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									Archive through May 27, 1999 - Kosovo War				            </title>
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                        <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-may-27-1999/paged/3/#post-4177</link>
                        <pubDate>Thu, 27 May 1999 14:48:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[Observers Barred from CARE Trial=20  By Candice Hughes Associated Press Writer Wednesday, May 26, 1999; 5:02 p.m. EDT  BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Yugoslav judicial officials have barred in...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Observers Barred from CARE Trial=20 <BR> <BR>By Candice Hughes <BR>Associated Press Writer <BR>Wednesday, May 26, 1999; 5:02 p.m. EDT <BR> <BR>BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Yugoslav judicial officials have barred <BR>international observers from the espionage trial of two Australian aid <BR>workers and a Yugoslav colleague, a diplomat said Wednesday.=20 <BR> <BR>Australian Ambassador Charles Lamb said a Belgrade court would not <BR>allow him to attend the trial of CARE workers Steve Pratt and Peter <BR>Wallace and Yugoslav Branko Jelen.=20 <BR> <BR>``I&#039;m very disappointed to be excluded,&#039;&#039; Lamb told reporters outside the <BR>court.=20 <BR> <BR>Lamb said the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations ``guarantees the <BR>right of access to trials&#039;&#039; and he had expected the court to allow observers <BR>from the embassy.=20 <BR> <BR>``We had hoped -- and we had some reason for that after our <BR>conversations with the government -- that we would in fact be able to get <BR>through, be there, observe the trial,&#039;&#039; Lamb said.=20 <BR> <BR>He said the court had turned down applications for permission to observe <BR>the trial from relatives, CARE and the U.N. High Commission on Human <BR>Rights. Lamb said a delegation from the International Commission of <BR>Jurists also hoped to attend, but could not get visas.=20 <BR> <BR>Pratt and Wallace have been in custody since March 31, when they were <BR>arrested by Yugoslav authorities for alleged spying when they tried to <BR>cross the border into Croatia.=20 <BR> <BR>Border guards apparently became suspicious of their laptop computers, <BR>files, and mobile telephones.=20 <BR> <BR>A reporter for the Australian Broadcasting Corp., Katy Cronin, was <BR>allowed in court briefly for the trial&#039;s opening. She said the Australians= <BR> and <BR>Jelen all appeared to be in good health.=20 <BR> <BR>She said Pratt had lost his trademark beard, and turned to wink at a <BR>friend, while Wallace looked straight ahead.=20 <BR> <BR>``They looked clean and healthy,&#039;&#039; she said on Australian radio. ``They <BR>were not handcuffed.&#039;&#039;=20 <BR> <BR>On April 12, Belgrade television showed Pratt making an apparent <BR>confession to collecting information on Kosovo and the effects of the <BR>NATO bombing.=20 <BR> <BR>Yugoslavia&#039;s government also alleged that four local CARE workers were <BR>involved in an alleged spy ring. CARE says it has lost contact with around <BR>a dozen of its Yugoslav staff working in Kosovo.=20 <BR> <BR>The trial is proceeding despite appeals from U.N. Secretary-General Kofi <BR>Annan, South African President Nelson Mandela, and several visits by <BR>CARE Australia chief and former Australian Prime Minister Malcolm <BR>Fraser.=20 <BR> <BR>Wallace&#039;s father said he was ``hurting and frustrated.&#039;&#039;=20 <BR> <BR>``We are looking forward to a quick end to the trial and we believe the <BR>only decision that can be made is very clear,&#039;&#039; Ross Wallace told <BR>Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio.=20 <BR> <BR>``Peter is a humanitarian aid worker,&#039;&#039; he said. ``The charges against him <BR>have no basis and should be immediately dismissed.&#039;&#039;=20 <BR> <BR>          =A9 Copyright 1999 The Associated Press]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>zoja</dc:creator>
