-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.siri-us.com/backgrounders/Albania-KLA-Crime.html
<A HREF="http://www.siri-us.com/backgrounders/Albania-KLA-Crime.html">Subj:
</A>
-----

SIRIUS: The Strategic Issues Research Institute

Benjamin C. Works, Director

718 937-2092; www.siri-us.com;

E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

--Celebrating Chaos Theory Since 1987--



April 18, 1999



ARCHIVE: Albanian Mafia & KLA Crime & Terror



Note: This archive, intended for research purposes, contains copyright
material included "for fair use only."



Contents:
1.NY Times, June 10, 1998; Kosovo Rebels and Their New Friend
2.Reuters Jan. 29, 1999; KLA Cleansing Serbs from villages
3.BBC, Feb. 3, 1999; Truck from Croatia Smuggling arms, ammo to KLA
4.Reuter Jan. 23, 1999: Albanian immigrant smuggling gangs
5.National Post (Canada) March 1, 1999; Migrants offered package deal to
freedom
6.Milan-Corriere della Sera, Jan. 19, 1999 on KLA-Drug
7.The Telegraph, Jan. 13, 1999; KLA Drug Crime in Milan
8.Irish Mirror, Jan. 22, 1999; A Geg Murderer in Dublin
9.Serb Media Center, Feb. 4, 1999; Terror-Murder in Djakovica;
10.AP Feb. 5, 1999: Devic Monastery robbery
11.The Guardian, Sept 30, 1998; Kanun Vendetta and Albanian Children in
Hiding
12.Police Report Regarding KLA Activities around Racak; Jan. 18, 1999
13.Maxim Mag. Jan/Feb 99; Confessions of a Strip Club Bouncer
14.Reuters, Feb. 12, 1999; UN, EU to fund Balkan Anti-Drug Smuggling
Programs
15.BBC April 14, 1999; BBC Reporters Robbed
16.Boston Globe, April 14, 1999; Lawless Northern Albania



Introduction:



This collection samples a range of activities from terror to mere
murder, in Kosovo, Ireland, New York, Milan and elsewhere. Some articles
are also included in other SIRIUS Topical Archives in the spirit of
cross-indexing important elements, such as Kanun Vendetta.



Even as the NATO forces in northern Albania seek to contend with the
refugee flow, bandits are robbing refugees, reporters, humanitarian
workers and other stray fools. But this has been going on for years.
Northern Albania is a "warlord" zone, dominated by Mr. Sali Berisha,
who, as President of Albania superintended an eruption of chaos in the
wake of a notorious pyramid scheme collapse



Readers with a further interest in this subject are referred to a
scholarly article also posted in the Archives:

Gus Xhudo; MEN OF PURPOSE: THE GROWTH OF ALBANIAN CRIMINAL ACTIVITY,
published in TRANSNATIONAL ORGANIZED CRIME; Published by Frank Cass &
Co. Ltd. (London) and The Ridgway Center for International Security
Studies, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA (
www.pitt.edu/~rcss/ridgway.html). Volume 2, Spring 1996, Number 1, pp.
1-20 (ISSN 1357-7387)





Benjamin C. Works.



Articles:



1. Kosovo Rebels and Their New Friend

BYLINE: By CHRIS HEDGES

DATELINE: VICIDIOL, Albania, June 9 1998



The family farm of the former Albanian President, Sali Berisha, who was
driven from power last year, has become a base for the Kosovo Liberation
Army, an ethnic Albanian group fighting for independence for their
province from Serbia.



Mr. Berisha's decision to turn over his birthplace to the rebels is part
of his skillful manipulation of the crisis in Kosovo to mount a
political comeback, Western diplomats say.



His return to power would not be welcomed by Washington, which blames
his administration for Albania's economic melt-down and descent into
lawlessness. The unrest began with the collapse of pyramid schemes, many
of them encouraged by the Government, that cost thousands of Albanians
their savings.



