnic-Albanian refugees
fled Serb attackers this spring, Israel was among the first countries
to dispatch mobile hospital units to help the sick. Israeli officials
spoke of being able to relate to the plight of refugees driven from
their homes for ethnic reasons.


Because Mr. Prlincevic and his family had good relations with
Albanians and had protected Albanian neighbours during the ethnic
cleansing of Kosovo by Serb forces, they believed they had no reason
to flee when Serb forces withdrew. They also believed in the
guarantees of the international community and the promises of KFOR,
the peacekeeping force in Kosovo led by the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, to protect Serbs and other minorities.

"I had trust in the world," Mr. Prlincevic said. "I never believed for
a minute that I'd be the target of a primitive mass."

But when heavily armed Albanian paramilitaries arrived, apparently
from Albania, the Jews of Pristina found themselves targeted and
terrorized by men who either assumed they were Serbs or had
collaborated with them.

"It's a real inquisition down there. It's not like you can talk to
someone and explain things. Those are wild people."

The Prlincevics' ethnic-Albanian neighbours were unable to protect
them from the paramilitaries.

"I saved two or three Albanian families during the war. When we were
leaving Pristina, my neighbour called to me. He said, 'Neighbour.
Forgive me. I couldn't help you. You helped me, but I can't help you.'
"

An envoy of the U.S. Jewish Joint Distribution Committee met with
Kosovo Liberation Army leader Hashim Thaci to seek protection for
Kosovo's Jews. Mr. Prlincevic himself wrote to Mr. Thaci seeking
protection. Mr. Thaci issued a letter ordering "the entire Kosovo
Liberation Army under my control to respect and protect all the Jews
of Kosovo." But the intimidation of Jews by paramilitary vigilantes
continued unabated.

Efforts to obtain protection from KFOR also proved fruitless. Mr.
Prlincevic sought personal protection, as president of the local
Jewish community, from a British major. The officer told him he was
too busy to talk to him that day.

"I'm not saying that KFOR encouraged this violence," Mr. Prlincevic
said, "but the forces which were supposed to protect all nationalities
didn't do their job."

Almost all of Pristina's Jews left the city during a 10-day period in
late June, with the assistance of the Joint Distribution Committee.
They are now living in Belgrade and Vranje, where the Federation of
Jewish Communities in Yugoslavia helped them settle. The JDC supports
them.

A historian by training, Mr. Prlincevic did research in Ottoman
archives in Istanbul on Jewish settlements in Kosovo going back to the
15th century. He says the history of Kosovo Jewry until the Second
World War was one of good relations with Albanians, Turks, and Serbs,
and that there was a high rate of intermarriage with these groups. His
father was Serbian, and his wife, Vidosava, is a Serb.

In April, 1944, Albanian fascists, acting on Gestapo orders, interned
and plundered the belongings of 1,500 of Pristina's Jews, most of whom
were sent to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Mr. Prlincevic's
mother, Bea Mandil, was one of the few who escaped being deported, but
her large extended family was almost wiped out in the Holocaust.

Now in her 80s, Mrs. Mandil is proud she can still speak the Spanish
she learned in her parents' home, a remnant from her ancestors who
were expelled from Spain in 1492.

Her large family's eight apartments and three houses in Pristina have
reportedly been looted and damaged. She now lives in a crowded
Belgrade apartment with Mr. Prlincevic and other family members.

"It's terrible," said Mrs. Mandil, who was married in 1938. "Sixty
years later, having to start again."

Less than half of Kosovo's pre-Second World War Jewish population of
1,700 survived the Holocaust, Mr. Prlincevic said. Most of those that
did emigrated to Israel from 1948 to 1952.

The continuation of more than 500 years of Jewish presence in Kosovo
now comes down to four Jews living in the environs of Pristina -- one
of Mr. Prlincevic's sons, a daughter-in-law, and two grandchildren --
and two Turkish-Jewish families in Prizren, which comprise 22 or 23
members.

Aca Singer, a 76-year-old Auschwitz survivor who is president of the
Federation of Jewish Communities in Yugoslavia, is pessimistic about
the chances for survival of the Kosovo Jewish community. He is
disappointed that the Pristina Jews were forced to leave "at a time of
peace, with international troops present, and when the international
community's representative in Kosovo, Bernard Kouchner, is a Jew from
France."

Although a few Jewish families from Kosovo fled to Israel on the eve
of the NATO's bombardment of Yugoslavia and five young Kosovo Jews are
on a paid excursion to Israel to explore living and studying there,
efforts by Mr. Singer's organization to get Israel to accept all the
Kosovo Jews have been stymied thus far.

He blames Orthodox Jews within the Israeli ministries of religion and
the interior for the situation, saying that they are applying purely
religious criteria in defining Jewishness.

Mr. Singer is disappointed that the Kosovo Jews were left out of
Israel's efforts to help refugees during the Kosovo war, when Israel
sent its army hospital and humanitarian aid, and took planeloads of
ethnic Albanians to Israel.