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                        <pubDate>Thu, 27 May 1999 14:45:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[Rugova Welcomed by Kosovo Refugees=20  By Gezim Baxhaku Associated Press Writer Wednesday, May 26, 1999; 5:20 p.m. EDT  BLACE, Macedonia (AP) -- Receiving a hero&#039;s welcome from thousand...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Rugova Welcomed by Kosovo Refugees=20 <BR> <BR>By Gezim Baxhaku <BR>Associated Press Writer <BR>Wednesday, May 26, 1999; 5:20 p.m. EDT <BR> <BR>BLACE, Macedonia (AP) -- Receiving a hero&#039;s welcome from thousands <BR>of exhausted Kosovo refugees, moderate ethnic Albanian leader Ibrahim <BR>Rugova appealed Wednesday for a swift deployment of NATO troops in <BR>Kosovo to ensure the return of the displaced.=20 <BR> <BR>Chanting ``Rugova, Rugova,&#039;&#039; tired but smiling Kosovo refugees were <BR>rubbing shoulders to get as close as possible to their leader, trailing him <BR>throughout the Blace and Stenkovec refugee camps near Macedonia&#039;s <BR>border with Kosovo.=20 <BR> <BR>Rugova&#039;s visit to the camps was the first since Serbs started systematically <BR>expelling Kosovo Albanians two months ago, when NATO began its air <BR>campaign against Yugoslavia.=20 <BR> <BR>Initially, Rugova remained in Yugoslavia, apparently under house arrest in <BR>Kosovo. He has provided few details of his reported detention since he <BR>showed up in Italy earlier this month.=20 <BR> <BR>``I am so happy that he is alive and here with us,&#039;&#039; said an old man in the <BR>Blace transit camp, where about 30,000 refugees have arrived in recent <BR>days -- the biggest influx since early May.=20 <BR> <BR>U.N. aid officials have been negotiating with Macedonia&#039;s reluctant <BR>government for permission to expand the seven main refugee camps.=20 <BR> <BR>``In a few days, every possible square foot of space in the camps will be <BR>taken and people will be living on top of each other again,&#039;&#039; Kris Janowski, <BR>a spokesman for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, said in <BR>Geneva.=20 <BR> <BR>Of about 830,000 ethnic Albanians who have fled or been driven from the <BR>province, Macedonia has accepted about 252,000 -- roughly one-tenth of <BR>its population.=20 <BR> <BR>Macedonia, with its own substantial minority of ethnic Albanians, worries <BR>that the arrivals could upset the ethnic balance and possibly lead to= <BR> unrest. <BR> <BR>Rugova thanked the Macedonian government for helping the refugees and <BR>said he was working to secure their return.=20 <BR> <BR>``We are demanding that NATO forces go into Kosovo as soon as <BR>possible to provide security for all the citizens of Kosovo,&#039;&#039; he told the <BR>refugees at Blace camp.=20 <BR> <BR>NATO says it has no intention of invading the embattled Serb province, <BR>but on Tuesday, it announced plans to send 50,000 peacekeeping troops <BR>if Serb forces withdraw.=20 <BR> <BR>``We should be optimistic because the world is with us. We are no longer <BR>alone,&#039;&#039; said Rugova, who met Wednesday with Chris Hill, the U.S. envoy <BR>to the Balkans, and with Macedonian President Kiro Gligorov.=20 <BR> <BR>UNHCR has pledged $4.5 million to Macedonia to help cope with the <BR>refugee influx and has paid out about half of that, said Dennis McNamara, <BR>Balkans envoy for the U.N. refugee agency. He said the government has <BR>apparently agreed in principle to open at least one new camp.=20 <BR> <BR>Meanwhile, a senior NATO commander in Albania said Wednesday that <BR>Serb artillery and water shortages are spurring the relocation of about <BR>30,000 refugees from the northern Albanian border with Kosovo.=20 <BR> <BR>``In the open, tents don&#039;t offer much protection from shrapnel. The last <BR>thing I want is the Serbs lobbing a few rounds into this place,&#039;&#039; said= <BR> British <BR>Lieut. Gen. John Reith in Kukes.=20 <BR> <BR>International aid agencies and NATO are hoping to relocate the refugees <BR>to safer, better camps in central and southern Albania. About 300 <BR>refugees left a Kukes camp Wednesday, the second day of the organized <BR>relocation. About 200 were moved Monday to the U.S.-built Camp <BR>Hope.=20 <BR> <BR>          =A9 Copyright 1999 The Associated Press]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>zoja</dc:creator>
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                        <pubDate>Thu, 27 May 1999 14:31:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[FOCUS-France firm on Kosovo during Cook visit 03:06 p.m May 26, 1999 Eastern  By Clar Ni Chonghaile  PARIS, May 26 (Reuters) - France on Wednesday joined the chorus of European Contact Group...