The decision to back the armed movement in Kosovo could also push
Albania toward open conflict with Belgrade and spread the fighting
beyond Serbia's borders.



"The increased violence in the border region is counterproductive," said
Daan W. Everts, the representative in Albania for the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe. "Instead of reducing militancy, it
has increased it inside Kosovo and Albania. The more violence, the more
militancy."



The stone farmhouse here, two miles south of Tropoje, with a red tile
roof and small, narrow windows, was surrounded this morning with dozens
of pack horses and 30 young men who were being issued AK-47 assault
rifles from an underground bunker in a field. Those interviewed said
they were preparing to cross the rugged border to join the rebels and
fight Serbian troops.



Mr. Berisha's elderly cousin, Besnik Berisha, who had lived with his
wife and family in the house for several years, moved out a few days
ago, the men said. A newly built wooden fence around the compound and
piles of assault rifles and ammunition boxes gave the place the feel of
a fortress.



The rebels, who move in darkness across the border into Kosovo, spoke
bitterly of the request by the Prime Minister, Fatos Nano, Mr. Berisha's
political rival, that NATO troops be stationed along the border on the
Albanian side.



"We don't want NATO troops here," said a young, bearded leader who would
not give his name. "The deployment of NATO troops on the border will
only assist the Serbs and hurt our struggle. If NATO troops go into
Kosovo, we will welcome them and respect any arrangement made by them,
but they have no place in Albania."



Several hundred young ethnic Albanians, with tons of weapons and
supplies, have entered Kosovo during the last week with Kosovar
guerrillas based here. The influx drew heavy Serbian shelling and blasts
from 20-millimeter antiaircraft canon, which pounded the mountain range
along the border on Monday night and today. Thousands of refugees have
fled Kosovo for Albania and Macedonia.



Mr. Berisha's decision to turn the border region under his control into
a staging area for the guerrilla army is popular here in the north,
where many Albanians have relatives in Kosovo and have accepted refugees
into their homes.



Prime Minister Nano, who had condemned the armed movement in Kosovo, has
begun referring to the guerrilla movement as "armed resistance" and the
struggle as "legitimate self-defense."



The arms trafficking, paid for by ethnic Albanians in Germany and
Switzerland, is enriching Mr. Berisha's supporters and swelling his
power base. The trafficking, which underlines the fact that Mr. Nano's
administration lacks control overwhole sections of the country, has also
welded the growing rebel army in Kosovo to Mr. Berisha's political
party.



Mr. Berisha refers to the fighting in Kosovo as a holy war and has
called on ethnic Albanians to "defend their homes and their land." He
has called Mr. Nano's Government an "enemy of the Albanian nation" for
failing to support the rebel cause. He defines the "Albanian nation" as
including not only Albania but also Kosovo and western Macedonia, which
itself is dominated by ethnic Albanians. Mr. Berisha refers to the
Serbian forces as "barbarians" and the rebels as "blessed."



Albania has been flooded with more than 10,000 refugees. A few hundred
new arrivals come each day. Local television runs frequent pictures,
shown throughout the day in homes and coffee shops, of lines of refugees
and weeping mothers speaking of suffering and violence inflicted by the
Serbs.



The fighting in Kosovo, which has taken at least 250 lives since March,
has intensified in recent days with attempts by the Yugoslav President,
Slobodan Milosevic, to force residents from villages along the border
and raze what remains. The campaign is seen as an effort to thwart the
arms smuggling and crossborder incursions by the guerrillas.



In the anarchy that swept Albania last year, mobs stole 650,000 weapons
and tons of military equipment from local armories. Many weapons were
smuggled into Kosovo and old stockpiles, as well as new purchases, are
swelling the rebel inventory, Western diplomats said.



At the same time, armed gangs with assault rifles in the trunks of their
cars roam freely. The police and local officials are corrupt or
powerless, and factories and stores, looted and gutted last year in the
upheaval, stand idle and deserted. Cars are stopped on the roads during
the day and stolen by brigands, and there are frequent shoot-outs in the
dusty village streets to settle feuds and rivalries.



