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Kosova Daily Report #1527, 98-08-20
Kosova Information Center
KOSOVA DAILY REPORT #1527
Prishtina, 20 August 1998
CONTENTS
[01] President Rugova Receives EU Commissioner Bonino and UNHCR Official
[02] 380,000 Albanians Displaced from their Homes in Kosova, LDK Says
[03] Overnight Artillery Fire Reported in Gjakova and De^an Areas
[04] Serb Forces Shell Rahovec and Suhareka Villages
[05] Serb Troops Pound with Artillery Fire Vushtrri Villages
[06] Humanitarian Activists Tortured in Serb Custody
[07] Serb Police Detains "Koha Ditore" Correspondent in Gjakova
[08] Serb Police Raids "Mother Teresa" Premises
[09] 1,500 Albanian Refugees Arrive in Overcrowded Mitrovica Today
[10] Four Young Albanian Refugees Arrested in Mitrovica
[11] Police Arrests Albanian in Prishtina
[12] The Case for an Independent Kosova
[01] President Rugova Receives EU Commissioner Bonino and UNHCR Official
PRISHTINA, Aug (KIC) - The President of the Republic of Kosova Dr. Ibrahim
Rugova received yesterday afternoon in Prishtina Ms Emma Bonino, the
European Union (EU) Humanitarian Affairs Commissioner, and her aides,
accompanied by Austria's ambassador to Belgrade, Wolfgang Petritsch.
The grave situation in Kosova, with particular emphasis on the humanitarian
aspect and the plight of displaced people, was discussed in the meeting.
President Ibrahim Rugova said the Serbian offensive should be stopped, and
called for an urgent international intervention to protect the people of
Kosova.
He urged for humanitarian action to relieve the suffering of the hundreds
of thousands of Albanians displaced from their homes in the wake of the
Serbian military and police offensive.
The EU Humanitarian Affairs Commissioner Emma Bonino said she followed
closely the situation in Kosova and expressed her readiness to assist the
displaced population. Preventative measures should be taken in Kosova so
that we do not end up dealing only with the consequences, she stressed.
President Rugova appreciated her visit to Kosova and called for EU to step
in urgently with humanitarian operations here.
Meanwhile, the Kosova President received yesterday the deputy of the UN
High Commissioner, Soren-Jensen Petersen, to discuss the humanitarian
situation and ways to address it.
[02] 380,000 Albanians Displaced from their Homes in Kosova, LDK Says
PRISHTINA, Aug 20 (KIC) - As a result of the Serbian military and police
shelling, destruction and looting of Albanian homes and property this year,
380,246 have been displaced from their homes in Kosova, the Democratic
League of Kosova (LDK) said in a statement today.
17 municipalities of Kosova with a total of 346 villages have been affected
by the Serb aggression, which has turned so many Albanians into internally-
displaced persons (IDP) and refugees, according to the LDK.
Some 50,000 Albanians are living rough in the open in hills and fields,
unable to get out of rings of steel enforced by Serbian troops, the
Presidency of the LDK, the main political force in Kosova, said today.
[03] Overnight Artillery Fire Reported in Gjakova and De^an Areas
PRISHTINA, Aug 20 (KIC) - Serb artillery fire was reported last evening and
overnight in wester Kosova, in the border area with Albania and in the
villages straddling the De^an-Gjakova roadway, from Prejlep to the villages
just outside the town of Gjakova.
Local LDK sources said there was artillery fire launched last evening from
Serb positions on Suka e Biteshit in the direction of the villages in the
De^an area.
An Albanian, whose name has not been made known, was reported wounded near
Prejlep.
A motorized convoy of Serb military and police troops left today Gjakova
for the Qafa e Prushit, near the Kosova-Albania border, whereas Serb
snipers have been positioned along the Gjakov&-De^an roadway.
The humanitarian situation of the displaced population scattered about the
hills in the region of Dushkaj& is appalling, reports said.
LDK sources in Gjakova said Hasan Rama, resident of Ponoshec village of
Gjakov&, has been transferred to the Prishtina hospital in a state of coma.
