-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

===========================
The Committee for National Solidarity
Tolstojeva 34, 11000 Belgrade, YU
>"My wife was killed by the United Nations"
>March 21, 2000
>
>
>
>Politika, Aleksandar Apostolovski, March 21st - "If all women from the
world
>stand one next to another, none would match my Mika. That night, suddenly
she
>felt hard pain in the chest. I made her some tea. She was still pressing
her
>hand on her chest. Then, at 10.45 p.m. on February 29th, she grabbed me
>around the neck. We both fell on the ground. I stood up, she didn't. I
>crossed myself and covered her with a sheet".
>
>
>This is how the 80-year old Smiljka Midzovic died. However this was not an
>ordinary death of old age. Her husband Dusan was certain that his Mika
would
>have lived for a few years more, for sure. This was why this old man from
the
>village of Mali Zvecan, near Kosovska Mitrovica, arrived at Belgrade, hired
>lawyers and composed a legal suite and dropped by our editorial offices.
For
>the death of his wife he blames the Security Council of the United Nations.
>
>
>"Probably nothing will come out of my legal suit. I will sue none the less,
I
>am a persistent man. I can still see that "bigheaded" man from KFOR and his
>associates. They entered my house masked, better to say, they broke down
the
>door. They were searching for weapons. Mika's heart could not  survive
this".
>
>
>Dusan Midzovic, a retired construction worker of the "Rad" company, who
>cruised around all building sites of Kosovo on scaffolds, from the "Obilic"
>heating plant, to the factory of hunter's ammunition in Srbica, spoke of
the
>night he reluctantly remembers - at 3 a.m. on February 29th the "KFOR
troops
>arrived in tanks and troop carriers and surrounded the village.
>
>
>They burst in Dusan and Mika's bedroom after they broke down the  door with
>spades at 5.30 a.m. "My wife was numb with fear. A stocky KFOR soldier,
that
>bigheaded one and their associates with stockings over their faces, pointed
>their guns at us. Behind them there was a cameraman, also uniformed,
without
>the stocking, enlightening the room and filming. I was so upset that I, in
>Serbian, told them to go to… The bigheaded one lowered his gun, as if
saying
>"O.K.", and told us to leave the house. My son Milutin, daughter-in-law
>Jagoda, four months pregnant, and my four-year old granddaughter Milica
were
>sleeping upstairs. They allowed us to put blankets over our shoulders and
go
>out into the cold like that, barely naked. It was minus 5 degrees Celsius.
>They were searching for weapons in the yard. I'm sure you'll find it, I was
>thinking", said Dusan and with a universal gesture, a folded elbow, he
>affirmed his confession.
>
>
>They were breaking furniture and ripping the bed linen. They were also
going
>in the empty houses. The frostbitten villagers begged the members of the UN
>military mission not to break into empty homes, but the soldiers refused to
>comply. The search lasted until noon that day. The local residents coming
>back from work gave the keys to their homes to the KFOR troops, but,
>according to Dusan, they preferred breaking down doors that day. Ranging
from
>breaking down doors with their feet, huge hammers, axes, they also
destroyed
>furniture and other home furnishings. "Everything resembled robbery more
than
>a search", continued Dusan.
>
>
>"They were breaking into all supplementary buildings - stables, sheds,
>basements, garages. They were destroying fences, breaking the padlocks. The
>residents of Mali Zvecani are especially aggravated at the action of the
KFOR
>soldiers who searched through feces in the field toilets with metal sticks,
>and then, with the same sticks, "analyzed" the barrels with stored cabbage
>and flour. The food for winter was destroyed. However, the most devastating
>thing to the villagers was the contamination of the wells. They were
breaking
>the padlocks, opening the wells and now we can't use that water".
>
>
>The KFOR soldiers left Mali Zvecan around noon. Smiljka Midzovic could not
>catch her breath. "She was scared to death for her granddaughter and
>daughter-in-law. I saw expressions on her face change. She kept grasping
her
>chest. I kept making her tea. Nothing could have saved her".
>
>
>The day after that, the residents of Mali Zvecan from 17 homes went to see
>the administrator, presumably some Armenian, in a sad procession. The
French
>KFOR soldiers were waiting for them. They arrived at the village and found
a
>wasteland. They told them that the night search for weapons was a vandal
act.
>They apologized to Dusan's family, expressed their condolences, promised a
>fair and detailed investigation.
>
>
>"After that, they used to come late in the evening to talk. One of them
>always speaks Serbian, like you and me. Now they knock properly. I let them
>in and offer them some brandy. I also offer them a bite to eat. They are
>usually interested in what I think about the KFOR mission. I always tell
>them: "You came here to introduce democracy and peace. Thank God. We,
Serbs,
>are so besmirched in the world, and you can see that we are hospitable and
>honorable. And see what you are doing. Instead of defending Serbs from
>ethnic-Albanians, you are driving away the small number of us that
remained."
>Be what it may, they write down all I say. Two days after, here they come
>again. They parked the troop carrier they use to show off, in front of the
>house. Again they brought a package of special water, the only water they
>drink. They are always bringing me that water because of the jaundice. I
>don't know what to do with all that KFOR water - I have 200kg of it. They
>killed my wife, but I can't hate them. Why would I? I look at all this high
>politics in Mali Zvecan, how the Danish and the French hate each other, how
>the Serbs love the French, and hate all the rest. How the French soldiers
>whisper: "Listen, old man, we know it all, but the bosses are in charge
here.
>All the information goes to Kouchner!" This is why it is important to keep
a
>sane mind in these times. The closest ethnic-Albanians are 700m across the
>hill. Skender comes to the yard with his brothers. Off course we talk.
Common
>people. What do we say when we see each other stealthily? It is a complete
>mess here. Now our life resembles hell".
>
>
>His granddaughter Milica does not yet understand the adult world. She is
>rocking on an old chestnut tree near the road KFOR patrols pass by. The
other
>day she told her grandfather that she learned two languages "Bon jour" and
>"Good buy".
>
> http://www.serbia-info.com/news/2000-03/21/17927.html
Secretary General
Mrs. Jela Jovanovic
Art  historian
===========================

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