28 December 2005

Serbs protest Kosovo shootings


KOSOVSKA MITROVICA, Serbia-Montenegro, Dec 27 (AFP)

Some 1,000 Serbs took to the streets of Mitrovica on Tuesday, voicing their anger after two Serbs were shot and wounded in the ethnically divided town in Kosovo.

"The latest attacks show that ethnic cleansing is happening," shouted protesters at the demonstration in the centre of the mainly Serb-populated northern part of the town.

"If UNMIK (the UN mission in Kosovo) cannot guarantee our security, there is only solution left -- the return of Serbian military and police" to the province of Kosovo, they said.

The gathering was held in response to the shooting of two ethnic Serbs in Mitrovica early Monday. Both victims were taken to hospital, and one of them is recovering from an operation on gunshot wounds to his stomach.

Kosovo has been administered by the United Nations and NATO since June 1999, when the alliance's intervention ended a crackdown by Belgrade-controlled forces against separatist ethnic Albanian rebels.

More than 200,000 ethnic Serbs have since fled the province fearing reprisals from Albanians after the 1998-1999 conflict, according to Serbia's government.
Out of the estimated 80,000 Serbs who remain in Kosovo, some 30,000 live in enclaves in the central part of the province, as ethnic tensions remain high.

Albanians, who outnumber Serbs and other minorities in Kosovo by more than nine to one, are seeking independence from Serbia in the recently opened talks on the province's future status.

Kosovo key issue in 2006: Italian FM

RELIEF WEB (SWITZERLAND)

 

Source: Agence France-Presse (AFP)

Date: 27 Dec 2005

 

BELGRADE, Dec 27 (AFP) - The future status of UN-administered Kosovo province will be the key issue in international political discussions next year, Italian Foreign Minister Gianfranco Fini said here Tuesday.

 

"The issue of Kosovo will be the key one in 2006... Everything should be done to solve this problem peacefully by political means," Fini said after a series of talks with top Serbian officials in Belgrade.

 

In November, the UN's special Kosovo envoy, Martti Ahtisaari, began a mission to resolve the status of the province, which legally remains a part of Serbia. First direct talks between Belgrade and Pristina, the Kosovo capital, were expected in late January.

 

"The solution for the province should be reached through negotiations, with a European character," Fini said, adding that Italy would propose an "active political role for the European Union in the talks."

 

Kosovo became a UN protectorate in 1999 after NATO bombing ended a Serbian crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatists who took up arms against the regime of the then Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic to demand independence.

 

"It will not be like before 1999 and there should be no division of Kosovo," said Fini.

 

Fini will travel to Kosovo on Wednesday to visit Italian troops, part of the NATO-led peacekeeping force (KFOR) stationed in the province.

Terrorists said to be getting aid in Balkans

HOUSTON CHRONICLE (USA), Dec. 27, 2005, 2:35AM

 

Crime gangs that control the smuggling routes are making their infiltration easier

 

By GREGORY KATZ Houston Chronicle Foreign Service

 

BELGRADE, SERBIA - A hidden alliance between terror networks and organized crime gangs that control heavily used smuggling routes in the Balkans is making it easier for terrorists to infiltrate Western Europe, according to law enforcement officials and intelligence experts.

 

In addition, prosecutors in Serbia believe that in some cases the money earned by people traffickers is used to support terrorist activities in Europe, which has been hit by several major terrorist attacks in the last two years, with many others prevented by police raids.

 

A key problem is lax border controls throughout the region. Many borders, such as the one between Romania and Serbia, are wide open to gangs that smuggle people, heroin and goods.

 

Europe's battle to contain the spread of international terrorism has been hobbled by such porous borders, which each year allow tens of thousands of undocumented immigrants to enter. So many people are sneaking into Europe that authorities admit they do not know exactly who resides in their countries, complicating the effort to prevent more terrorist attacks.

 

"This is a paradise for al-Qaida," said Marko Nicovic, former police chief in the Serbian capital Belgrade and a director of the International Narcotic Enforcement Officers Association. "For Europe, it can be a disaster at any time because the authorities don't know who is there and they don't know who is who. The attacks in Madrid and London showed that."

 

Traveling freely

 

Once illegal migrants reach Serbia overland from Eastern Europe, police say they can easily cross into Bosnia and then Slovenia, thus entering the European Union. At that point, they can take advantage of weak or nonexistent border controls to travel freely to France, Spain, Germany and other countries on the continent.

 

Police officials believe that most of the migrants are law-abiding people looking for work, but they caution that the migration gives terrorist gangs a way to move sleeper cells into the West while also fueling tensions between Western Europe's Muslims, the fastest growing minority on the continent, and the rest of society.

 

These tensions surface in a number of ways: the deadly attacks on transit systems in Madrid and London, intense rioting in France, death threats against secular politicians in the Netherlands, and legal battles over the right to wear Muslim scarves and headgear to public schools.

 

While smuggling gangs are using Serbia as a transit point, some Muslim militants seems to have established a base in neighboring Bosnia.

 

Officials warn that several hundred militants who came to Bosnia to fight on behalf of Muslims there during the war in the 1990s have remained in the country to attack the West.

 

In October, police in Bosnia uncovered an apparent plot to blow up the British Embassy and found a large cache of weapons and explosives along with propaganda vowing to retaliate for the U.S.-and-British-led invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan.

 

A Swede and a Dane were also arrested in that raid, and there were follow-up arrests in Sweden that suggested the Bosnian extremists had operational ties to Western Europe, investigators said.