His family members, who have been prevented from contacting him in the past
few days, fear for his life. Hasan has been reported beaten up severely in
Serb custody.
Meanwhile, Serb police arrested the Koha Ditore correspondent, Musa
Kurhasku, yesterday afternoon at his place in Gjakova. He had his home
raided, and was held for several hours in detention. He was ordered to
report back to the Serb police on 21 August.
[04] Serb Forces Shell Rahovec and Suhareka Villages
One killed and eight wounded Albanians PRISHTINA, Aug 20 (KIC) - Serbian
forces resumed today shelling the villages of Zo^isht& and Opterush&,
municipality of Rahovec, and Samadraxh& of Suhareka municipality, local
sources said.
Today's intensity of the shelling was lower today compared to yesterday's.
LDK sources in Suhareka said the shelling is being done from Serb positions
in Ho^& e Madhe and Landovic&.
Reports said Bekim Dalip Bekteshi (27) from Samadraxh& was killed yesterday,
whereas eight other Albanians wounded - Bajram Bekteshi, Selim Kusha,
Ibrahim Mamaj, Nexhat Cika^i, Fatmir Bala, Osman Cika^i, Visar Bala, and
Muharrem Kryeziu.
Serbian paramilitary units torched the village of Zo^isht& last evening.
Flames and smoke could be seen billowing from the village.
Meanwhile, three Albanians, Hazir Selimaj (44), Zenel Curraj (25) and Sabit
Lushaj (23), who were killed two days ago at Gorozhup near the Kosova-
Albanian border, were buried last evening in their native village if
Grejkoc of Suhareka.
[05] Serb Troops Pound with Artillery Fire Vushtrri Villages
PRISHTINA, Aug 20 (KIC) - The Serbian police/army troops pounded with
artillery guns the Pantina village and adjacent hamlets in the municipality
of Vushtrri ('Vicitrn') today (Thursday) morning.
The LDK Information Commission in Vushtrri said the Albanian settlements
were attacked for about one hour, from 5:30 through 6:30 a.m., today. The
Commission could not say anything about possible casualties by midday.
It reported, however, about a continued campaign of provocations and
intimidation by armed Serb civilians in the area.
Yesterday afternoon, a group of Serb civilians from Prilluzha village set
afire four haystacks belonging to two local Albanians in Stanoc i Ep&rm,
Nebih Duraku and Abdullah Duraku, local LDK sources said.
[06] Humanitarian Activists Tortured in Serb Custody
PRISHTINA, Aug 20 (KIC) - Four local humanitarian workers in the Kamenica
municipality, southern Kosova, were reported detained and subject to severe
torture by the Serbian police on Wednesday.
The LDK chapter in Kamenica said Refik N. Kryeziu, dr. Faredin Sh.
Kryeziu and Ibrahim D. Shurdhani in Roga^ica village, and dr. Izet H. Keka
in Mu^iv&rca village, had their homes raided by Serb police before actually
being detained. They were taken to the police station in the town, where
they were held for several hours and subjected to questioning and beating.
The four activists received grave body injuries and had to be seek medical
treatment, the LDK said.
[07] Serb Police Detains "Koha Ditore" Correspondent in Gjakova
PRISHTINA, Aug 20 (KIC) - Musa Kurhasku, the Gjakova correspondent with the
Prishtina-based Koha Ditore newspaper, was held in Serb custody for several
hours on Wednesday afternoon.
The LDK chapter in Gjakova said Serb policemen searched thoroughly the
house of Musa Kurhasku and seized his equipment and materials, including a
camera and a fax machine he needed to report to his newspaper and the
Albanian Television.
According to the Koha Ditore, Musa Kurhasku had been summoned to the Serb
police station in Gjakova earlier on Wednesday, to intervene about the
release of a Serb allegedly captured by members of the Kosova Liberation
Army (U^K).
He refused to go there, saying that it was not a journalist's
responsibility to act as a broker, because such offices are commonly done
by the Red Cross.
[08] Serb Police Raids "Mother Teresa" Premises
PRISHTINA, Aug 20 (KIC) - The Serbian police broke Wednesday afternoon into
a warehouse of the "Mother Teresa" Charity Organization in Kodra e Trimave
neighborhood in Prishtina.