Copyright by The New York Times,

June 10, 1998



2. Serbs say West helps Kosovo Albanian ``terrorists''

04:31 a.m. Jan 29, 1999 Eastern

By Kurt Schork



PRISTINA, Serbia, Jan 29 (Reuters) - Western governments are coddling
ethnic Albanian separatists in Kosovo, awarding them at the negotiating
table what they never won on the battlefield, the top Serbian official
in the province complained on Friday.



Zoran Andjelkovic, President of the province's governing Interim
Executive Council, told Reuters that the exodus of Kosovo's minority
Serb population had accelerated since a ceasefire agreement was signed
last October 15.



``What has happened here since the October agreement has been a tragedy.
Our police were forced to withdraw and international monitors were slow
in arriving,'' Andjelkovic said.



``KLA (Kosovo Liberation Army) terrorists filled the vacuum, using
murder and kidnapping to create panic among Serbs, who fear for their
lives.''



Ninety percent of the population in this southern Serbian province are
ethnic Albanian. KLA guerrillas are fighting for independence on behalf
of that majority.



Andjelkovic said 97 villages had been ``cleansed'' of Serbs in the last
seven months, 36 of them since the ceasefire agreement that required
most Serbian security forces to withdraw from Kosovo or return to bases
within the province.



``The manager of a large public enterprise here told me today that his
engineers are leaving Kosovo,'' the Serbian official recounted from his
office in Pristina, the provincial capital.



``The engineers tell him they don't know where they will find a place to
live or to work and that they don't care, so long as they and their
wives and children can sleep at night without worrying about terrorist
attacks.''



Andjelkovic cited the December kidnapping and murder of the deputy mayor
of nearby Kosovo Polje and the kidnapping of five Serb civilians,
including two women, near Vuciturn this month as the sort of incidents
destroying communal life in Kosovo.



``It's true the five Serbs (in Vuciturn) were finally released, but
ethnic Albanians and Serbs will never live together normally in that
area again. They will always be divided by fear and mistrust,''
Andjelkovic said.



``The murder of the deputy mayor of Kosovo Polje, who lived in the
village of Velika Slatina, caused four Serb families to leave. It's not
just that another 15 Serbs left, it's that Velika Slatina has been
ethnically cleansed by terror.''



``We blame the international community. NATO is used to pressure our
police. The KLA interpret that as support. They are not a liberation
movement. They are terrorists and criminals who don't hesitate to kill
Albanians when it suits them.''



More than 2,000 people have been killed and hundreds of thousands driven
from their homes in Kosovo in the 11 months since the KLA began its
guerrilla campaign.



The international community, mostly worried about containing the
violence and preventing a wider Balkan war, says both sides in Kosovo
prey on civilians.



Western officials warn that Serbian and ethnic Albanian leaders will
soon be summoned to peace talks and ordered to agree an interim peace
deal under threat of NATO action.



Among those likely to have a place at the table is the KLA, a
development that Andjelkovic warned could be enough in itself to derail
the proposed talks.



``We have no intention of trying to choose negotiating representatives
for the Albanian side,'' Andjelkovic said.



``Neither do we intend to sit across from those killing and kidnapping
our people. If the international community had taken a stand against the
KLA and allowed our police to finish their work there would be a real
chance for peace.''



* * * *

Croatia apparently remains secretly at war with Yugoslavia, as does
Bosnia. Both support the KLA --BCW



Wednesday, February 3, 1999 Published at 09:29 GMT

BBC: World: Europe



Serbs find KLA 'arms cache'

3. Serbs say arms for KLA fighters were in a truck coming from Croatia::

http://news.bbc.co.uk/olmedia/270000/images/_271063_kla300.jpg



Yugoslav authorities say police have seized weapons, ammunition and
uniforms bound for ethnic Albanian rebels in Kosovo hidden in a lorry
coming from Croatia.



