UN SC to hear about organ trafficking

29 October 2008 | 09:56 -> 13:57 | Source: B92, Beta
BELGRADE -- Serbia's War Crimes Prosecutor Vladimir Vukčević today 
directly accused Sali Berisha of ordering a cover-up in the organ 
trafficking case.

Vukčević spoke in Belgrade, two days after a visit to Tirana, and after 
his Albanian counterpart Ina Rama refused to launch an investigation 
into allegations that Kosovo Serb civilians were kidnapped in the 
province after the 1999 war, and taken to northern Albania, where their 
vital organs were extracted.

Beta reports that Vukčević told Wednesday's edition of Press newspaper 
that Berisha, who is today Albania's prime minister, "ordered the 
security services to destroy documentation on the missing Kosovo Serbs, 
their transport to Albania, and organ trade".

Vukčević accused Berisha of issuing this order under pressure from one 
of the so-called Kosovo Liberation Army, KLA, leaders, and subsequent 
Kosovo premiers, Ramush Haradinaj.

Since Tirana refused to open an investigation into all this, the war 
crimes prosecutor continued, Serbia will send the case to the UN 
Security Council and the Council of Europe.

"The world must learn about what happened in northern Albania," Vukčević 
said.

"We have arrived at a conclusion that politics played a significant role 
in the cover-up of the war crimes committed against Serbs and 
non-Albanians in Kosovo and Metohija. Carla Del Ponte's book, obviously, 
is an unpleasant testimony for Albania."

Vukčević also said that some 300 people were kidnapped and taken to 
Albania in this way, and that there is information about several 
possible mass graves, but that this is something that must be 
investigated by Albania or by international institutions.

Earlier today, reports in Belgrade said that his office's spokesman 
Bruno Vekarić commented that the Albanian Prosecutor Ina Rama had not 
even had time to look through all the materials.

Serbian Justice Minister Snežana Malović echoed the views of the War 
Crimes Prosecution, stating that the decision had obviously been taken 
under political pressure.

State Secretary to the Justice Ministry Slobodan Homen told B92 that 
following Albania’s decision to drop the investigation, the Serbian 
institutions would call on the help of international organizations.

“The problem is that Albanian politics has got involved here, and that 
this is a purely political decision,” he said.

"Therefore, we will address international organizations, first of all, 
the Council of Europe’s [CoE] representative in charge of this case. 
We’ll provide them with all the evidence and I believe that Albania will 
need to explain why such a decision was taken only 12 hours after it 
received the evidence,” Homen said.

Vukčević met on Monday with the Albanian chief prosecutor and her team 
to discuss the investigation launched by the Serbian War Crimes 
Prosecution into the alleged organ harvesting.

The prosecution announced earlier that the CoE’s rapporteur in the 
matter, Dick Marty, would be notified of all the allegations regarding 
the organ harvesting of missing persons.

The allegations first surfaced in former Chief Hague Prosecutor Carla 
Del Ponte's book "The Hunt", published in Italian earlier this year.

B92 TV's team was in northern Albania recently, visiting some of the 
locations where kidnapped Serbs are said to have been held and killed.

 

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