 

Disturbing pairing

 

Magnus Ranstorp, a specialist at the Swedish National Defense College who testified before the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, said the presence of Islamic militants inside Bosnia makes it an attractive gateway into Europe for terrorists.

 

"They came in ten years ago, that was the first warning signal, it was the embryo of what became al-Qaida in Europe," he said. "The Iranians are supporting activity there, and the Balkans have become the crossroads where we see the merger of Islamic extremist groups who reach out to organized crime groups."

 

Ranstorp said well-established organized crime networks in the region provide the terrorist gangs with routes for people smuggling and with phony identification documents.

 

"People being smuggled in add to the security threat," he said. "Most are economic migrants but hand-in-hand with that are people in organized crime who allow terrorism to be possible. They move in the same circles and need the same things. If you want to tackle terrorists, you have to tackle the supporting environment, the organized crime rings and the human trafficking rings."

 

The migrants enter Europe in many ways. Some travel on land through Serbia and the other countries of the former Yugoslavia.

 

Others take trawlers or dilapidated fishing boats across the Mediterranean bound for southern Spain or Italy. Still others simply fly into the continent's many hub airports.

 

'New generation of jihadis'

 

A large number of immigrants formally apply for political asylum in their new countries, giving them the right to a legal review that can take years. Others destroy their identity documents, making it difficult for authorities to determine their nationality.

 

Many come from predominantly Muslim countries like Morocco, Pakistan and Afghanistan where jihadis committed to waging holy war against the West are active. This sentiment has grown in ferocity since the United States and Britain invaded Iraq two years ago, according to analysts and enforcement agents.

 

"There is clear, unmistakable evidence that the level of terrorist activity that has killed and injured people has soared to unprecedented levels since we invaded Iraq," said Larry Johnson, a former CIA agent and State Department counter-terrorism specialist now working in the private sector.

 

"Iraq is creating a new generation of jihadis looking for places to live in Europe," Johnson said, "and they have this festering resentment that is usually at the core of terrorism. They will take up residence with existing communities or form new ones in Europe.

 

"It doesn't augur for a great future."

 

Serbian investigators maintain they have uncovered a prime example of the cozy relationship between terrorism and people smugglers. It involves a Bangladeshi suspect believed by prosecutors to be making more than $150,000 per week bringing people into Western Europe through clandestine routes.

 

Training camps in Bosnia

 

Mioljub Vitorovic, the Serbian special prosecutor for organized crime cases, said he believes, but cannot prove, that some of this money was being paid to support the families of suicide bombers who have carried out attacks in Europe. He also believes a number of jihadis from Bangladesh have gathered at training camps inside Bosnia.

 

The prosecutor complained that the suspect, whom he declined to name, appears to have some high-level protection because he has been able to flee whenever police are closing in.

 

Prosecutors in several countries are gathering evidence about the gang, he said.

 

"This is a huge case involving Sri Lankans, Pakistanis and Bangladeshis, and the whole region is looking for the leader of the operation, who is this Bangladeshi," Vitorovic said. "He was involved during the Bosnian war and he's using his connections to bring people across the borders. We have information about the money he is making. This is from listening to his mobile phone conversations."

 

He said he had warned intelligence officials in Western Europe about the threat posed by this people-smuggling operation but was ignored.

 

That changed, he said, after the July 7 suicide attacks on London's transit system, carried out by British Muslims linked to overseas groups, revealed how dangerous the situation had become.

 

"Now they are paying much more attention to the situation here," he said.

 

'Using all channels'

 

Serbian Border Police concede they are outmanned and outgunned in the losing battle against well-organized smugglers.

 

"It's very easy for them to cross the Danube," said Col. Dusan Zlokas, chief of the Serbian Border Police. "We need more boats, we need radar, we need thermal imaging, we need binoculars with night vision, we need everything. We don't have the technical capacity to provide border security."

 

He cited the arrest in Serbia in March of a Moroccan accused of taking part in the deadly 2004 attacks on the Madrid train system that killed nearly 200 people as proof that international terrorists are using Serbia as a transit point.

 

"The biggest number of recruited terrorists is coming from this illegal immigrants community," he said. "It is a very vulnerable society and easy to recruit in. For sure, this jeopardizes Western Europe and the U.S.

 

"This is the crossroads of the trade in illegal immigrants, weapons and drugs and no one can say terrorists cannot pass. They are using all channels."

First phase of reconstruction process successfully completed

KiM Info Newsletter 25-12-05 www.kosovo.com

Reconstruction Implementation Commission for Orthodox Religious Sites in
Kosovo

PRESS RELEASE

21 December 2005

The Reconstruction Implementation Commission (RIC) announces the completion
of the works of protection and consolidation carried out in 30 Orthodox
religious sites damaged in March 2004. The RIC considers that it has fully
achieved its goal of protecting the sites against further deterioration
before the arrival of winter.

The RIC began work in June 2005 as a result of an agreement between the
Serbian Orthodox Church (SOC) and the Provisional Institutions of Self
Government (PISG) to repair Orthodox sites damaged in March 2004. The PISG
has funded interventions at all sites except the Church of St Nicholas in
Prizren, which was supported by a generous donation from the US office.

Temporary roof over the burned church of St. Nicholas in Pristina

Between June and September 2005, the RIC prepared and tendered emergency
interventions for 30 sites, which began implementation in October 2005. More
extensive works of reconstruction and preservation will proceed in 2006. As
part of a long-term conservation programme, the RIC organized an expert
mission to survey wall paintings within the damaged sites.