Official Serbian sources say the cache, worth more than $500,000, is the
biggest ever seized inside the embattled Serbian province.

The police found "100 automatic weapons, several thousand bullets of
various sizes, rockets, and uniforms bearing the insignia of the Kosovo
Liberation Army (KLA)", according to the Serbian Information Centre in
Pristina.



* * * *



4. Albanian Gang Recaptures Boats Seized by Police

Reuters 23-JAN-99



VLORE, Albania, Jan 23 (Reuters) - Albanian gang members involved in the
smuggling of illegal immigrants to Italy recaptured six speedboats on
Saturday after police had seized them the previous day, witnesses said.
Albanian and Italian police had mounted a joint operation to bring the
boats to an island off the port of Vlore on Friday night as part of
efforts to stem a steady flow of migrants across the Adriatic Sea. Six
men were arrested.



Angry gang-members blocked the main road along the coast on Saturday
morning and, when Vlore police chief Sokol Kociu came to negotiate with
them, he was roughed up and taken to Sazan island where the boats were
moored.



"A group of armed smugglers blocked the main road by the coast this
morning," a Vlore resident told Reuters by telephone. "The Vlore police
chief tried to negotiate with them but they insulted and assaulted him."
Once on Sazan, the gang members reclaimed their property and released
the police chief.



Albania, Europe's poorest country, has experienced periodic violence
since the collapse of communism in 1991. At least half a million weapons
were looted from army barracks during months of chaos in 1997 and many
outlying regions are completely lawless.



Vlore was the centre of a 1997 revolt that followed the collapse of
fraudulent pyramid investment schemes, which eventually toppled the
former Democratic Party government and brought to power a Socialist-led
coalition.



Police, who were backed by troops, did not intervene in Saturday's
standoff. The situation in the town was otherwise quiet.



Ethnic Albanians fleeing the conflict in Yugoslavia's Kosovo province,
as well as Kurdish refugees, use Albania as a springboard for entering
southern Italy.



Copyright 1999 Reuters Limited.All rights reserved.



* * * *



Note: This adds more breadth to the scope of Albanian refugee and heroin
smuggling across the Adriatic to Italy. Once there, refugees have easy
access to Western Europe and once heroin enters Italy and the European
Union's customs zone, it can move on without any further customs
inspections. --BCW

THE NATIONAL POST (Canada), Monday, March 1, 1999 WORLD



5. Migrants offered package deal to freedom

In the Strait of Otranto, criminals help desperate people find a new
home in Europe: In an astounding display of international co-operation,
organized criminals from around the globe have combined to offer a
one-price-covers-all scheme to collect illegal emigrants from the
world's hot spots and smuggle them into the new, borderless Europe.
Frank Vivian reports



PHOTO: George Karachalis, Reuters / An Albanian woman holds her crying
baby as a gunman stops her from approaching a boat in a desperate bid to
flee the country. The local "mafia" was charging $250 (US) a person for
a ride to Italy.

PHOTO: Santiago Lyon, The Associated Press / Two Albanian men use a rope
to get aboard a boat leaving for Italy in the Albanian port of Durres.



PHOTO: Paolo Cocco, Reuters / Albanian refugees queue to disembark as
they arrive at the south Italian port of Brindisi, after they were
rescued by the Italian coast guard in the Adriatic sea.



>From the moment he sees the rust-streaked freighter slide out of a fog
bank on the Otranto Strait, 40 kilometres west of the Albanian coast,
and abruptly change course, Captain Antonino Lo Presti is wary.

"She's an old gas tanker, the kind a smuggler can buy at a scrapyard for
next to nothing," he says, giving the order for full throttle. "When we
picked her up on radar, she didn't even respond to our signals." This is
where the war-torn Third World meets Western Europe head-on, in a tense
struggle between civil society and organized crime that holds hundreds
of lives hostage every night.



