http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/breaking-news/world/europe/eu-probes-horrific-organ-trade-claim-14289620.html


Belfast Telegraph
May 3, 2009


EU probes horrific organ trade claim

Europe's top human rights watchdog is investigating claims that Albanian 
guerrillas kidnapped Serb civilians, removed their organs and sold their body 
parts.

The allegations relate to Kosovo's war in 1998.

A United Nations inquiry five years ago proved inconclusive, but Serbian 
authorities say they have uncovered new evidence.

They say two wealthy Europeans - a Swiss and a German - were among the 
recipients of kidneys, livers and other organs harvested in Albania.
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http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30541817/


Associated Press
May 3, 2009


European Union probing Balkan organ trade
Group looks at allegations that Albanians sold organs of kidnapped Serbs
 

RRIPE, Albania - Europe's top human rights watchdog is launching a probe into a 
bone-chilling allegation: That ethnic Albanian guerrillas may have kidnapped 
Serb civilians at the end of Kosovo's 1998-99 war, removed their organs and 
sold the body parts on the black market.

A United Nations inquiry into the issue in 2004 proved inconclusive. So did a 
recent investigation by The Associated Press, which obtained U.N. and Serbian 
documents detailing what was uncovered at a farmhouse in remote north-central 
Albania: bloodstains, syringes, empty bottles of muscle relaxant, surgical gear 
and other material. The family living in the house in Rripe offers a plausible 
explanation for everything the investigators found.

The allegations were first made public in a memoir last year by Carla Del 
Ponte, the former chief U.N. war crimes prosecutor. In "Madame Prosecutor," an 
account of her tenure as head of the International Criminal Tribunal for former 
Yugoslavia, Del Ponte said her office was tipped to possible organ trafficking.

Although the information was "tantalizing," Del Ponte wrote, "in the end, the 
attorneys and investigators on the KLA cases decided that there was 
insufficient evidence to proceed." They left it to U.N. officials and the local 
Kosovo and Albanian authorities to investigate further, which never happened.

Now, a probe is being led by Dick Marty, the Swiss senator who headed an 
investigation into claims the CIA operated secret prisons in Eastern Europe. 
Marty, working on behalf of the Council of Europe, would not comment before his 
Balkans fact-finding mission is completed.

New evidence? 

Serbian authorities claim to have uncovered new evidence.

They say two wealthy Europeans — a Swiss and a German — apparently were among 
the recipients of kidneys, livers and other organs harvested in Albania and 
sold via middlemen in a macabre but meticulously orchestrated operation that 
involved private aircraft and tens of millions of dollars.

Bruno Vekaric, a top adviser to Vladimir Vukcevic, Serbia's chief war crimes 
prosecutor, declined to identify the alleged recipients but said the 
information came from "people involved in the operation," including former 
members of the now-disbanded Kosovo Liberation Army.

Vukcevic showed the AP a thick blue binder jammed with documents he recently 
handed over to Marty. He declined to let AP review the statements, citing the 
need to protect the identities of Albanian informants.

KLA guerrillas fought Serbian troops loyal to the late strongman Slobodan 
Milosevic....The bloodshed ended after NATO pummeled Serbia with airstrikes and 
sent in peacekeepers in June 1999. Kosovo's ethnic Albanian leaders declared 
independence in February 2008.
  
The alleged organ harvesting reportedly happened in the confusing weeks that 
followed the war's end — a time when hundreds of thousands of ethnic Albanians 
who had sought refuge in neighboring Albania were streaming back into Kosovo.

Serbian officials say up to 400 Kosovo Serbs vanished without a trace during 
that period, and some fear a few dozen may have fallen victim to an organ 
operation.

Albanian and Kosovar authorities vehemently deny that Serbs were killed and 
their organs harvested. In an interview with the AP, Kosovo Prime Minister 
Hashim Thaci — himself a former KLA commander who once went by the 
nom-de-guerre "The Snake" — dismissed the allegations as "a complete 
fabrication."

But Serbia is pressing Albanian and international authorities to take another 
look at the house, as well as at maps and other intelligence it claims detail 
the locations of three mass graves in northern Albania — sites that Serbia 
suspects may contain the remains of missing Kosovo Serbs.

Vekaric told the AP his office has obtained statements from ex-KLA rebels 
confirming they had access to Albanian military clinics in the area, as well as 
testimony from two Serbs who escaped prison camps run by the KLA in northern 
Albania and said the rebels operated medical clinics in the area.

He said Serbian prosecutors also have the bank account details of individuals 
who profited from sales of organs, narcotics and weapons trafficked through 
Kosovo and northern Albania, along with photos of surgical scissors allegedly 
recovered from the house.

>From the start, the investigation was stymied by international officials' 
>insistence that neither the U.N. mission in Kosovo nor the tribunal in The 
>Hague had jurisdiction over crimes committed in Albania, former U.N. forensics 
>expert Jose Pablo Baraybar told the AP.
....
'Evidence and allegations are credible'

New York-based Human Rights Watch has been conducting its own investigation 
into the allegations. The group pressed Kosovo and Albania to reopen the case 
and sent letters to both nations' prime ministers last spring. They went 
unanswered.

"I really don't know why this wasn't taken more seriously," said senior 
researcher Fred Abrahams. "The evidence and allegations are credible."

Officials acknowledge the Balkans is a hotbed for organ trafficking.

In November, Kosovo police raided a clinic in the capital, Pristina, where they 
arrested two ethnic Albanian doctors suspected of illegally removing a kidney 
from a Turkish donor and transplanting it into an elderly Israeli man's body. 
Authorities are still searching for a third doctor, also a Turk.

Medical experts say that although transplantation requires a large team of 
surgeons and sophisticated equipment, the simple harvesting of a kidney or 
liver can be fairly straightforward. But speed is of the essence, and the 
allegations that remote northern Albania may have been used to harvest highly 
perishable organs raise questions.

Roads are unpaved and so badly rutted that villagers without four-wheel drive 
vehicles travel by mule. That suggests a helicopter would have been needed to 
whisk an organ out of rugged northern Albania to Tirana's international 
airport, where it presumably would be flown onward to a recipient in the West.

In February 2004, Baraybar led a team of investigators to the house in Rripe. 
The investigators, accompanied by a local Albanian prosecutor, sprayed a 
chemical agent on the floors and walls. That revealed two sizable splatters of 
blood: one in the kitchen, another in a storage room.

"My gut feeling is that something happened there," Baraybar said.

Yet forensics tests were never conducted on the stains to determine if the 
blood was human or animal.

Outside the house, on a steep slope leading down to a stream, Baraybar's team 
recovered syringes; empty containers of Tranxene, a muscle relaxant, and 
chloraphenical, an antibiotic; a piece of gauze similar to material used for 
surgical scrubs; and an empty handgun holster, according to the investigative 
report. It does not mention the surgical scissors Serbia alleges also were 
found.

When the team tried to speak to villagers, the local prosecutor answered for 
them, Baraybar said. And when investigators attempted to dig in a nearby 
cemetery which they were told might hold Serb remains, a mob quickly formed to 
drive them away.

"It was quite a hostile situation," he said.
....


                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

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                                    http://www.antic.org/

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