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[FOCUS-France firm on Kosovo during Cook visit <BR>03:06 p.m May 26, 1999 Eastern <BR> <BR>By Clar Ni Chonghaile <BR> <BR>PARIS, May 26 (Reuters) - France on Wednesday joined the chorus <BR>of European Contact Group members stressing NATO must <BR>sustain military pressure on Belgrade while diplomats step up <BR>efforts to negotiate an end to the Kosovo crisis. <BR> <BR>Foreign Minister Hubert Vedrine reiterated Paris&#039; firm stand after <BR>talks with his British counterpart Robin Cook, who flew in on the <BR>last leg of a three-stop tour to synchronise policy watches with <BR>the main European allies. <BR> <BR>Cook heard similar statements of resolve in Rome in the morning <BR>and in Bonn at midday. Unlike France and Britain, Italy and <BR>Germany face increasing domestic pressure to end the <BR>two-month bombing campaign. <BR> <BR>Vedrine said the bombing could only stop when Yugoslavia <BR>accepted NATO conditions of allowing an international force to <BR>protect returning Kosovo Albanian refugees and the U.N. Security <BR>Council approved the deployment of that force. <BR> <BR>``Organising (the sequence of) these elements and getting a vote <BR>in the Security Council is the central point of our work,&#039;&#039; he said. <BR> <BR>Cook said NATO could not pull back from its bombing campaign <BR>now. <BR> <BR>``If we ease back on that military pressure, then (Yugoslav <BR>President Slobodan) Milosevic will ease back on any interest in a <BR>military solution,&#039;&#039; he said. <BR> <BR>Earlier in the day, German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer, whose <BR>Greens party has a strong pacifist wing, echoed Cook&#039;s views after <BR>their talks in Bonn. <BR> <BR>``We must not overlook the link between the twin track. The <BR>military campaign has laid the foundation for the diplomatic <BR>efforts,&#039;&#039; Fischer told reporters there. <BR> <BR>Cook secured similar agreement earlier on Wednesday in Rome <BR>from Foreign Minister Lamberto Dini. <BR> <BR>Vedrine stressed that Russia, which is needed to pass any U.N. <BR>resolution on Kosovo, has been working closely with the Western <BR>states in the search for an agreement. <BR> <BR>Vedrine sidestepped a question about a possible increase in <BR>French troops for the KFOR force slated to accompany Kosovo <BR>Albanian refugees home in the event of a peaceful settlement, <BR>saying it was up to the defence ministry to announce any such <BR>decision. <BR> <BR>Britain announced earlier in the day it would send another 6,000 <BR>troops to the region and put another 6,000 troops on standby, <BR>thus bringing London&#039;s overall troop contribution to almost 20,000. <BR> <BR>Cook and Dini said they both wanted to see a negotiated <BR>settlement on Kosovo, but that NATO needed to maintain the <BR>military pressure until Belgrade agreed to withdraw. <BR> <BR>``Of course none of us like the bombing. In the present <BR>circumstances, we don&#039;t see an alternative,&#039;&#039; Dini said, responding <BR>to questions about a proposal last week by Italian Prime Minister <BR>Massimo D&#039;Alema for a bombing pause. <BR> <BR>``There is a common view on how the conflict should be approached <BR>from now on. The alliance stands united on how to proceed,&#039;&#039; he told <BR>reporters. <BR> <BR>Dini emphasised NATO&#039;s position that the force would not go into <BR>Kosovo unless Milosevic pulls out his troops. <BR> <BR>Vedrine refused to be drawn on the issue of sending troops in <BR>without Belgrade&#039;s approval, saying NATO wanted a peace deal <BR>and he would not weaken its position by entertaining other options. <BR> <BR>The key players are already looking ahead to life in Kosovo <BR>after the war. <BR> <BR>Russia is proposing to divide Kosovo into zones, but this is not <BR>acceptable to Britain, which wants to avoid giving Russia a sphere of <BR>influence like East Germany during the Cold War. <BR> <BR>``We no more want to see an ethnically pure Albanian Kosovo <BR>than we want to see an ethnically pure Serbian Kosovo,&#039;&#039; the British <BR>official said, saying NATO wanted to ensure the province&#039;s territorial <BR>integrity. <BR> <BR>``Dini was very clear that there could be no partition of Kosovo <BR>either formal or de facto,&#039;&#039; the British official said. <BR> <BR>
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<BR> <BR>Nick, are you still so proud of being French??? <BR> <BR>Zoja]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>zoja</dc:creator>
