August 14, 2006

Latest video shows alleged Balkan war crimes

 

Balkans
Latest video shows alleged Balkan war crimes

Another video has been broadcast in the Balkans which purports to show war crimes committed against ethnic Serbs in Croatia in 1995. It appears to show members of Bosnian paramilitary groups brutally interrogated a Serb prisoner who is later killed. The fighters are also shown vandalising an orthodox church.

This latest images - from nearly two hours of videos - were broadcast by Croatian television. The previous amateur video, allegedly involving Croatian fighters as well as those from Bosnia-Herzegovina, was transmitted by Serbian TV last week.

The violence took place in the self-declared Serb republic of Krajina when a Croatian military offensive was launched in 1995 to retake contested territories from Serbs. Hundreds of Serbs were killed and around 200,000 thousand fled into Bosnia and Serbia. Both Bosnia and Croatia have opened war crimes inquiries after receiving copies of the video that was broadcast by Serbian television last week.

http://euronews.net/create_html.php?page=detail_info&article=374383&lng=1

THE PATRIOT NEWS - Balkan connection (Ltr published) by Stella L. Jatras

 

Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
 
 


 

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Click here to send a letter to the editor online

Balkan connection
Sunday, August 13, 2006

A front-page article (June 19) reported that the planned poison gas attack on the New York subway system was canceled by al-Qaida's No. 2 man, Ayman al-Zawahiri, 45 days before its execution because "it would not be spectacular enough."

A July 27 article, which reports that al-Zawahiri is seeking support for jihad from non-Muslims, clearly demonstrates the terrorist dangers to this country. In addition to non-Muslims, Islamic terrorists are reportedly relying on European Muslims who don't fit the physical profile of Middle Eastern terrorists. Because the Balkans has become a central point of this recruitment effort, we must not ignore al-Zawahiri's connection to the area.

The Serbian province of Kosovo, under U.N. administration since 1999, has been the center of Islamic terrorism and ethnic cleansing. Unfortunately, some in the administration are moving headlong toward establishing Kosovo as an independent state run by terrorists and war criminals, while ignoring the fact that Kosovo has become a center for terrorism and crime in the Balkans. Did we learn nothing from 9/11, or are we about to make another colossal mistake in the Balkans?

-- STELLA L. JATRAS, Camp Hill

Kosovo 2006 - "risk of genocide"


Print this damning and timely report  (PDF link below) and send it to all those who built their political lives on "humanitarian intervention"!


"Nowhere in Europe is there such segregation as Kosovo.
Thousands of people are still displaced and in camps.
Nowhere else are there so many ‘ethnically pure’ towns and villages scattered across such a small province. Nowhere is there such a level of fear for so many minorities that they will be harassed simply for who they are. And perhaps nowhere else in Europe is at such a high risk of ethnic cleansing occurring in the near future – or even a risk of genocide."


http://www.minorityrights.org
http://www.minorityrights.org/admin/Download/pdf/MRGKosovoReport.pdf
Press release
http://www.minorityrights.org/media_centre/media_press/media_centre_press_ko
sovo.htm
Failure by international community to protect minorities in Kosovo could lead to renewed conflict Embargoed for release Monday 7th August 2006 at 10:30 a.m.
7 August 2006
After seven years of UN and international governance the situation in Kosovo is 'little short of disastrous' and there is a high risk of ethnic cleansing occurring again, according to a new report by Minority Rights Group.
The report titled Minority Rights in Kosovo under International Rule launched today, criticizes the UN and international community for failing to protect the rights of Kosovo's minority communities. It describes how the situation of minorities in Kosovo remains the worst in Europe, and highlights the danger of these mistakes being repeated in Iraq.
"The authorities have allowed a segregated society to develop and become entrenched, and thousands of minorities remain displaced," the report says.
"Nowhere (in Europe) is there such a level of fear for so many minorities that they will be harassed or attacked, simply for who they are or what language they speak," it adds.
According to the report, the short term measures of separating Kosovo's two main communities, Albanians and Serbs, has disastrous long term implications.
Clive Baldwin the author of the report, says: "The reality is that segregation is entrenched, creating a society that is so fractured that non of its people feel protected. They live in fear of mass conflict re-occurring in the long term."
The report, which looks at the situation of Kosovo's Albanian, Serb and other communities, including, Bosniak, Croat, Turk, Ashkalia and Roma, argues that problems to do with minorities are not due to lack of resources. In fact, the international administration has been one of the most expensive in UN history.
Instead, the report says a mindset of segregation, a lack of clear accountable government and a lack of any real protection of human rights and the rule of law are among the reasons why minorities continue to suffer in Kosovo.
It also faults the international community for failing to learn from past mistakes and use the experience and expertise available to them to protect minority rights.
"It is almost incredible is that all these mistakes have been made under an international administration consisting of institutions, notably the UN and OSCE, with a long institutional memory of addressing minority rights,"
Baldwin says.
According to the report the 'future status negotiations' represents both the best hope and the greatest danger and as the future of Kosovo is currently being decided the report calls for a radical move away from the patterns of segregation. It also recommends that minority rights are guaranteed by the rule of law and that all minorities, including minority women, should be consulted on the future of their lives, their property and their country.
"The message is clear to all parties. The Serbs need to realize that the effective protection of all communities in Kosovo in an integrated society is the only long term solution. It is in their best interest," says Baldwin.
"We urge the international community to recognise the damage that segregation can cause. They must realize that the Serbs and Kosovo's other communities, including the Albanians, are not benefiting from the current system. The only long term security for Kosovo will be effective protection for all minorities," he says.
For more information or to arrange interviews with Clive Baldwin, please contact Farah Mihlar on 0207 4224205 (office) 078 70596863 (mobile) or farah.mihlar@mrgmail.org