He was visiting Israel at the time, and pressed interior-ministry
officials to relocate Kosovo's Jews to Israel as well. "I said, 'If
there's a problem, then accept them as Albanians, and sort out later
whether they're Jews or not.' They got mad at me."

For Mr. Prlincevic, however, the prospect of going to Israel -- a
region, as he says, with its own ethnic conflicts -- is not
heartening. If he must emigrate, he would prefer Canada, but most of
all he would like to be able to return home with his family.

"I can't comprehend in my 60th year, or my mother in her 81st, having
to start a new life elsewhere. I'd look upon that as a moral death.
This doesn't have to do with the Jewish community, it has to do with
the right of a citizen to live where he belongs. I belong there,
however primitive or undeveloped it is."





To: goldsnow who wrote (14555)9/18/1999 4:18:00 PM
From: George Papadopoulos  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17770
 
IMHO, this is a must read...and the last two paragraphs are tragically funny.

THE TYRANNY OF HUMAN RIGHTS
Foreign Affairs Editorial Opinion (Published) Keywords:
YUGOSLAVIA, WAR CRIMES
Source: The Spectator (UK)
Published: 8/28/99 Author: Kirsten Sellars
Posted on 08/28/1999 18:39:50 PDT by antiwar republican

THE SPECTATOR

28 August 1999

THE TYRANNY OF HUMAN RIGHTS

Kirsten Sellars says that war-crimes tribunals advance the global aims
of Western leaders

WHEN the Swiss attorney-general Carla Del Ponte takes up her post as
chief prosecutor of the Yugoslavia and Rwanda war crimes tribunals
next month, she will assume the role of high priestess of human
rights, the secular religion for the millennium. She will be
responsible both for putting Milosevic and the rest behind the bars of
Scheveningen prison and for healing the wounds of a troubled world.
Her job is to see that good vanquishes evil.

That's the theory, anyway. The reality is more complicated.

When viewed with a dispassionate eye, the war-crimes tribunals look
less like paragons of justice and more like the political tools of
Clinton and Blair. These trials, like the recent bombing campaign, are
motivated first and foremost by political expediency. This is not a
popular point of view. Indeed, it is heresy. The consensus rules that
anything done in the name of human rights is right, and any criticism
is not just wrong but tantamount to supporting murder, torture and
rape.

This coercive consensus gives the most powerful nations carte blanche
to interfere in the affairs of any country they choose. In his book
Crimes Against Humanity, the British-based QC, Geoffrey Robertson, a
passionate advocate of human rights, argues for an end to the age of
impunity in which repression is allowed to flourish within the
protective borders of the nation state. In place of this he envisages
a new 'age of enforcement' in which interventionist global law ensures
that the Pinochets and Pol Pots get their just desserts.

It is a seductive but invidious scenario which ignores the fact that a
humanitarian crusade offers a lot more to the crusaders than to those
on whose behalf the battle is supposedly fought. History teaches us
two important lessons. First, the human-rights ideal was itself born
of political convenience, as a smokescreen behind which the great
powers could pursue their own interests, oblivious to the needs of
those they purported to help. Second, intervention, whatever banner it
goes under, is a direct challenge to national self-determination. That
is to say, it undermines a people's right to govern themselves. This
assault on sovereignty is constantly reinforced by institutions such
as the United Nations, Nato and the World Bank.

Attacks on sovereignty, while considered all right for faraway
countries, are not acceptable when they affect the United States or
Britain. America, the crucible of human rights and chief architect of
the UN's 1948 Declaration on Human Rights, refused to accept the
Genocide Convention until 1986, on the grounds that it encroached on
American sovereignty.

British governments have been equally cautious. Although the Atlee
government signed the European Convention on Human Rights, it did so
only after securing the condition that UK citizens were banned from
taking cases to the human-rights courts in Strasbourg. This ban was
lifted in 1964 and there was a succession of high profile cases
against the UK on such issues as police powers and press freedom,
homosexual rights and the treatment of paramilitary suspects in
Northern Ireland. Westminster has reluctantly accepted the court's
authority, but there is still, understandably, widespread resentment
of meddling Strasbourg Eurocrats.

The history of human rights as foreign policy is a story of
realpolitik and opportunism. At the 1919 Paris Peace Conference, the
US President Woodrow Wilson invoked limited minority rights, while
significantly opposing the principle of racial equality. In the second
world war, Franklin Roosevelt rallied a hitherto isolationist public's
support for the 'Good War' in order to extend America's global reach.
Later, the Carter and Clinton administrations both launched
human-rights missions in order to restore public confidence in the
integrity of government after Watergate and Monicagate. Tony Blair and
Canada's Lloyd Axworthy have followed their vote-catching example.
Official interest in human rights has waxed and waned inversely with
the other 20th-century Western idea,' anticommunism, and at the end of
the Cold War 'human-rights abuse' has replaced the 'red menace' as the
enemy of civilised values.