Ismail Gashi, in charge of the organization's warehouse, was summoned to
show up in the Serb police station in the neighborhood today.
There were some 130 sponge mattresses in the warehouse, dedicated to the
uprooted people sheltered in Prishtina. The Serb policemen reportedly told
the activist that they would face consequences if they actually distributed
the mattresses to the refugees.
[09] 1,500 Albanian Refugees Arrive in Overcrowded Mitrovica Today
PRISHTINA, Aug 20 (KIC) - At least 1,500 Albanians displaced from their
home villages in Skenderaj municipality arrived in the town of Mitrovica
today (Thursday) morning, sources reported.
The LDK chapter in Mitrovica said they were mostly from the villages of
Prekazi i Ep&rm, Mikushnica, Lubavec, Galica and the villages along the
^i^avica footmountains.
According to estimates of the local LDK chapter and human rights workers in
Mitrovica, at last 30.000 Albanians from war-torn areas in central Kosova
have sought shelter in the town and adjacent villages in the wake of the
latest Serb offensives in the area.
Local Albanian structures said food and medical supplies are desperately
needed in the town, which has 21,000 Albanians already dependent on the
Kosova welfare system. If such supplies are not delivered in a couple of
days time, a humanitarian catastrophe is in the making, they warned.
[10] Four Young Albanian Refugees Arrested in Mitrovica
PRISHTINA, Aug 20 (KIC) - Four young Albanians from the villages of
Skenderaj ('Srbica') were arrested by the Serbian police in Mitrovica on
Wednesday.
The LDK chapter in Mitrovica said Behxhet Sejdiu (23) and Bekim Sejdiu (21)
from Runik of Sk&nderaj, Zekim Istogu (25) from Polluzha, and Bahri Hyseni
(25), a student from Izbica, had fled their homes earlier and were
sheltered with their relatives in the town.
[11] Police Arrests Albanian in Prishtina
Albanian arrested on obscure charges of collaboration with the U^K
PRISHTINA, Aug 20 (KIC) - Serbian police arrested today Salih Zariqi in the
Bregu i Diellit neighbourhood in Prishtina, a family member told the KIC.
He said three days ago the police arrested Salih's brother, Vehbi Zariqi,
as well as Salih's sons, Gazmend and Shk&lzen, and their relatives, Albert
Shala and Ekrem Krasniqi.
Salih Zariqi has been arrested on obscure charges of collaboration with the
U^K (Kosova Liberation Army). His house has been reported raided after his
arrest today.
A senior Serbian security officer announced earlier in the week that a huge
campaign of arrests of Albanians ('terrorists') would be carried out in
Prishtina, Podujeva and Mitrovica.
[12] The Case for an Independent Kosova
Janusz Bugajski, associate director of the Center for Strategic and
International Studies in Washington, in The Christian Science Monitor,
August 19, 1998
PRISHTINA, Aug 20 (KIC) - If Kosova ever slips out of Serbia's grip, the
international community will need to weigh the regional impact of the
region's independence, with most policymakers still believing that a
sovereign Kosovo will destabilize the Balkans, Janusz Bugajski notes at the
very outset of his article, echoing what he calls 'conventional wisdom'.
"But an alternative scenario must now be seriously considered: that
without independence the unresolved Albanian question will traumatize
Europe for many years to come."
The director of East European studies at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS) in Washington and a frequent visitor to the
Balkans said conventional wisdom contends that statehood for Kosova will
ignite a series of ethnic and territorial conflicts in the south Balkans,
radicalizing the large Albanian minority in Macedonia and precipitating the
disintegration of this linchpin state.
"The destabilization of any state bordering Kosovo would have wider
ramifications. Analysts worry about the unraveling of the Dayton accords
through the revival of Serb separatism in Bosnia.", Bugajski writes, adding
that a conflict in Macedonia could embroil Bulgaria, Serbia, Albania,
Greece, and Turkey in a replay of the Second Balkan War. "In order to avoid
such scenarios, NATO leaders have adamantly opposed Kosovo's independence.