The RIC is headed by an international expert, Ms. Emma Carmichael, appointed
by the Council of Europe (CoE) and includes representatives from the
Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sports (MCYS), the SOC and the Institutions
for the Protection of Monuments of Kosovo and Belgrade.

International partners, the CoE, UNMIK and the European Commission, have
expressed their satisfaction not only with the concrete work of the RIC, but
also with the outstanding collaboration demonstrated by PISG in Kosovo, SOC,
Institutions in Serbia as well as by the Albanian, Serbian and international
professionals and institutions who have made this work possible. The RIC has
proven to be the most effective mechanism of cooperation between the various
stakeholders in the field of cultural heritage in Kosovo and all local and
international partners have fully committed to continuing the works in 2006.

SUMMARY OF INTERVENTIONS CARRIED OUT DURING 2005

. Protective fences were placed in the churches of St. Petka in Donja
Sipasnica, Presentation of the Virgin and St. Florus and Laurus in Lipljian.

. Protection measures and consolidation of remains in the sites of the
destroyed churches of St. Elias in Bistazin, Assumption of the Holy Virgin
in Djakovica and the cemetery chapel of St. Lazar in Piskote, where a large
number of graves were also repaired.

. Further extensive protection measures, including provisional coverings,
were also made in the churches of St. Nicholas in Pristina, Cathedral of St.
George in Prizren and St. Elias in Vucitrn. Extensive interventions in these
churches is programmed for 2006.

. Minor repairs in the churches of St. Petka in Vitina, St. Michael in
Obilic, St. Nicholas in Kosovo Polje, Holy King Uros in Urosevac and St.
Michael in Stimlje have been completed.

. Major consolidation and stabilization works have been carried out in the
churches of the Holy Virgin Ljeviska, St Nicholas (Tutic's), St George
(Runovic's), St. Saviour and St. Kyriake in Prizren, St. Joanikije at Devic,
Presentation of the Holy Virgin in Belo Polje, St. Sava in Mitrovica and St.
Andrew in Podujevo. Internal and external repairs will be continued during
next year.

. Churches and cemeteries repaired in the sites of St. Peter and Paul in
Talinovac, St. Elias in Varosh Selo and Serbian town Cemetery and Chapel in
Urosevac.

. Complete reconstruction works were done in the churches of the Birth of
the Holy Virgin in Softovic, St. Peter and Paul in Istog, St. John the
Baptist in Pec and the refectory of the church of St. Kyriake in Brnjaca.

Attacks leave two injured in Kosovo

FoNet and Beta News Agencies, Belgrade, December 26, 2005 09:23 -> 12:30

 

KOSOVSKA MITROVICA -- Monday - Dejan Maksimovic and Branislav Antovic where injured in two armed attacks in Kosovska Mitrovica late last night.

 

An unidentified shooter fired through the window the Maksimovic family home and wounded Dejan Maksimovic's leg. The attacker fled from the scene and no one else was injured.

 

In the second incident, Branislav Antovic was shot several times while working the overnight security shift at the Vodovod Ibar public parking grounds, and was taken to the Kosovska Mitrovica Hospital where doctors operated on him last night. Maksimovic is receiving treatment at the hospital as well.

 

"Antovic was shot twice in the stomach, several of his internal organs were damaged and he was bleeding heavily. A four hour operation was done and he is currently is stable but critical condition. Dejan Maksimovic was shot in the shin. The injuries are serious, but he is stable." Milan Ivanovic, deputy director of the Kosovska Mitrovica Hospital, said.

 

Maksimovic told Beta that the attacker shot at him from the terrace of his own apartment. He said that he was watching television in the room in which his parents were sleeping.

 

"I heard steps and sounds coming from the terrace and went out to see what it was. I saw a silhouette of a person holding something in their hands. I could not see anything in the dark. I then went back towards the room and heard the shots." Maksimovic said.

 

The police have yet to give a statement regarding the attacks and investigations are ongoing.

 

Violence "will not be tolerated"

 

US Office Chief in Pristina, Philip Goldberg, said that disorder or violence in any form will not be tolerated in Kosovo.

 

"We are clear in the principles which the Contact Group has introduced when Kosovo is in question, and NATO, along with the international and Kosovo police forces, will do everything to prevent any eventual violence in Kosovo." Goldberg said, adding that "Absolute security cannot be guaranteed in the US, much less in Kosovo."

 

A message to the Serbs

 

Goran Bogdanovic, member of Belgrade's Kosovo status discussion team, has condemned the attacks and said that they represent a message that Serbs are not wanted in this Kosovo city.

 

"I am not going to prejudge who could be responsible for the attacks while the police and institutions have yet to make any official statements, but there are many indications as to where the attacks could be coming from. We know who has pointed fingers at Kosovska Mitrovica thus far. We know who has, on several occasions, tried to cross into northern Kosovska Mitrovica from the southern region, and last night's attack is just another attempt to try and destabilize the only larger city in Kosovo where there are still Serbs living and has remained multi-ethnic." Bogdanovic said, keeping his statement ambiguous.

 

He said that last night's attacks, other more recent attacks on Serbs in Strpac, the turning off of electricity going to Serbian villages in Kosovo, all have one goal in mind; to demoralize the Serbian community and get them thinking about leaving, coincidentally, at the same time that discussions for the future status of Kosovo are set to begin.

27 December 2005

Two Serbs wounded in attacks in northern Kosovo

Associated Press, Dec 26, 2005 4:46 AM

 

KOSOVSKA MITROVICA, Serbia-Montenegro-Two ethnic Serbs were wounded early Monday in separate attacks in U.N.-run Kosovo, police officials and doctors said.

