From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

U.N. police stoned in Kosovo
January 7, 2002 Posted: 1843 GMT
 

 
PRISTINA, Yugoslavia -- Four U.N. police officers were
attacked and their cars stoned by a rioting mob in
northern Kosovo this weekend.
The crowd also burned a U.N. vehicle during the
clashes on Sunday night in the Serb-dominated part of
the city of Kosovska Mitrovica.
The rioting began after NATO-led peacekeepers raided a
bar and detained a Serb hardline militant, U.N. police
spokesman Neeraj Singh told the Associated Press. The
four officers were not injured.
A crowd of 20 people prevented an earlier effort to
detain the activist, who had been seen carrying an
illegal weapon, said Daz Slaven, a spokesman for the
peacekeepers. 
"We will not tolerate acts of aggression against our
soldiers at any time or at any place," Slaven said.
Kosovska Mitrovica, an industrial city 40 kilometres
(25 miles) north of the provincial capital, Pristina,
is divided along ethnic lines and has seen a number of
ethnically motivated attacks and riots. The divided
town's Serb minority has recently targeted
peacekeepers and U.N. police officers.
Last month, two French peacekeepers were slightly
injured by hand grenades thrown at them, NATO told AP.

U.N. peacekeepers stepped up security a day after a
booby-trapped grenade killed a Serb in the ethnically
mixed town of Kosovska Kamenica, about 55 kilometres
east of Pristina. 
A curfew already in place from midnight to early
morning in the town has been extended for six more
hours, from 6 p.m to 5 a.m., Slaven said.
Sunday's explosion was the latest in a series of
violent incidents in Kosovska Kamenica, although it
was the first to claim a life.
  Kosovo's U.N. governor, Hans Haekkerup, quit a week
ago for family reasons  ?In a statement, NATO's top
commander in Kosovo, Lt. Gen. Marcel Valentin,
condemned "this and any acts of inter-ethnic
violence." He also called for the restoration of calm
during the Orthodox Christmas season. Christmas was
celebrated last weekend.
The peace force "abhors this vicious and cowardly
act," Slaven said. 
Dozens of Serbs have been killed and tens of thousands
have fled the province fearing attacks levelled in
revenge by ethnic Albanians after the U.N. and NATO
took control of Kosovo in 1999.
A 78-day NATO air war ended the 1998-99 crackdown on
ethnic Albanians by then Yugoslav President Slobodan
Milosevic, which killed at least 10,000 people.
The U.N. governor of Kosovo, former Danish Defence
Minister Hans Haekkerup, announced his resignation for
personal reasons just before New Year after one year
in charge of the southern Yugoslav province.
The soft-spoken, bearded Dane, 56, replaced Frenchman
Bernard Kouchner in January 2001 as the U.N.'s Kosovo
administrator. 
Haekkerup, whose wife is expecting a child early next
year, said he was looking forward to spending more
time with his family and said the decision to leave
was his. 

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