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                        <pubDate>Thu, 27 May 1999 14:26:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[Reuters Milosevic seeks direct talks with West Content-Type: text/plain; charset=x-user-defined Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit  ANALYSIS-Milosevic seeks direct talks with West 11:50 a.m. Ma...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Reuters Milosevic seeks direct talks with West <BR>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=x-user-defined <BR>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit <BR> <BR>ANALYSIS-Milosevic seeks direct talks with West <BR>11:50 a.m. May 26, 1999 Eastern <BR> <BR>By Colin McIntyre <BR> <BR>BELGRADE, May 26 (Reuters) - Yugoslav President Slobodan <BR>Milosevic is pressing for direct negotiations with the West on <BR>ending the Kosovo crisis in order to boost his political position at <BR>home, local analysts said on Wednesday. <BR> <BR>``The bottom line is he wants to be treated as a respected negotiator,&#039;&#039; <BR>one leading Yugoslav analyst said. ``That way he feels he can get out <BR>of the crisis with his position more or less intact.&#039;&#039; <BR> <BR>The West dismisses the idea of talks with Milosevic, or an end to <BR>NATO air strikes, before he has accepted five demands, including <BR>the withdrawal of Yugoslav forces from Kosovo and the stationing of <BR>a NATO-led peace force in the province. <BR> <BR>``Milosevic would see complete acceptance of NATO&#039;s demands <BR>as capitulation,&#039;&#039; another analyst said, adding that the Yugoslav <BR>leader wanted a halt to the bombing without acceding to the <BR>demands, a move he could then portray as a victory. <BR> <BR>After Russian envoy Viktor Chernomyrdin came to Belgrade <BR>last week for talks with Milosevic, the presidency issued a statement <BR>calling for Yugoslavia&#039;s participation in talks to flesh out <BR>seven principles contained in a framework plan agreed by the <BR>Group of Eight nations last month. <BR> <BR>Chernomyrdin is due in Belgrade again on Thursday, after holding <BR>talks with U.S. negotiators to try to narrow differences between <BR>Russia and the West over Kosovo. <BR> <BR>The main sticking points between Belgrade and the West are the <BR>makeup and command of an international peace force in <BR>Kosovo and the number of Yugoslav troops that could remain <BR>in Kosovo. <BR> <BR>According to one local analyst Milosevic wants to retain some <BR>5,000 of his troops in Kosovo, compared with an estimated <BR>40,000 at present. The West wants only a few hundred, to <BR>check borders and help in mine-clearing operations. <BR> <BR>While the West insists that an international peace force to <BR>oversee the return of ethnic Albanian refugees to Kosovo <BR>should be large, well armed and led by NATO, Belgrade publicly <BR>rejects anything but a small, lightly armed U.N.-led unit. <BR> <BR>Analysts believe the leadership will eventually have to accept foreign <BR>troops, but would strongly resist the inclusion of any from countries <BR>currently taking part in air strikes against Yugoslavia. <BR> <BR>Another snag is that under a draft agreement presented to Belgrade <BR>and Kosovo Albanian leaders in France earlier this year, the <BR>international force would have free access to the whole of Yugoslavia, <BR>not just Kosovo, and Belgrade would see this as tantamount to occupation. <BR> <BR>As the West and Russia struggle to find a joint position on Kosovo, <BR>Milosevic is digging in his heels in the hope that the NATO alliance <BR>will unravel, or Western public opinion will force a halt to the <BR>bombing campaign, analysts said. <BR> <BR>The Yugoslav leader must also hope that civil unrest and anti-war <BR>protests that broke out in southern Serbia earlier this month does not <BR>spread, they added. <BR> <BR>Some analysts believe that public opinion in the West may be <BR>moving against a continuation of the bombing, particularly as the <BR>civilian toll and the number of NATO mis-hits rises. <BR> <BR>But at least one analyst believes a number of key Western leaders <BR>are determined to press the campaign until it forces Milosevic <BR>from office, seeing his continued rule as a threat to stability in the <BR>volatile Balkan region. <BR> <BR>Local analysts see the unrest in the south, particularly in the <BR>industrial town of Krusevac, where several thousand people were <BR>reported to have demonstrated on Sunday against the war and local <BR>men vowed to ignore a recent call-up, as a potential threat to the <BR>leadership. <BR> <BR>There have been unconfirmed reports that some army units in <BR>Kosovo have not been paid for several weeks, and cigarettes, <BR>regarded as essentials in Yugoslavia, are in short supply for <BR>the soldiers. <BR> <BR>One analyst said the anti-war pressure was likely to be greater <BR>in central and southern Serbia because more people from these <BR>areas were being drafted to Kosovo than from Belgrade and <BR>further north. <BR> <BR>``As more soldiers get killed in Kosovo, pressure could build up <BR>on the government,&#039;&#039; one analyst said. ``If there were 10 military <BR>funerals a day in Belgrade nobody would notice. But if that happened <BR>in smaller towns down south, everyone would know about it.&#039;&#039; <BR> <BR>
