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Kosovars painted signs in 1999
thanking NATO forces for liberating their
province. |
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CREDIT: Gordon Beck, CanWest News
Service |
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Four years after it was "liberated" by a NATO bombing campaign,
Kosovo has deteriorated into a hotbed of organized crime, anti-Serb
violence and al-Qaeda sympathizers, say security officials and
Balkan experts.
Though nominally still under UN control, the southern province of
Serbia is today dominated by a triumvirate of Albanian
paramilitaries, mafiosi and terrorists. They control a host of
smuggling operations and are implementing what many observers call
their own brutal ethnic cleansing of minority groups, such as Serbs,
Roma and Jews.
In recent weeks, UN officials ordered the construction of a
fortified concrete barrier around the UN compound on the outskirts
of the provincial capital Pristina. This is to protect against
terrorist strikes by Muslim extremists who have set up bases of
operation in what has become a largely outlaw province.
Minority Serbs, who were supposed to have been guaranteed
protection by the international community after the 78-day NATO
bombing campaign ended in the spring of 1999, have abandoned the
province en masse. The last straw for many was the recent round of
attacks by ethnic Albanian paramilitaries bent on gaining
independence through violence.
Attacks on Serbs in Kosovo, a province of two million people,
have risen sharply.
According to statistics collected by the UN criminal tribunal for
the former Yugoslavia at The Hague, 1,192 Serbs have been killed,
1,303 kidnapped and 1,305 wounded in Kosovo this year.
In June, 1999, just after the NATO bombing, 547 Serbs were killed
and 932 were kidnapped.
Last summer, in one of the more grisly massacres, two Serb youths
were killed and four others wounded by ethnic Albanian militants
while swimming in the Bistrica River, near Pec.
The violence continues despite an 18,000-strong NATO-led
peacekeeping force and an international police force of more than
4,000.
Serbs, who now make up 5% of the population of Kosovo, down from
10% before the NATO campaign, are the main targets of the
paramilitary groups.
The bombing was partly launched by NATO countries to end the
ethnic cleansing of Albanians by Serb security forces in the region.
In its immediate aftermath, many Serbs left Kosovo to settle in
other parts of Yugoslavia, now known as Serbia and Montenegro.
Last week, Harri Holkeri, the province's UN leader, suspended two
generals and 10 other officers, all members of an ethnic Albanian
offshoot of the Kosovo Liberation Army, an insurgent group that
emerged in the late 1980s to fight Serb security forces.
Mr. Holkeri made his decision -- the strongest UN response to
violence in the province so far -- after a UN inquiry into the
Kosovo Protection Corps (KPC). Although the civilian defence
organization is supposed to help local residents, over the past four
years, its mostly ethnic Albanian military officials have been
involved in violent confrontations with Serbs.
The inquiry found last April's bomb attack on a Kosovo railway
was the work of the KPC.
"The whole process of rebuilding Kosovo-Metohija as a democratic,
multi-ethnic society failed due to both the inability of the UN
mission and [NATO] forces to protect Serbs and other non-Albanians
from large-scale ethnic cleansing, this time primarily against
Serbs," said Dusan Batakovic, a Serb diplomat and leading expert on
Kosovo.
Dr. Batakovic and other Balkan experts, who attended a conference
in Toronto last month to discuss Kosovo's future, say the situation
is deteriorating rapidly.
"NATO forces made a real mess of Kosovo," said James Bissett, a
former Canadian ambassador to Yugoslavia. "The bombing of Yugoslavia
was a dreadful failure on humanitarian grounds. It failed to stop
ethnic cleansing, which has continued after the so-called peace
treaty."
In addition, "Balkan Taliban" -- Muslim ethnic Albanian
paramilitary groups -- have vandalized Serb cemeteries and destroyed
many of the region's Orthodox Christian monasteries and
churches.
"This is a strategy of cutting Kosovo Serbs off from their
historical and religious traditions," said Dr. Batakovic in his
report to the North American Society of Serbian Studies
conference.
Moreover, Kosovo has turned into one of Europe's biggest hubs for
drug trafficking and terrorism.
Al-Qaeda has set up bases in the province, which has become an
important centre for heroin, cigarette, gasoline and people
smuggling.
The Albanian mafia and paramilitary groups, which security
officials say are closely tied to al-Qaeda militants in the region,
also oversee smuggling. More than 80% of Western Europe's heroin
comes through Kosovo, where several drug laboratories have been set
up, Interpol officials say.
During the wars (1991-99) that led to the breakup of Yugoslavia,
drugs and other commodities were smuggled through Bulgaria and
Turkey to Western Europe.
Now, more than 5,000 tonnes of heroin pass directly through
Kosovo every month. In a recent article in Serbia's Vreme magazine,
Kosovo was referred to as the "republic of heroin."
"The Albanians have become the alpha and omega of the drugs trade
in southeast Europe," said Marko Nicovic, chairman of the
International Police Association for the Fight Against Drugs.
"There are two reasons for this. The first is the fact that
Kosovo is now under the control of the Albanian mafia lobby and the
criminal police do not operate there. This is literally a paradise
for all kinds of crime, especially narcotics."
The Albanian mafia also control trafficking in cigarettes,
weapons, gasoline and women. Dozens of young women from impoverished
towns and villages in the region are forced into prostitution rings
centred in Kosovo, security officials say. Many of the women are
taken by mobsters to work in Western European countries.
There is little consensus on the way ahead.
Many Serbs and moderate ethnic Albanian politicians would like a
decision on Kosovo's legal status -- should it remain a province of
Serbia or become independent?
Many ethnic Albanians are calling for independence, but their
more extremist elements would like to fold the province into a
Greater Albania that would see ethnic Albanians take over the mostly
Albanian regions of neighbouring Macedonia as well.
The Serb government in Belgrade wants Kosovo to continue as part
of Serbia.
Although it is four years since the NATO bombing, talks on
Kosovo's future began only recently. Serb and ethnic Albanian
leaders met in Vienna in October to discuss transportation and the
return of Serb refugees to Kosovo.
"At this point, the chances for Kosovo remaining in Serbia are
pretty slim," Mr. Bissett said. "There is a powerful Albanian lobby
in the United States that is determined to make Kosovo
independent."
Moreover, many Serb leaders know that to attract the much-needed
aid and investment, they will need to give way on Kosovo, experts
say.
In the meantime, the situation is expected to get worse, with
renewed threats of violence against both the United Nations and
Serbs in the province.
"It's a terrible situation," said Mr. Bissett. "If the United
Nations and other organizations can't handle Kosovo, you wonder how
they are going to do with something like Iraq."
ivincent@nationalpost.com