 

The incidents happened around 0100 GMT in the Serb-held part of Kosovska Mitrovica, an ethnically divided town in the north of the province.

 

Police said that one person was seriously injured and the other lightly. Spokesman Sami Mehmeti gave no other details, but said there was no immediate indication that the attacks were ethnically motivated.

 

According to Serb sources in Kosovska Mitrovica, unknown assailants first shot at 35-year-old Branislav Antovic, a guard for the local authorities.

 

Local doctor Milan Ivanovic said Antovic was in life-threatening condition following four hours of surgery.

 

Dejan Maksimovic, 24, was shot in the leg while at his home in the ethnically mixed Bosnjacka Mahala part of town. Maksimovic told Belgrade-based Beta news agency that the attacker climbed to his balcony and fired at him.

 

Ivanovic said Maksimovic also underwent surgery but was in stable condition.

 

Kosovo remains tense years after a Serb-Albanian war over the region. There are fears that tensions could soar in the run-up to U.N.-brokered talks next year on the province's future status.

Coordinating Center president visits monasteries in Metohija


KIM Info Service, Decani, December 23, 2005

As part of her tour of Kosovo and Metohija, Dr. Sanda Raskovic-Ivic, the president of the Coordinating Center for Kosovo and Metohija, visited several Serbian Orthodox monasteries in Metohija yesterday and today, including Devic, the Pec Patriarchate, Gorioc and Visoki Decani. During her discussions with the monks and nuns of those monasteries, Ms. Raskovic-Ivic learned first-hand of the difficulties confronting these monastic communities, which have lived in almost complete isolation for the past six years under the constant military protection of KFOR, and promised them help and support.

In Visoki Decani Monastery Ms. Raskovic-Ivic held an extended discussion with Vicar Bishop Teodosije of Lipljan, the head of the monastery and the vice-chair of the Council for Kosovo and Metohija of the Serbian Orthodox Church, and Protosingel Sava, sharing her views with regard to the future protection of Serbian Orthodox monasteries in Kosovo and Metohija. Bishop Teodosije emphasized that the Church is vitally interested in the protection of her faithful and holy shrines in Kosovo and Metohija, and that the Serbian Orthodox monasteries in this region are not only valuable historical and cultural monuments of global significance but also living monastic communities that need long-term, internationally guaranteed protection. He noted that he was extremely pleased that a task group for the protection of spiritual and cultural heritage has been formed within the Serbian negotiating team, adding that it is essential to work together on discovering optimal solutions in the spirit of the agreement achieved at a joint session of the negotiating team and the Council for Kosovo on December 6.

Ms. Raskovic-Ivic emphasized that in addition to the issue of decentralization in upcoming talks about the Province special attention will be dedicated to defining the best ways of protecting the Serbian cultural heritage in Kosovo and Metohija, adding that expert cooperation with representatives of the Church is very important and necessary. She also expressed interest in the restoration process being implemented by a commission under the supervision of a Council of Europe, in which Bishop Teodosije represents the Serbian Orthodox Church. He informed Ms. Raskovic-Ivic of what had been accomplished thus far as well as of plans for the next year.

After a tour of the new monastery kitchen presently being built with funds provided by the Coordinating Center for Kosovo and Metohija and the new dairy barn, Ms. Raskovic-Ivic and her associates continued on to Prizren and Gracanica.

Aleksandra Fulgosi, Nenad Trajkovic, Dragan Lukic and Zoran Mujbegovic, Ms. Raskovic-Ivic's associates, accompanied her on her visit to Serbian monasteries.

-----

Italian chief of staff admiral di Paola visits Visoki Decani Monastery

KIM Info Service, Decani, December 23, 2005

Following the visit of the delegation of the Coordinating Center for Kosovo and Metohija, a senior delegation of the Italian Army visited Visoki Decani Monastery. The delegation was headed by Italian chief of staff admiral Giampaolo di Paloa and general Castagnetti. The Italian military officials were also accompanied by KFOR commander in chief general Giuseppe Valotto and his local commanding officers.

The Italian senior officers expressed their personal admiration for the beauty of the monastery, emphasizing its importance for the cultural heritage of Europe and the world. Admiral di Paola strongly emphasized that KFOR military forces will continue to protect religious sites in Kosovo and Metohija as long as necessary, expressing the hope that in the meanwhile the spirit of tolerance and respect toward Christian cultural monuments would be established.

Admiral di Paola stressed that the protection of monasteries in Kosovo is an important priority for the Italian army, which currently has been entrusted with command of three world peacekeeping missions: Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo and Afghanistan.

Wishing his senior guests a happy Christmas and new year's holiday, Bishop Teodosije once again took the opportunity to thank the Italian Army for the dedication of its soldiers in protecting the Serbian cultural heritage in Metohija.

Next week Italian foreign minister Fini is expected to visit Visoki Decani Monastery with his associates as part of his visit to KFOR troops in Kosovo and Metohija.

-----

Kosovo Ombudsperson: Minorities who fled Kosovo in 1999 are being denied access to proceeds from KTA Privatization

Ombudsperson's office, Pristina

PRISTINA, Kosovo, Dec 23 —Before getting on a plane to leave Kosovo today, Kosovo Ombudsperson, Mr. Marek Antoni Nowicki, wrote one last letter to UN head, SRSG Soren Jessen-Petersen, urging him to address complaints from former employees of Kosovo’s “socially-owned enterprises” (SOE’s) who say they are too frequently unable to profit from the on-going privatization process.