The main fear in any planned NATO bombing campaign is not the Yugoslav
military reaction but the political impact on Kosovo's status if Belgrade
withdraws its security forces from the province.", concludes the
'conventional wisdom' argument.
"But an alternative view on the Kosovo crisis must now be seriously
weighed: the independence option.", Janusz Bugajski writes. He argues that
Kosova's detachment from Serbia could deal a fatal blow to President
Slobodan Milosevic of 'FRY' and "unleash potentially more constructive
forces in Serbian politics."
"It is the absence of Kosovo's statehood that can be seen as destabilizing
the region by providing opportunities for militant gunmen and criminal
organizations to prosper.", he stresses, adding that Milosevic manipulates
the Kosova question to keep himself in power and to stifle any chances for
political or economic reform throughout rump Yugoslavia.
Milosevic bears "primary responsibility for four wars in the past decade
and if left unchecked he could spark further conflicts in Montenegro and
Macedonia by manipulating the Albanian question.", Bugajski points out,
adding that the loss of Kosova and the collapse of the moribund Yugoslav
economy could provoke an internal conflict in Serbia. "This would weaken
Belgrade's expansionist pretensions and may bring new democrats or pro-
Western figures to the forefront. Even if this fails, then a truncated
Serbia will remain a weak pariah state that no longer threatens its
neighbors."
The legal arguments for maintaining an integral Yugoslavia are "reminiscent
of our [U.S.] obsolete policies in 1991 when four of the eight federal
units declared independence.", the CSIS associate director says. Kosova is
simply the fifth unit that has opted for sovereignty, and Montenegro may be
the next in line, particularly as President Milo Djukanovic has already
threatened to hold a referendum on secession, he notes.
Milosevic's Yugoslavia is not "the successor to the Titoist state and
cannot be treated as a normal legal entity", Bugajski writes.
"Kosovo's statehood, if handled adroitly by the international community,
could help resolve the simmering Albanian question in the south Balkans.
Instead of provoking calls for a Greater Albania it could actually pacify
Albanian demands and allow Europe to increase its influence in the region.
But in order for Kosovo to become a source of regional stability, NATO must
control the process from the very beginning.", the CSIS associate director
sums up his idea, the 'case for an independent Kosovo'.
He goes on to elaborate, noting that once Belgrade is forced to withdraw
its forces from Kosova through some combination of NATO intervention and
Albanian resistance, "then Kosovo should be declared an international
protectorate. Washington and London must take charge in overseeing the
creation of any new Kosovar administration and this must be accomplished in
a much more resolute manner than in Bosnia-Herzegovina."
Under international supervision, "the Prishtina government would need to
commit itself to ensuring a full range of minority rights for Serbs,
Montenegrins, Muslims, and Romas. It would have to renounce any potential
territorial claims to Macedonia, Serbia, or Montenegro, and indeed sign
treaties with its three Slavic neighbors to that effect. It would also need
to commit itself to democratic pluralism, the rule of law, a market economy,
and European integration."
Janusz Bugajski maintains the Ushtria ^lirimtare e Kosov&s (KLA) could then
develop into a Kosova Security Force under a NATO arm and train program
similar to the one in Bosnia. NATO itself would disarm any rogue units and
help patrol the Macedonian and Serbian borders, whereas the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe and the European Union could
dispatch teams of monitors to the country. "Their long-term presence under
a NATO umbrella would help ensure Pristina's compliance with democratic
norms in a range of arenas."
In Macedonia a "multi-ethnic polity" must be promoted with expanded rights
for the Albanian population that would undercut the demands of militants
for unification with Kosova, Bugajski argues.
The international Contact Group has failed to come up with a credible plan
for Kosova, the director of East European studies at the CSIS in Washington
says. "Instead, its empty statements have simply encouraged both Belgrade
and the KLA to continue the war."
Now is the time to lay the foundations for a lasting political and regional
solution, one that will guarantee self-determination for the Albanian
majority while simultaneously pushing Milosevic toward a long-overdue
political suicide.", Janusz Bugajski concludes his 'case for an independent
Kosovo" in the Christian Science Monitor.
Kosova Information Center
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