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<BR> <BR> <BR>Chick,chick,chick, chick!!!! <BR> <BR>How the hell can Slob Milo save his IMAGE! Once a dictator, always a dictator!]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>zoja</dc:creator>
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                        <pubDate>Thu, 27 May 1999 14:18:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[Reuters Clinton ready to consider Kosovo land war - paper Content-Type: text/plain; charset=x-user-defined Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit  Clinton Ready To Consider Kosovo Land War - Paper ...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Reuters Clinton ready to consider Kosovo land war - paper <BR>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=x-user-defined <BR>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit <BR> <BR>Clinton Ready To Consider Kosovo Land War - Paper <BR>09:22 p.m May 26, 1999 Eastern <BR> <BR>LONDON (Reuters) - President Clinton is ready to consider a <BR>full-scale Kosovo ground war against Serb forces, sending up to <BR>90,000 U.S. combat troops if no peace deal emerges within three <BR>weeks, Britain&#039;s Times newspaper reported Thursday. <BR> <BR>The newspaper, which led its front page with the story, quoted <BR>unidentified NATO sources for its information. <BR> <BR>Although NATO was officially planning for a peace <BR>implementation force of only 50,000-60,000 troops, there was a <BR>growing feeling in Washington and London that it must prepare for a <BR>much bigger operation involving 150,000-160,000 troops, the <BR>Times said. <BR> <BR>``Mr. Clinton&#039;s dramatic conversion, after weeks of <BR>apparent reluctance to send in ground troops, has emerged in the <BR>light of detailed briefings from General Wesley Clark, the <BR>Supreme Allied Commander, last week,&#039;&#039; it said. <BR> <BR>The newspaper said a new sense of urgency had been injected into <BR>NATO&#039;s contingency planning because of a warning from the <BR>military that a decision would have to be made by mid-June if the <BR>alliance was to contemplate a ground offensive. <BR> <BR>``The tight timetable is being dictated by the alliance&#039;s <BR>determination to start returning ethnic Albanian refugees to their <BR>homes in Kosovo before the winter,&#039;&#039; the Times said. <BR> <BR>It quoted the sources as saying that with Clinton committed to <BR>defeating Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic one way or <BR>another, the United States would be expected to contribute more <BR>than half of the force. <BR> <BR>The sources estimated the U.S. contribution could be about 90,000 <BR>troops who would be deployed from the United States, not Germany. <BR> <BR>``Britain and France would also be expected to play a major part,&#039;&#039; the <BR>Times said.]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>zoja</dc:creator>
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                        <pubDate>Thu, 27 May 1999 14:15:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[] Reuters UN indicts Milosevic, clouding diplomacy Content-Type: text/plain; charset=x-user-defined Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit  UN Indicts Milosevic, Clouding Diplomacy 09:21 p.m May 26...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[] Reuters UN indicts Milosevic, clouding diplomacy <BR>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=x-user-defined <BR>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit <BR> <BR>UN Indicts Milosevic, Clouding Diplomacy <BR>09:21 p.m May 26, 1999 Eastern <BR> <BR>By Janet McBride <BR> <BR>AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Yugoslav President Slobodan <BR>Milosevic has been indicted for war crimes, U.N. tribunal sources <BR>said, a move that may put Kosovo mediation efforts on ice while the <BR>West cranks up pressure for his removal from power. <BR> <BR>A source close to the International Criminal Tribunal for former <BR>Yugoslavia said Wednesday a warrant had been issued for <BR>Milosevic&#039;s arrest. The tribunal&#039;s chief prosecutor, Louise Arbour, <BR>was to hold a news conference Thursday to provide details of the <BR>indictment, which would be the first of a head of state in office. <BR> <BR>The indictment followed