These mainly Serbian complainants contend they were obliged to leave Kosovo or were dismissed from their jobs after 1999, and were unable to be employed when the Kosovo Trust Agency initiated privatization proceedings (May 2003).

Without proving that they were employed (by the SOE’s) for a period of three years and without proving that they left their jobs because of discrimination, these workers, who, in some cases, had been SOE employees in the former Yugoslavia for 25 or more years, have been denied proceeds owed to them from the sales of the privatized socially-owned enterprises.

According to an UNMIK Regulation on the privatization process of Kosovo’s socially-owned enterprises, the complainants are allowed to submit their concerns to the Special Chamber of the Supreme Court on Kosovo-Trust Agency-Related Matters, and if they can prove that they would have been employed had they not experienced discrimination, they are then qualified for a list of eligible employees entitled to receive payments in connection with the privatization process.

Although many have lodged complaints with this body, these complainants have had obvious difficulties proving that they suffered from discrimination.

The Kosovo Ombudsperson contends the burden of proof is, however, with the socially-owned businesses to explain why these able workers were not allowed to continue working at their former jobs after 1999 - something that is in line with current basic European Anti-Discrimination standards.

Indeed, even Kosovo’s own Anti-Discrimination Law holds to a similar premise.

Because the international community has so often talked about moving Kosovo towards “European Standards” where rule of law is concerned, the Kosovo Ombudsperson has asked the SRSG, Mr. Jessen-Petersen, to amend the UNMIK regulation on privatization to assure that the privatization law will comply with these European standards.

“Asking former employees to prove discrimination in the context of this privatization process is in flagrant contradiction with generally accepted principles,” the Ombudsperson said, in his last public statement before his departure from Kosovo.

UNMIK Boss Gives Up on Human Rights for Kosovo

ANTIWAR BLOG (USA), Fri Dec 23, 2005

 

Marek Antoni Nowicki, ombudsmen for Kosovo, is notable for being one of the very few international officials to have remained in the UN mission there from the very beginning. But now he's on the way out, reports ADN Kronos.

 

He's also remarkable for being one a very few officials who consistently has stood up for the rights of the people of Kosovo, reminding a disinterested outside world of the chronic problems faced by the province's minorities. And Nowicki has not been afraid to criticize the UN administration for its failings, either.

 

During his tenure, Nowicki was one of the few UNMIK officials to win the respect and trust of all of Kosovo's ethnic communities because he did a rare thing: he listened to their problems. He was impartial. He tried to help the voiceless common people when the state or other groups treated them unfairly. Most fundamentally, he was respected because he was an international, and not from one of the rival ethnic groups.

 

You can read his interview with Balkanalysis.com here.

 

This is why, without being self-aggrandizing, Nowicki wisely noted that "the situation is likely to get worse unless the international community appoints a new human rights watchdog," according to the ADN Kronos report.

 

However, UNMIK boss Soren Jessen-Petersen - an avowed friend of the murderous war criminal Ramush Haradinaj - has decided to replace Nowicki by granting "human rights supervision to local ethnic Albanian authorities, a move that Novicky considers premature."

 

At the same time Jessen-Petersen, who has "wide arbitrary powers in the province," has decided, contrary to the UN's mandate and Kosovo's legal status, that he will create "Kosovo justice and police ministries, under majority ethnic Albanians' control."

 

Anyone who thinks that granting human rights protection responsibilities to a partisan ethnic group widely feared (for good reason) by another has got to be smoking something very potent indeed.

 

And anyone who thinks that the same people who helped mastermind the March 2004 anti-Serb pograms can be trusted to exercise their duties responsibly and fairly is either deluded or a delighted supporter of full ethnic cleansing in Kosovo.

 

To sum up, it is all too clear that the UNMIK is looking to save its own hide from local Albanians who perceive it as an obstacle to independence. By placing the courts, the cops and the human rights observers in the latter's hands, they are paving the way for a fait accompli- the removal of all minorities from Kosovo, which will render moot the idea of a "negotiated solution," leaving Belgrade with nothing to protect save a heritage without a remaining population. And the UNMIK staff is making sure there will be no one left to call them on it, while they can move on to another high-paying job with a similar institutional protection from accountability somewhere else in the world. These people are truly reprehensible.

 

Posted by: Christopher Deliso on Dec 23, 05 | 3:59 am

Kosovo looks set for 'conditional independence'

ISN (SWITZERLAND)  (24/12/05)

 

As both formal and informal behind-the-scenes talks about Kosovo's future status begin, the member countries of the powerful Contact Group seem to have reached a consensus that Kosovo should be granted "conditional independence".

 

By Tim Judah in London and Paris for ISN Security Watch

 

Though UN officials have recently announced that talks concerning the status of Serbia's UN-administered province of Kosovo would begin in earnest in January, ISN Security Watch has learned that much of the real work is already being done behind the scenes, with intense discussions between key countries involved in the region and Serbian and Kosovo Albanian leaders.

 

Over the past few weeks, a series of meetings, both formal and informal, have taken place in key capitals - including the Serbian capital, Belgrade, and the Kosovo capital, Pristina - as diplomats attempt to shape a deal for Kosovo, bolstering the work being done by former Finnish president Martti Ahtisaari, who has been chosen to head the UN-led status negotiations.

 

Since the end of the Kosovo war in 1999, the province of some two million people has been under the jurisdiction of the UN, though it legally remains a part of Serbia. Its population is over 90 per cent ethnic Albanian. They have made it clear they want nothing less than full independence for Kosovo.

