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


To: D. Long who wrote (9565)5/22/1999 6:04:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 17770
 
Analysis: The war for hearts
and minds

Refugees: Human cost of the conflict

By European Affairs Analyst William Horsley

Nato's air war has brought many harsh denunciations,
especially of Nato's mistakes like the bombing of a
hospital and a prison in Yugoslavia this week.

China said the bombing has resulted
in the greatest human catastrophe
since World War Two. The former
Soviet President Michael Gorbachev
said that politically and morally,
Nato has lost.

The International Herald Tribune, an
American paper published in Europe,
reported that opposition to the
bombing has surfaced in Latin
America, Asia, Africa, and the Middle East - in official
statements, newspaper editorials and public protests.

In British newspapers many letters express outrage at
the number of civilian casualties caused by the bombs.

A common view in the opinion columns, of papers
across Europe and North America is that the war,
although in a just cause, is being bungled. The Times of
London wrote bluntly: "Give war a chance".

Strikes anger

But in Italy and Greece,
public feeling is running
strongly against the bombing
campaign. The past week
saw acts of urban guerrilla
violence inspired by hostility
to what the alliance is doing.

Sweden and Switzerland,
whose diplomatic buildings in
Belgrade were damaged in
the air strikes, now complain
that the bombing is too
indiscriminate.

Against that, the denunciations by Nato spokesmen and
government ministers of Serb atrocities against the
Kosovo Albanians continue to be reported day after day.

A top official of the International War Crimes Tribunal
says up to quarter of a million ethnic Albanian men are
missing, many of them feared dead, in Kosovo.

And the Serbs are now accused of stopping thousands
of would-be refugees from fleeing Kosovo in order to use
them as human shields in the war.

Internal divisions

Still, in Britain, many
contributors to radio phone-in
programmes echo the
criticism of opposition
politicians. They say the
government is raising false
hopes by promising to defeat
President Milosovic and
ensure the safe return of the
refugees to their homes in
Kosovo, when those goals
are looking more and more
unlikely to be achieved this
year.

Internal divisions in Europe are coming into the open.
Germany's Frankfurter Allgemeine newspaper, for
example, criticised Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair for
pretending to be a 'know-all' in his pronouncements
about the conflict.

The pressures of this war, in which civilians have suffered
terribly and the main opposing forces have never even
met on a battlefield, are testing many fixed assumptions.

One is the standing of Nato itself. In Bulgaria, Serbia's
eastern neighbour, the government is giving practical
help to Nato.

Yet opinion polls show many Bulgarians see the Serbs
as victims of excessive Nato force and the public has
grown noticeably cooler towards the idea of the country
joining the alliance.

Another test is of the independence of the media. There
is ample evidence that in Serbia freedom of expression
has been largely stamped out by the state.

But in Nato countries, too, the media must report what
they find out without fear or favour, to uphold the ideals of
a free society.

When so much information about the conflict comes, as
it is bound to do, from governments or Nato sources,
that is much harder to achieve than in normal times.
news.bbc.co.uk