===========================
The Committee for National Solidarity
Tolstojeva 34, 11000 Belgrade, YU
 www.iwpr.net <http://www.iwpr.net

 NATO BRAWLING UPSETS MACEDONIANS

 Macedonians say trouble-making NATO troops are abusing their hospitality.

 By Zeljko Bajic in Skopje

 Outbreaks of violence involving unruly NATO troops in Macedonia are
 worsening relations between the western military alliance and local
people.

 The trouble is being caused by some of 4,500 NATO troops stationed in
 Macedonia and visiting Alliance troops from Kosovo.

 A German soldier stationed in the Macedonian capital, Skopje, says the "
 Kosovo soldiers are isolated, two three months at a time, so when they get
 here, they are prone to getting drunk and getting into fights."

 In one incident at a Skopje caf? last week, a large group of drunken
 American marines, who had been pestering girls on neighbouring tables,
 brawled with customers at a nearby square. A policeman who tried to
 intervene was hit by a brick.

 The fight was stopped by police reinforcements who took away the American
 soldiers to be sobered up.

 According to unofficial information, all the soldiers involved in this and
a
 string of similar disturbances had participated in recent NATO exercises
in
 Kosovo.

 A KFOR spokesman in Skopje confirmed that the American military and
 Macedonian civilian police were investigating the incidents which, some US
 military officials believe, were provoked by locals.

 "KFOR deeply regrets the incidents. We wish to stress that such behaviour
is
 not what we expect from our troops," Reinicke said.

 For its part, KFOR has complained that 22 of its vehicles have been stoned
 since the beginning of April.

 A series of violent altercations involving KFOR troops have been reported
 over the past year.

 "They sing, shout and bang the car doors," said Skopje resident, Aco
 Kitanovski. "They act abnormally and mainly provoke the girls."

 Another resident, Kire Manevski, says trouble-making KFOR soldiers are a
 disgrace, "What sort of behaviour is that - drinking away and attacking
 people? They definitely abuse our hospitality."

 At the height of the NATO campaign in Kosovo, 19 elite British soldiers
were
 beaten up after picking a fight with five waiters at a posh Skopje
 restaurant. Two of the soldiers ended up in hospital.

 At the time, the extreme nationalist Serbian leader, Vojislav Seselj,
 congratulated the Macedonian waiters, saying they had taught the "British
 occupier" a lesson.

 In Kumanovo last summer, several Danish KFOR soldiers stripped off and
 jumped into the town fountain. They were beaten up by residents appalled
by
 their behaviour.

 According to police sources, NATO troops have been involved in 182 traffic
 accidents and were the cause in nearly 75 per cent of cases.

 The most tragic of all was a collision between a KFOR vehicle and a
 government car carrying Minister Radovan Stojkovski, his wife and
daughter.
 The family along with their driver were killed.

 The Norwegian KFOR driver caused the accident, but will be tried in his
own
 country, much to the anger of the Macedonian public.

 Particularly infuriating was the Norwegian prosecutor's ruling that the
KFOR
 driver would be tried for careless driving, not involuntary manslaughter,
 the charge Macedonians expected him to face.

 Legal experts were warning the government right at the start of the NATO
 mission in Macedonia that it had paid insufficient attention to the
details
 of the terms and conditions under which the international force was to
 operate in the country.

 One key oversight, some Macedonians believe, was the government's
agreement
 to allow NATO troops who commit crimes here to be tried by courts in their
 native countries.

 Many in Macedonia believe the authorities have been lenient towards NATO
in
 the hope of speeding up its membership of the Alliance.

 Professor of Constitutional Law at the Law Faculty in Skopje, Svetomir
 Skaric, has warned that the status of KFOR troops in the country is in
 violation of the Macedonian Constitution.

 Former minister and legal expert, Djordji Naumov, proposed at a recent
 meeting of the government's advisory body, the Legal Council, new
 legislation obliging the government to compensate citizens affected by the
 actions of NATO troops.






Secretary General
Mrs. Jela Jovanovic
Art  historian
===========================

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