 

Serbia's official position is that Kosovo can have "more than autonomy but less than independence".

 

Members of the Serbian negotiation team, Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica and President Boris Tadic, had proposed earlier this month that Kosovo be divided into Albanian and Serbian areas.

 

According to the Serbian plan, the Albanian areas would be self-governing and independent in all but name, while the Serbian ones would remain linked to Belgrade and the Serbian flag would fly once again on Kosovo's frontiers.

 

In parallel to this, the Serbian leadership has also decided that it would be most advantageous to argue their Kosovo case along legal lines - that is to say that Kosovo is de jure part of Serbia and thus its international frontiers cannot be changed without Serbia's consent.

 

However, Kosovo's Albanian leaders are demanding that the province be given full independence in recognition of their right to self-determination.

 

Over the last few weeks, there have been several meetings - including one between the Contact Group, which was set up to coordinate policy during the Balkan wars in the early 1990s, and Ahtisaari - which have yielded significant results. While Ahtisaari is now the official Kosovo mediator, real power lies with the countries of the Contact Group.

 

There appears to be a considerable unity of purpose among the Contact Group members. France and the US, for example, so often at loggerheads over the past few years, have no major disagreement over Kosovo. Russia, too, has been described by diplomats as extremely cooperative over Kosovo. If Serbian leaders were hoping to find backing from the traditionally friendly Russians there is no evidence thus far that they will get it.

 

Representatives of the Contact Group countries have decided that the best solution for Kosovo is that it be given so called "conditional independence".

 

This means that the sovereign link with Serbia will be broken but that restrictions on Kosovo's independence will remain for a transitional period. These could include, for example, no army and awarding reserve powers to a representative of the international community. The result would be a slimmed down and more focused version of the model that exists in Bosnia and Herzegovina, which is effectively governed by the international community's High Representative, who has sweeping powers.

 

Diplomats who have talked to ISN Security Watch, on condition of anonymity, say the only disagreement among the Contact Group members is over speed and tactics.

 

"We all know, more or less, where we are going but we just have to be careful of the language used in public," one source said.

 

At the moment, officials from Contact Group countries say publicly that what they want is an agreement made between and mutually acceptable to Serbs and Albanians. Yet, privately, everyone knows that Serbs and Albanians will never be able to agree on the status of Kosovo.

 

France is less willing to openly say that the Contact Group countries are in favor of conditional independence because it fears that to do so might prompt the Serbs to withdraw from talks before they have even properly started.

 

By contrast, the British believe that the sooner the "I" word (for independence) is pronounced, the more flexible the Albanians will become. The British theory, according to informed sources, is that given a guarantee that independence (conditional or otherwise) is coming, the Albanians will be more amenable to granting the Kosovo Serbs concessions such as extensive decentralization.

 

As to whether moving Kosovo towards independence might provoke a nationalist radicalization of Serbia, one source in favor of moving faster rather than slower, simply sums up the Serbian dilemma as one of "Belarus or Brussels". That is to say that Serbia has a choice between renewed isolation or continuing along its current path towards European integration.

 

It is clear to Serbian leaders that US policymakers have little sympathy for the Serbian efforts to keep Kosovo. However, what is unclear is that there appears to be no compelling reason (other than realpolitik,) as to why the US should favor independence for the Kosovo Albanians but oppose it for Iraqi Kurds, for instance.

 

Serbs have looked for support in meetings in Moscow and with the French. The Russians, while promising Serbian leaders that they would oppose anything Belgrade does not agree with, say in private talks with their western counterparts that they will not oppose conditional independence for Kosovo.

 

France then was perhaps the last best hope for the Serbian leadership, but here too, in a series of meetings this month, the Serbs have been disappointed. According to ISN Security Watch sources, the Serbs were told that France would support Serbian interests but that those interests had to be realistic. Holding on to Kosovo, in any form, was not considered realistic.

 

In public and private, the Serbs are now pursuing different lines of attack. Predrag Simic, Serbia and Montenegro's ambassador to France and a member of the Serbian Kosovo negotiating team, evokes the situation leading up to the Second World War to argue against independence for Kosovo.

 

"In 1938," he says, the Western powers, fearful of Hitler, accepted his demand to annex the Sudetenland, the predominantly German inhabited area of Czechoslovakia. But this appeasement "brought neither peace nor security to Europe".

 

However, in private, according to western diplomatic sources, Serbian President Tadic is exploring a more flexible agenda. He wants any settlement to secure the future of the Kosovo Serbs and wants to try and steer proponents of conditional independence into making sure that if this cannot be avoided then, at least for the foreseeable future, Kosovo will have no army or highly symbolic seat at the UN.

 

But Western diplomats are fearful of what they call the "disaster scenario", which foresees the talks failing to gain traction and hardliners on either side opting for violence.

 

The disaster scenario sees either Serbian or Albanian hardliners provoking an exodus from the Serbian enclaves in Kosovo. There are some100,000 Serbs in Kosovo, of which 30,000 live in the solidly Serbian north, while the rest are scattered in enclaves in central and southern Kosovo.

 

Albanian hardliners could decide to attack the enclaves and provoke the flight of the Serbs there, so as to prevent the areas from becoming autonomous regions that would remain, in their view, like Serbian claws in a future independent Kosovo.

 

By contrast Serbian hardliners could seek to provoke a Serbian exodus from the enclaves in a bid to solidify the Serbian population of the north. Their hope would be that many years down the line the de facto partition that already exists along the Ibar river would one day be recognized as the international frontier between the part of Kosovo that Serbia managed to save and the Albanian part, which would be independent.