a trip to Yugoslavia by a senior U.N. <BR>humanitarian delegation that reported finding strong evidence of <BR>massive human rights abuses in the purge of Kosovo&#039;s ethnic <BR>Albanian population by Serbian forces. <BR> <BR>It also pointed to a loss of Western patience with Milosevic&#039;s refusal to <BR>accept international administration of Kosovo after more than two <BR>months of NATO air strikes that have smashed Yugoslavia&#039;s <BR>economy and infrastructure. <BR> <BR>Overnight, NATO warplanes zeroed in on the Yugoslav capital <BR>Belgrade and surrounding areas, with residents and local media <BR>reporting heavy bombardment and intense anti-aircraft fire. <BR> <BR>Western diplomats said Milosevic&#039;s indictment leaves him <BR>no choice but to yield to NATO&#039;s demands for an international <BR>security force in Kosovo or risk a possible NATO ground invasion. <BR> <BR>Yugoslav analysts said Milosevic had wanted direct talks with the <BR>West to boost his political standing at home, and that one of <BR>his main concerns had been to obtain a pledge of immunity from <BR>prosecution for war crimes. <BR> <BR>One Belgrade analyst said the tribunal&#039;s decision showed the <BR>West had decided removing Milosevic should take precedence <BR>over diplomacy that could leave the Serbian nationalist strongman <BR>in power, free to stir upheaval in the Balkans yet another time. <BR> <BR>The tribunal has indicted Bosnian Serb wartime leaders Radovan <BR>Karadzic and Ratko Mladic for their alleged role in the &#039;&#039;ethnic <BR>cleansing&#039;&#039; of Muslims and Croats during the conflict in Bosnia that <BR>ended in 1995, but they have not been arrested and remain at large. <BR> <BR>It was not immediately clear after reports of the impending <BR>indictment became public whether Russia&#039;s Kosovo envoy, Viktor <BR>Chernomyrdin, would travel to Belgrade Thursday for his planned <BR>fourth round of talks with Milosevic. <BR> <BR>Wednesday evening, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott <BR>appeared to deflate the idea. <BR> <BR>``Is he going to Belgrade? All I know is that he is meeting us in <BR>the morning (on Thursday),&#039;&#039; Talbott told Reuters in Moscow <BR>after several hours of talks with Chernomyrdin and European <BR>Union envoy Martti Ahtisaari.]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>zoja</dc:creator>
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                        <pubDate>Thu, 27 May 1999 14:14:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[By DMS on Wednesday, May 26, 1999 - 07:09 pm:  We are looking for topic ideas that would encourage thoughtful and intelligent debate. Please send topic suggestions to viexpo@viexpo.com.  Tha...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[By DMS on Wednesday, May 26, 1999 - 07:09 pm: <BR> <BR>We are looking for topic ideas that would encourage thoughtful and intelligent debate. Please send topic <BR>suggestions to <A HREF="mailto:viexpo@viexpo.com">viexpo@viexpo.com</A>.  <BR>Thanks DMS]]></content:encoded>
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                        <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-may-27-1999/paged/2/#post-4170</link>
                        <pubDate>Thu, 27 May 1999 14:07:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[] upi: Reports: ethnic cleansing in Pristina Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit         Serb forces have begun operations to ethnically cleanse Pristina of &gt;the tens...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[] upi: Reports: ethnic cleansing in Pristina <BR>Content-Type: text/plain <BR>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit <BR> <BR>       Serb forces have begun operations to ethnically cleanse Pristina of <BR>&gt;the tens of thousands of ethnic Albanians still living in the Kosovo <BR>&gt;capital, according to refugees and aid workers. <BR>&gt;        London&#039;s Daily Telegraph reports that independent accounts suggest <BR>&gt;the action is aimed at those who refused to or could not leave the city <BR>&gt;during the first heavy push two months ago. Macedonian officials stated <BR>&gt;that about 150,000 refugees are now leaving Kosovo and headed toward the <BR>&gt;border. Most refugees who arrived at the Macedonian border Tuesday were <BR>&gt;from Pristina. <BR>&gt;        ``For two months the police played cat and mouse with us,&#039;&#039; Shehrije, <BR>&gt;a 27-year-old woman from the suburb of Vranjevc told The Telegraph. <BR>&gt;``First they told us to go to the bus station and leave and then when we <BR>&gt;got there they told us to go back home. But last week that all changed. <BR>&gt;They said if we didn&#039;t leave in five minutes we would be killed. This <BR>&gt;happened to all our neighbors, too, and from what we saw the same was <BR>&gt;going on all over the city.