Notes to Editors
Since 1999 Kosovo has had an interim administration, consisting the UN Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK), which includes representatives of the EU and Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), and a NATO-led Kosovo Force.
Clive Baldwin is Head of Advocacy at Minority Rights Group International.
>From 2000 to 2002 he was a member of the OSCE Mission in Kosovo.
Previously, he was a practising human rights lawyer.
Minority Rights Group International (MRG) is a non governmental organisation working to secure the rights of ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities and indigenous peoples worldwide.

Read the report summary

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Download the PDF copy of Minority Rights in Kosovo under International Rule English Albanian Serbian = ________________________________________________________________________
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A Must See Video

 
This is a must see short video for everyone, exposing some of the greatest fraud in the main stream media regarding the Israeli conflict
 
COMMENTS:  Regarding falsely orchestrating events and doctoring photos. 
 
Remember Dubrovnik where a media fraud reported that the Serbs destroyed the Pearl of the Adriatic, the city of Dubrovnik?  Read below the similarity between the alleged burning of Dubrovnik and the cover of U.S. News and World Report which shows a Hezbollah fighter overlooking a fire in Beirut.    The caption reads, "Wreckage of an Israeli jet billowing smoke in Beirut."  Upon closer look, it is not a war scene.  No, those are automobile tires burning in a garbage dump. 
 
Peter Maher, Professor Emeritus of Linquistics, visited Dubrovnik, Croatia, to see for himself the truth about the war in the Balkans.  It should be noted that Dr. Maher, a Roman Catholic, not a Serbian Orthodox source, video taped the entire city, building by building and his footage was shown on Access TV Channel 19 in Chicago.
 
Dr. Maher wrote, "A few months earlier, the press was filled with stories that the Pearl of the Adriatic had been reduced to rubble. The stories were fakes."  Professor Maher goes on to explain just how it happened:  "The dramatic 'Dubrovnik burning' pictures were shot with long lenses. . . .But the smoke was from the fuel tanks of two pleasure boats burning in the Old Harbor ... Dubrovnik's Old City never burned and was never even targteted by the federal forces.   It was not navy guns that did the damage, but plastic and incendiary devices planted on the spot by Croatian forces....The only structures destroyed in Dubrovnik were the home of the Serbian Orthodox priest and the 17th Century Serbian Orthodox Liberary, it was burned from within and there was no evidence of artillery damage to the exterior of the building. 
 
And of course, let us not forget the image of the wailing woman in this video - how many did we see, month after month, of Bosnian or Kosovo women and children wailing on the front pages of all our newspapers?  I do not denegrate their suffering because many of them did suffer needlessly, but intentionally by the Bosnian Muslim government of Alija Izetbegovic. But U.S. newspapers never showed photos of Serbian women and children suffering from NATO bombs, or their slaugfhtering at the hands of Agim Ceku, the Muslim war lord who today is walking a free man. 
 
If only we had had this kind of email/bloging during the war against the Serbian people, the lies would have been exposed immediately and perhaps, just perhaps, things might have been different - one would hope.   
 
'Nuf said.  Stella