 

It is precisely because they want to avert such a disaster scenario that the diplomats are now talking intensively to the Serbs and Albanians and among themselves.

 

Indeed, the message diplomats are now delivering to the Kosovo Albanians might come as a surprise to some. According to one source, the Albanians have been warned not to let hardliners provoke violence, but they have also been told that since conditional independence is the aim, "The talks are not about the status of Kosovo. What they are really about then, is negotiating the status of the Serbs in Kosovo," the source said.

From Albanian target practice to gifts of goats, NATO commanders find expanded horizons

Associated Press, Dec 22, 2005 6:55 AM

 

ZALL HERR, Albania-After the crack Albanian unit had blasted a hillside with weapons, the military display came to a startling climax: soldiers marched into the firing range, hoisted targets on their heads or tucked under their arms, and stood square-jawed while their colleagues opened fire.

 

Clearly, the elite commando unit was out to impress.

 

But the spectators were no ordinary bunch. They included NATO's Supreme Allied Commander Gen. James L. Jones and other top officers, on the last leg of a tour that had taken them to the wintry hills overlooking Kabul, the heart of Africa, and Algeria's Mediterranean shore.

 

The five-day, six-nation tour that ended this week illustrated NATO's ongoing struggle to evolve from a Cold War defender of Western Europe to a global security force whose new duties will range from peacekeeping to humanitarian assistance and the fight against terrorism.

 

For their part, the Albanians wanted to demonstrate that their army will be up to NATO standards by 2008, when Albania hopes to join the Western alliance.

 

"This is confidence shooting, the hardest shooting of all," explained a proud Albanian commander.

 

To further demonstrate their prowess, the sharpshooters turned their backs, bent over, and fired from between their legs at the targets held by their unflinching colleagues, as the NATO officers looked on with openmouthed dismay.

 

[...]

 

On Monday, Jones celebrated his 62nd birthday in Albania. A bone-crunching drive over potholed roads took him out of Tirana, the capital, to the commando base where senior Albanian officers serenaded him with a rendition of "Happy Birthday."

 

The NATO visitors may have preferred the Albanians' singing to their training techniques. One shocked European officer said he'd never seen anything like the commandos' shooting display in his long military career.

 

Jones tried to be diplomatic.

 

"The last thing that I ever wanted to do when I was commander in the Marine Corps was have to write a letter to a mother or a father or family whose son or daughter had just died in a stupid training accident," Jones said.

25 December 2005

Macedonia's president says border guarantees needed for Kosovo deal

Associated Press, Dec 22, 2005 11:33 AM

 

SKOPJE, Macedonia-Macedonian President Branko Crvenkovski on Wednesday said any deal on the future status of neighboring Kosovo must come with guarantees that the province's borders will remain unchanged.

 

Kosovo claims some 2,000 hectares (about 5,000 acres) of disputed Macedonian territory, since a 2001 border agreement between Macedonia and the former Yugoslavia.

 

"We will accept and support any decision that will come out of the negotiations between Belgrade and Pristina that will be backed by the international community," Crvenkovski said in an annual speech to parliament.

 

"But, Macedonia insists on clear guarantees from the international community, above all from Brussels and Washington, on the inviolability of the borders and territorial integrity of our country, regardless of Kosovo's final status."

 

The United Nations has administered Kosovo since a 1999 NATO bombing campaign halted a Serb crackdown on the province's majority ethnic Albanian community.

 

Serbia wants to retain formal control over Kosovo in the future while the province's ethnic Albanians insist on independence.

 

Talks set to begin in late January are intended to resolve the conflict,

 

Also Wednesday, Albanian President Sali Berisha held talks in Athens with Greek Prime Minister Costas Caramanlis, reportedly covering issues of regional security, including Kosovo.

 

Berisha was returning from a visit to Iraq, where Albania has a small troop presence.

Ancient Blood Feuds Resurface In Kosovo

ONASA-AFP (BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA FEDERATION), Dec 22, 2005 8:27 PM

 

PETROVE, Serbia-Montenegro, Dec 22 (ONASA - AFP) - The centuries-old custom of blood feuds has gripped a part of Kosovo, threatening the lives of people in two clans as it did with thousands of ethnic Albanians in the past.

 

The feud between the two clans began at the end of November when Fadil Mujota, a 36-year-old father of four, was shot dead at a gas station owned by the Beqaj family in the central village of Belinc.

 

"Fadil went to Belinc to fill a tank with gasoline. His friends, who were waiting for him in a nearby cafe, had no time even to put sugar in their coffee when they heard shots and found him covered in blood," said Shaip Mujota, the victim's eldest brother.

 

The circumstances behind the murder are still not clear, although a main suspect, 16-year-old Arlind Beqaj, has been detained pending a trial.

 

The blood feud system is believed to have re-emerged in Kosovo due to a power vacuum during the UN-run province's painful transition from conflict six and a half years ago.

 

As a result, many Albanians in Kosovo have returned to the laws of their tribal roots in a bid to settle disputes, namely the Code of Leke Dukagjini, an Albanian aristocrat from the era of struggle against Ottoman rule in the 14th century.

 

The legal system that has since existed in Kosovo, as well as parts of neighboring Albania, includes the right to kill to avenge murders, or "whoever kills, will be killed".

 

An estimated 50 murders in the province have been linked to blood revenge between the end of Kosovo's 1998-1999 war between Serbian forces and Albanian rebels and the end of last year.