&#039;&#039; <BR>&gt;        Aid workers said that in one area, young girls were kidnapped and <BR>&gt;held until their families paid ransom. <BR>&gt;        ``There seems to have been a policy change in Pristina some time <BR>&gt;around the middle of last week,&#039;&#039; said an aid worker at the Blace, <BR>&gt;Macedonia camp. ``Just when it seemed that life was settling down a bit, <BR>&gt;a fresh outburst of evil was let loose.&#039;&#039; <BR>&gt;        The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees also reports a new <BR>&gt;wave of systematic cleansing in Kosovo. More than 7,500 refugees arrived <BR>&gt;in Macedonian on Tuesday. In addition to Pristina, other cities that <BR>&gt;appear to be targeted for ethnic cleansing include Urosevac and Vitina. <BR>&gt;The UNHCR fears that if refugees continue to arrive at the present rate, <BR>&gt;there will be a crisis in the already overcrowded camps. <BR>&gt;        Refugees arriving in Macedonia said that Serbian troops were going <BR>&gt;from house to house, ordering residents to leave at gunpoint, and <BR>&gt;robbing and beating them. <BR>&gt;        They also reported that as people were being expelled, police forced <BR>&gt;them to sign documents stating they were leaving their home and <BR>&gt;renouncing their citizenship of their own free will. Some refugees said <BR>&gt;that only people with the proper documents were allowed to leave the <BR>&gt;country. <BR>&gt;        In Albania, about 220 people crossed the Morini border Tuesday, <BR>&gt;including 104 prisoners released from the Smrekovnica prison in northern <BR>&gt;Kosovo. Approximately 1,300 people have been released from Smrekovnica <BR>&gt;over the last four days, out of a reported prison population of about 3, <BR>&gt;000. Prisoners were reportedly forced to sign a blank sheet of paper for <BR>&gt;reasons that were not explained. <BR>&gt;        The UNHCR has also deposited $800,000 in Macedonia&#039;s Health Insurance <BR>&gt;Fund in order to finance health services to refugees. <BR>&gt;        Enthusiastic crowds greeted the moderate Kosovo Albanian leader, <BR>&gt;Ibrahim Rugova, when he visited the Stankovic camp in Macedonia, the BBC <BR>&gt;reported. Rugova who was seen on Serbian TV meeting with Yugoslav <BR>&gt;President Slobodan Milosevic, was met by thousands of cheering refugees <BR>&gt;who gave the victory sign and chanted, ``Rugova, Rugova&#039;&#039; and ` <BR>&gt;``parvasi&#039;&#039;, the Albanian word for independence. <BR>&gt;        Earlier, Rugova had thanked the Macedonian government for sheltering <BR>&gt;the refugees. Rugova has spent the past two weeks visiting European <BR>&gt;capitals to discuss the Kosovo crisis. <BR>&gt;]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>zoja</dc:creator>
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                        <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-may-27-1999/paged/2/#post-4169</link>
                        <pubDate>Thu, 27 May 1999 14:03:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[] upi: Yugoslav shells kill two Albanians Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit        TIRANA, Albania, May 26 (UPI) -- Two Albanian civilians were killed by &gt;Yugoslav ...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[] upi: Yugoslav shells kill two Albanians <BR>Content-Type: text/plain <BR>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit <BR> <BR>      TIRANA, Albania, May 26 (UPI) -- Two Albanian civilians were killed by <BR>&gt;Yugoslav cross-border artillery fire in Cahan, a village in Hasi <BR>&gt;district, says the Albanian Public Order Ministry. <BR>&gt;        A ministry statement says, ``Muse Cahani, 58, and his daughter <BR>&gt;Merita, 20, were killed by Serb shells in their home in Cahan, in Hasi <BR>&gt;district, this morning.&#039;&#039; <BR>&gt;        The ministry said the incident occurred at 10:30 a.m. (4:30 a.m. <BR>&gt;EDT). A spokeswoman for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in <BR>&gt;Europe confirmed the identity of the two victims. <BR>&gt;        The statement said Serb police and army fired across the border at <BR>&gt;the Morina checkpoint, some 10 miles (16 km) from Kukes, where there are <BR>&gt;still around 100,000 Kosovar Albanian refugees. <BR>&gt;        Lt. Gen. John Reith, commander of the NATO troops in Albania, said in <BR>&gt;Kukes today: ``There are Serbs digging in at the border at Morina <BR>&gt;checkpoint. There is artillery behind them.