FROM PHOENIX, ARIZONA

The Special "Kosovo Crisis" Truth in Media Global Watch Bulletins, such as
the one enclosed below, can also be accessed at our Web site:
www.truthinmedia.org which is being updated throughout the day.

DAY 32, Update 1
-----------------------
Apr. 24, 1999; 1:30AM EDT

HEADLINES

Belgrade     1. NATO Is Now Killing People Because It Doesn't Like
                       What They Say (By Robert Fisk)

----------------------

1. NATO Is Now Killing People Because It Doesn't Like What They Say (By
Robert Fisk, The Independent - For Personal Use Only)

BELGRADE, Apr. 24 - The veteran war correspondent of The Independent,
Robert Fisk, was this London's daily's "Johnny on the spot" in Belgrade,
before and after NATO bombed the Serb TV building, killing at least 10
people and injuring scores of others.  Much of what Fisk wrote in his Apr.
24 dispatch matches up exactly with the eyewitness story we brought to you
yesterday, in the Day 31, Update 1, Item 1, Apr. 23 story:

"Once you kill people because you don't like what they say, you change the
rules of war'

Hanging upside-down from the wreckage was a dead man, in his fifties
perhaps, although a benevolent grey dust had covered his face. Not far
away, also upside-down - his legs trapped between tons of concrete and
steel - was a younger man in a pullover, face grey, blood dribbling from
his head on to the rubble beneath.

ROBERT FISK IN BELGRADE

Deep inside the tangle of cement and plastic and iron, in what had once
been the make-up room next to the broadcasting studio of Serb Television,
was all that was left of a young woman, burnt alive when Nato's missile
exploded in the radio control room. Within six hours, the Secretary of
State for International Development, Clare Short, declared the place a
"legitimate target".

It wasn't an argument worth debating with the wounded - one of them a young
technician who could only be extracted from the hundreds of tons of
concrete in which he was encased by amputating both his legs. Nor with the
silent hundreds who gathered in front of the still-smoking ruin at dawn
yesterday, lost for words as they stood in the little glade of trees beside
St Marko's Cathedral, where Belgrade's red and cream trams turn round. A
Belgrade fireman pulled at one of the bodies for all of 30 seconds before
he realised that the man, swinging back and forth amid the wreckage, was dead.

By dusk last night, 10 crushed bodies - two of them women - had been tugged
from beneath the concrete, another man had died in hospital and 15 other
technicians and secretaries still lay buried. A fireman reported hearing a
voice from the depths as the heavens opened, turning into mud the muck and
dust of a building that Ms Short had declared to be a "propaganda machine".

We had all wondered how long it would be before NATO decided that Radio
Televizija Srbija should join the list of "military" targets. Spokesmen had
long objected to its crude propaganda - it included a NATO symbol turning
into a swastika and a montage of Madeleine Albright growing Dracula teeth
in front of a burning building.

It never reported on the tens of thousands of Albanian refugees who spoke
of executions and "ethnic cleansing" in Kosovo. It endlessly repeated films
that depicted Yugoslav soldiers as idealised heroes defending their
country. It carried soporific tapes of President Slobodan Milosevic meeting
patriarchs, Cossacks, Russian envoys and the Kosovo Albanian leader Ibrahim
Rugova. The channel was showing an American interview with Mr Milosevic
when the first cruise missile smashed into the station's control room just
after two o'clock yesterday morning.

But did this justify killing the night staff in their studios and taping
rooms? Two weeks NATO's spokesmen had been suggesting that RTS would have
to carry six hours of Western television a day if it was to survive - CNN's
bland, safe coverage of events presumably offering some balance to the
rubbish churned out on the RTS news.

But once NATO decided this was as preposterous as it was impracticable, its
spokesman announced that the station was not on the list of NATO targets.
Then, on Monday, CNN's bosses called up from Atlanta to inform the
satellite boys in Belgrade that they should pull out of the RTS offices.
Against the wishes of other NATO nations, so the word went, General Wesley
Clark had decided to bomb Serb television. CNN withdrew from the building
in Takovska Street. And that night, we were all invited to have coffee and
orange juice in the studios.

The building was likely to be a target of the "NATO aggressor", according
to Goran Matic, a Yugoslav federal minister, as he walked us through the
ground floor of the doomed building. Yet, oddly, we did not take him
seriously. Even when the air-raid siren sounded, I stayed for another coffee.

Surely NATO wouldn't waste its bombs on this tiresome station with its
third-rate propaganda and old movies, let alone kill its staff.

Yesterday morning, the moment I heard the cruise missile scream over my
hotel roof, I knew I was wrong. There was a thunderous explosion and a
mile-high cloud of dust as four stories collapsed to the ground,
sandwiching offices, machines, transmitters and people into a pile of
rubble only 15 feet high.

Yet, within six hours, Serb television was back on the air, beaming its
programmes from secret transmitters, the female anchorwoman reading the
news from pieces of pink paper between pre-recorded films of Serbian
folk-songs and ancient Orthodox churches. All along, the Serbs had been
ready for just such an attack. We had not believed NATO capable of such
ferocity. The Serbs had.

The crowds still stood in the park as darkness fell, watching the men with
drills punching their way through the concrete for more survivors. By that
time, explanations were flowing from NATO's birthday celebrations in
Washington. Serbia's "propaganda machine" had been prolonging the war.

I wonder. I seem to recall Croatian television spreading hatred a-plenty
when it was ethnically cleansing 170,000 Serbs from Croatia in 1995. But we
didn't bomb Zagreb. And when President Franjo Tudjman's lads were
massacring Serbs and Muslims alike in Bosnia, we didn't bomb his residence.
Was Serbian television's real sin its broadcast of film of the NATO
massacre of Kosovo Albanian refugees last week, killings that NATO was
forced to admit had been a mistake?

Yes, Serbian television could be hateful, biased, bad. It was owned by the
government. But once you kill people because you don't like what they say,
you have changed the rules of war. And that's what NATO did in Belgrade in
the early hours of yesterday morning.

For photos that went along with this story, check out:
http://www.independent.co.uk/
--------------
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----
Bob Djurdjevic
TRUTH IN MEDIA
Phoenix, Arizona
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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