 

"Kosovo is still in a vacuum between strong traditions of the past and modern values," Naim Maloku, sociologist and professor at the Pristina University, told AFP.

 

Maloku noted that Kosovo's society was "deeply patriarchal, torn by its inclination toward the West and by its religious past which originates from the East."

 

"These two civilizations clash, pushing people towards one or another pole and making them oscillate between them," he added.

 

Last week, six brothers from the 60-member Mujota clan were still receiving condolences from friends and family at their homes in the hillside village of Mollopolce.

 

The Mujotas, well-known and respected here for their contribution to the ethnic Albanian guerrilla force that fought Serbian forces during the conflict, could hardly hide their anger at the lack of any rule of law.

 

"Unfortunately, the system does not function. I know that no one can return our brother. God willing, Fadil will be the last victim," said Shaip Mujota.

 

He said he had given his word of honor, or "Besa" -- a rule declaring that any murderer will not to be killed outside his home -- to the Beqajs and their children, "who have to go to school."

 

"I am a teacher and I know that going to school is important," Mujota said. "But we have to know why our brother was killed."

 

Since the killing, the pressure has mounted on both families, aware of the custom that those deciding against vengeance and "honor killings" were seen as cowards and considered unworthy.

 

Although the Dukagjini code also offers ways for the families to reconcile through mediation by influential people respected by both sides, the two clans are yet to find a truce.

 

There were no signs of life outside six traditionally high-walled Beqaj houses in the muddy village of Petrove, set in the eerily calm mountainous region.

 

"We are in a blood feud with the Mujotas," admitted 63-year-old Fehmi Beqaj, the head of the 70-member clan known in the region as successful merchants.

 

"We are waiting for the dispute with the Mujotas to be resolved," he said, adding that their gas station and sawmill businesses had been paralyzed for weeks.

 

Beqaj said the "Besa" offered by the Mujotas would last till the third day of the Muslim Bayram holiday in the middle of February.

 

"Until then, our children can freely go to school, but after it expires, we will be confined to our houses until this dispute is over," Fehmi said, turning down the likelihood the matter could be resolved with the help of police.

 

The feud was "between the two families and will be settled in accordance with the code ... What God decides, will be," he said.

Kosovo: Ombudsman criticizes human rights situation

ADN KRONOS INTERNATIONAL (ITALY), 22-Dec-05 11:55

 

Pristina/Belgrade, 22 Dec. (AKI) - Kosovo ombudsman Marek Novicky has criticised the state of human rights in the province, under United Nations administration since 1999, saying it was "far from international standards".

 

Novicky, appointed by the international community five years ago to supervise the human rights situation in Kosovo, said that ethnic minorities in Kosovo, particularly Serbs and Romanics, "are still not in a position to move around freely", which is limiting their living conditions and economic activities.

 

At a farewell press conference in Pristina on Wednesday evening, Novicky warned that the situation is likely to get worse unless the international community appoints a new human rights watchdog.

 

Chief UN administrator, Soren Jessen Petersen, who has wide arbitrary powers in the province, has decided to pass the human rights supervision to local ethnic Albanian authorities, a move that Novicky considers premature.

 

Petersen has also come in for criticism from Serbian officials in Belgrade for starting the formation of Kosovo justice and police ministries, under majority ethnic Albanians' control. The judiciary and police have been under international control since Serbian forces were pushed from the province by NATO bombing raids in 1999.

 

Dusan Batakovic, an aide to Serbian president Boris Tadic, argued that Petersen had overstepped his competences and that his move would increase the pressure on the remaining 100.000 Serbs in the province.

 

Over 200.000 Serbs and other non-Albanians have fled Kosovo since 1999, whose majority ethnic Albanians demand independence. Belgrade opposes independence, though it has no more authority in Kosovo, and talks on the final status of the province are expected to begin in January.

Serbia says new Kosovo ministries a dangerous move

STUFF (NEW ZEALAND), 22 December 2005

 

BELGRADE: Serbia today said it was a "reckless and dangerous political move" to transfer the authority of the police and justice sectors to the ethnic Albanian dominated population of its Kosovo province.

 

On Tuesday the United Nations, which took over the administration of Kosovo in 1999 after Nato bombing forced Serb forces to pull out, formally established ministries in the two sensitive sectors which had so far been in UN hands.

 

Serbia said the move came at a very bad time when the Serb and Kosovo Albanian sides were starting UN-mediated talks on whether the province becomes independent, as the majority Albanians demand or stays part of Serbia, as it now formally is.

 

"At the very start of talks on the future status of Kosovo such moves only go in favour of the extremist policy of the Albanian leadership in the province," the government's team for Kosovo talks said in a statement.

 

The government urged Kosovo's UN governor Soren Jessen-Petersen to reconsider his decision which "jeopardises Serb and other non-Albanian communities in the province and directly burdens political talks on Kosovo's future status." The UN officials say the justice and police ministries, which will assume their responsibilities gradually will be subject to a "vigorous accountability policy" and the UN governor will have the right to intervene.

 

The 90-per cent ethnic Albanian majority is increasingly impatient for independence, but Serbia says this is impossible and has offered the province wide autonomy.

 

Last month, UN envoy Martti Ahtisaari started shuttle diplomacy aimed at reconciling the two opposing visions. A decision on whether Kosovo will get the independence the Albanians demand is expected in the second half of next year.

 

The two sides are expected to meet face-to-face in the second half of January, probably in Vienna where Ahtisaari has set up his headquarters.