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


To: JBL who wrote (9510)5/22/1999 7:48:00 AM
From: cody andre  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17770
 
The Washington Post is feeling the oats: time to update the CIA "maps" of Washington, DC.



To: JBL who wrote (9510)5/22/1999 11:01:00 AM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 17770
 
'Long exile' for Kosovo
refugees

Nato leaders say the campaign may not end before winter

The head of Nato's humanitarian force in Albania has
warned that it is likely to be a long and difficult task to
return all refugees to Kosovo.

The warning came as Nato
intensified its air campaign, carrying
out 684 sorties over Yugoslavia on
Friday, the highest number so far in
a single day.

In his first full briefing since the
conflict started, Lieutenant-General
John Reith said it could take two
years to repair the devastation
inflicted by Serb forces.

He said: "When the Serbs evicted the
people from Kosovo they did
tremendous damage, particularly to
the outlying villages.

"That will take time to repair, and my
experience from Bosnia was that even two years later,
many of the houses had not been repaired," he added.

The flood of refugees out of Kosovo has meanwhile been
continuing unabated.

Thousands more people crossed into
Albania late on Friday. Most were
from the village of Suvareka, near the
southern town of Prizren.

Some told the BBC they had been
hiding out in forests for over two
months since being expelled from their homes.

Armoured vehicles hit

Taking advantage of good weather,
Nato planes carried out an
unprecedented number of sorties,
hitting a wide range of targets.

The attacks were directed against the
Serbian electricity transmission
system, as well as ammunition storage facilities,
bridges, army barracks, television and radio transmitters.

Nato says that at least 12 tanks were hit in Kosovo, as
well as 11 other armoured vehicles and nine artillery
positions.

Most of Serbia's largest cities were reported to be
without electricity on Saturday morning after Nato planes
dropped graphite bombs on a number of power plants
overnight.

Serb media said 10 workers at one plant to the
southwest of the Yugoslav capital Belgrade were injured
in the raids.

The capital was also said to have been targeted during
the night. Unconfirmed reports speak of a number of
powerful explosions at fuel depots in and around the city.

(Click here to see a map of the latest strikes)

Ground troops

With no breakthrough in sight on the
diplomatic or military fronts, Nato is
facing pressure to make a decision on
sending ground troops into Kosovo.

Nato commander Gen Wesley Clark
reportedly told US military chiefs
there was no guarantee the air campaign against
Yugoslavia would succeed before winter sets in, and a
decision on "other options" was needed soon.

Pentagon spokesman Ken
Bacon said Nato would
probably discuss a plan next
week for a force of up to
50,000 troops to join Nato's
KFOR peacekeeping force -
up from a previously-agreed
figure of 28,000.

Mr Bacon said: "We're going
to need a larger KFOR, and
we want it deployed in
Macedonia as quickly as
possible, because, should
there be a peace agreement quickly ... we need a force
that's ready to go in ... as the Serb forces pull out"

Serbs 'diminished'

The UK Foreign Minister Robin Cook, who met US
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright on Friday, said the
time was nearing when Serb troops in Kosovo would
become so diminished by allied bombing that they could
not mount an organised defence against a NATO ground
force.

He said: "I don't see any sign that the Yugoslav army at
the present rate of attrition is going to hold out until
August or September."

The first Nato F-18 attack aircraft were due to arrive in
Hungary on Saturday.

While Hungarian air space and airports have been used
since the beginning of the operation, these will be the
first planes to take off from Hungarian soil to attack
targets in Yugoslavia.

Other top stories

Analysis: The shifting diplomatic scene
Nato: Prison bombing 'justified'
Analysis: The war for hearts and minds
Anti-Yugoslav protest in Montenegro
Children's tales of horror

news.bbc.co.uk