&#039;&#039; <BR>&gt;        In its Albanian-language report, Voice of America says there are <BR>&gt;around 200 Serb soldiers in Morina. <BR>&gt;        State-run Radio Tirana, quoting a local official, says border police <BR>&gt;and citizens shot at the Serbs when they tried to dig trenches in Zherke <BR>&gt;inside the Albanian border early this morning. <BR>&gt;        Radio reports say there was fighting today between Yugoslav forces <BR>&gt;and the Kosovo Liberation Army in Cahani and Pogaj. <BR>&gt;        The reports say the Serbs mined 500 square meters in Cahani, using <BR>&gt;mine launchers. They say NATO dropped 20 bombs on Morina inside <BR>&gt;Yugoslavia and the Albanian army also returned Yugoslav fire. <BR>&gt;        Neither Albanian nor OSCE authorities have confirmed fighting between <BR>&gt;Yugoslav forces and the KLA. <BR>&gt;        Meanwhile, the KLA is attempting to open a new corridor in Hasi <BR>&gt;district. The guerrillas already maintain a corridor in Padesh that <BR>&gt;extends 10 miles (16 km) into Kosovo and 4 miles (7 km) along the <BR>&gt;border, says a KLA liaison officer. <BR>&gt; <BR>
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<BR> <BR>Now, really, why is Slob complaining about collatteral damage, when he imposes it himself on another sovereign state?? <BR> <BR>Zoja]]></content:encoded>
						                            <category domain="https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/">Kosovo War</category>                        <dc:creator>zoja</dc:creator>
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                        <link>https://www.viexpo.com/kosovo-war/archive-through-may-27-1999/paged/2/#post-4168</link>
                        <pubDate>Thu, 27 May 1999 13:58:00 +0000</pubDate>
                        <description><![CDATA[afp: Serbs close border with Macedonia, UN says Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit     SKOPJE, May 26 (AFP) - Yugoslavia appeared to have closed its &gt;border with Mac...]]></description>
                        <content:encoded><![CDATA[afp: Serbs close border with Macedonia, UN says <BR>Content-Type: text/plain <BR>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit <BR> <BR>   SKOPJE, May 26 (AFP) - Yugoslavia appeared to have closed its <BR>&gt;border with Macedonia Wednesday, suddenly stopping the flow of <BR>&gt;ethnic Albanian refugees from Kosovo, the office of the United <BR>&gt;Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said. <BR>&gt;   The closure occurred at around 0800 local (0600GMT) and no <BR>&gt;further refugees were waiting in the no-man&#039;s-land between the two <BR>&gt;countries at the main crossing point of Blace, said Ron Redmond, <BR>&gt;UNHCR spokesman in Macedonia. <BR>&gt;   He said 8,500 had crossed in the previous 24 hours, adding to <BR>&gt;22,000 who arrived in the preceding three days. <BR>&gt;   "According to unverifiable rumours, the Serbs have closed the <BR>&gt;frontier for two or three days," he said. <BR>&gt;   All through Tuesday, refugees crossed into Macedonia in small <BR>&gt;groups and the arrivals continued through the night. <BR>&gt;   Redmond said the UNHCR did not know if the buses and trains that <BR>&gt;transported the refugees were still bringing people to the Serb post <BR>&gt;of Djeneral Jankovic on the other side of the frontier. <BR>&gt;   The UNHCR expressed the fear that the sudden surge in refugee <BR>&gt;arrivals would saturate camps in Macedonia that have already taken <BR>&gt;in 250,000 refugees. Another 63,000 have been taken to other <BR>&gt;countries, mainly in Europe and North America. <BR>&gt;   On Sunday, the UNHCR accused Skopje, which fears the influx of <BR>&gt;refugees will destabilise the country, of trying to organise the <BR>&gt;night-time transfer of refugees to Albania but the Macedonian <BR>&gt;authorities denied any such plans. <BR>&gt;   Macedonia, which closed the frontier at the beginning of the <BR>&gt;month because it said it could take no more refugees, gave the <BR>&gt;go-ahead Tuesday for the construction of a new camp in the west of <BR>&gt;the country financed by the US government. <BR>&gt; <BR> <BR>
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<BR> <BR>This is a nice example of how chicken Slob Milo is. Too affraid to fight himself, he uses unarmed civilians. PRAVI COVIJEK!! <BR> <BR>Zoja]]></content:encoded>
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