War-crimes tribunals have traditionally been the cutting edge of such
crusades. The post-second world war Nuremberg and Tokyo trials
established the blueprint for the modern ad hoc tribunals on former
Yugoslavia and Rwanda. From the start, politics impinged openly upon
the legal process, and there were accusations of double standards from
both conservatives ('our generals would have done the same') and from
radicals ('Dresden and Hiroshima were war crimes too'). Some lawyers
questioned the legal basis of the newly created 'crimes against peace'
and 'crimes against humanity'. The Tokyo trial aroused particular
controversy, and the Indian judge Radhabinod Pal, rejected all guilty
verdicts as victors' justice. William Douglas of the US Supreme Court
later wrote of the Tokyo trials: 'It took its law from the creator and
did not act as a free and independent tribunal. It was solely an
instrument of political power.'

The Allied prosecution of German and Japanese leaders was primarily
prompted by political concerns, however high-minded the judges and
vile the crimes of many of those involved. Justice had to be seen to
be done, but within the framework of broader post-war strategies. At
Tokyo, some defendants were scapegoatedwhile a blind eye was turned to
others-notably Emperor Hirohito-in order to bolster American
occupation policies in Japan.

At Nuremberg, evidence of Allied atrocities (e.g. the Soviet massacre
of Poles at Katyn) or aggressive war plans (e.g. Britain's proposed
invasion of Norway) was ignored. And once the political and propaganda
value of the trials began to wane, the Allied authorities simply wound
up the proceedings. Thus, when the lesser tribunals became an obstacle
to the creation of the Federal Republic, the Allies shortened the
sentences of many Nazi war criminals. Most were freed by the
mid-Fifties. History, as we know, is written by the winners. The
ensuing justice is conquerors' justice, so only losers ever stand
trial for war crimes.

Perhaps, as one Tokyo trial judge noted, a lost war is itself a crime.
When Churchill was told that 12 top Nazis had been sentenced to the
gallows after the Nuremberg trials in 1946, he mused to General
Hastings Ismay, 'It shows that if you enter a war, it is supremely
important to win it-if we had lost, we would have been in a pretty
pickle.' After Nato's bombardment of Serbia, these words have a
powerful contemporary resonance.

Just and noble wars are back in fashion and so, as night follows day,
are war-crimes tribunals. A new International Criminal Court looks set
to follow on the heels of the courts dealing with former Yugoslavia
and Rwanda. Supporters of the enterprise argue that modern
humanitarian law can rise above politics and dispense truly impartial
justice. The portents are not good, though.

The courts are far from independent. The Yugoslavia tribunal, for
example, was set up by the UN Security Council in 1993. Since then it
has danced to the tune of the Big Five, especially the more
aggressively interventionist members, America and Britain.
Occasionally the strings show. In 1997, for example, the United States
ruffled the court's feathers when it promised indicted Croats a speedy
trial if they surrendered themselves to The Hague.

A tribunal spokesman complained: 'By making such statements they are
making us look like a politically driven tribunal that you can switch
on and switch off every day, according to political circumstance.'

In reality, that is precisely what happens-the current chief
prosecutor, Louise Arbour, has admitted as much. She is heavily
reliant on Western intelligence to put together prosecution cases and,
as she indicates, Security Council members can either 'slow down the
flow of information or accelerate it' in line with their political
aims.

The Kosovo bombardment stripped away lingering illusions of tribunal
impartiality. The court acted as the judicial arm of Nato, with Louise
Arbour as the Alliance's witchfinder-general. She was glad publicly to
accept a bulging dossier of British intelligence on Kosovo from Robin
Cook.

By contrast, when a delegation from a Paris-based organization tried
to deliver a petition calling for Bill Clinton's indictment as a war
criminal, they were told that the prosecutors were 'too busy' to
receive it. In the end, they had to hand it in to a UN guard on the
gate. Ironically, human-rights courts show precious little regard for
the legal rights of the accused. The Croat general Tihomir Blaskic has
been held in custody for almost three years and still awaits the
outcome of his trial.

In 1997 three Croats spent two months in prison before being released,
because the prosecution could not mount a case against them. The
Croats Dario Kordic and Mario Cerkez were jailed for 18 months before
standing trial and, only last year, charges were dropped against 14
Serbs who had been indicted by Arbour's predecessor, Richard
Goldstone, in 1995.

Among them was a certain Gruban, who was accused of viciously raping
prisoners at the Omarska camp. When he was added to the tribunal's
wanted list, he continued to live openly in the Balkans. This is
hardly surprising, given that 'Gruban' is not a human being but a
fictional character from Miodrag Bulatovic's novel, Hero on a Donkey.

The Gruban-as-rapist hoax apparently began when a local journalist fed
the story to a sensation-hungry American reporter in a Bosnian cafe,
who, in turn, passed the information to The Hague, where it was
'confirmed' by the conveniently anonymous 'Witness F'. It would be
funny if it weren't so tragic.

The author is a joumalist. She is writing a critical history of human
rights.




To: goldsnow who wrote (14555)9/20/1999 4:17:00 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17770
 
Yep... Luzhkov's up the creek --and I see only one 'paddle' who could rescue him:
pacificnews.org

Hey, Rudolph! How do you say 'Zero-tolerance' in Russian? <VBG>