Capt. Lo Presti's command, the high-speed pursuit vessel Cavaglia,
sailing under the flag of the Guardia di Finanza, Italy's counterpart to
the Canadian Coast Guard, patrols one of the most dangerous seaways on
the planet.



An international conspiracy of unprecedented dimensions, involving crime
syndicates in half a dozen nations -- and trafficking in enormous
quantities of narcotics, arms, and desperate human beings -- operates in
these waters.



As the two vessels close on a moonless night, the radio of the 70-metre
freighter finally crackles into response, agreeing to heave to. Its name
and Syrian home port are faint, nearly illegible scrawls on the stern.



"Could be drugs," says the captain. "Could be guns. Could be people."



Led by chief engineering officer Girolamo Gambino, four crew members
strap on bulletproof vests and handguns, and prepare to board.



They return after an hour, shaking their heads. The freighter carries
only a herd of goats bound for the port of Koper, Slovenia. It makes no
commercial sense as cargo, but there is nothing more the Cavaglia can
do. Two days later, police report a large group of clandestine emigrants
has landed on the Italian coast near Venice, from a small port just
south of Koper.



The 67-kilometre-wide Otranto Strait is the narrowest waterway between
the rich European Union and a Third World engulfed in civil war. It's
also the last leg of an epic journey for vast numbers of undocumented
migrants.



Their origins are a catalogue of the planet's bloodiest crises. Crossing
the strait in the holds of rusting freighters -- or more often aboard
gommones, 95km/h motor launches based in the Albanian port of Vlore -
they include refugees from every conflict raging in Africa, the Balkans,
and south and central Asia.

On the single afternoon and night a team of journalists spent aboard the
Cavaglia, the Guardia di Finanza rounded up 365 clandestine emigrants.



They had set sail from Vlore after journeys to Albania of up to 10
weeks, from Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, the Kurdish borderland of Turkey and
Iraq, Kosovo, Algeria, Sierra Leone, Liberia, and Nigeria. Italian
government spokesmen estimate 800 to 1,000 such emigrants leave Vlore
daily, successfully eluding detection -- or drowning en route.



Once in Italy, they are able to travel north unimpeded and disappear
into the swelling Third World ghettos of Paris, Berlin, Brussels, and
Rotterdam. In an effort to further integrate their economies, Italy and
most other EU nations have dismantled border posts with their EU
neighbours in the past two years.

It is what precedes the clandestine voyages on the Otranto Strait that
suggests an underworld conspiracy more extensive, and more ominous, than
anything preceding it in the annals of organized crime.

Put simply, "mafia" groups from the South China Sea to Sicily have
recognized a golden opportunity in Europe's open internal borders.



With extraordinary sophistication and minute planning, they have
combined forces to smuggle thousands of human beings over the EU's
Adriatic frontier.



In dozens of interviews, emigrants said they had paid for their
transportation to Western Europe in their homelands. That one up-front
payment covered everything: At each step on their journey -- whether it
be the remote frontier between Iraq and Turkey, or a port in Nigeria,
Albania or Pakistan -- buses, cars, and maritime vessels were waiting,
and no further payment was asked.



"I gave a man in Kabul $6,000 [all figures US] for myself and my
sister," says a traveller from Afghanistan. "When we crossed into
Pakistan, there was a minibus ready for us, and others when we reached
Iran and Turkey."



Neither he nor his sister had passports or official identification
documents, yet they had crossed several of the world's most heavily
defended borders.



"After Turkey, it was a freighter to Albania," the Afghan says. "Nobody
anywhere said a word about more money."



Each driver or helmsman's share of the fee had been assigned in advance,
and distributed by an international team of paymasters who were trusted
to meet specific billing schedules that stretched across two continents.



The size of the advance payment is based on a complicated formula that
takes into account the level of political risk and the distance
travelled.



Like the Afghans, several Sri Lankans had paid $3,000 apiece. "We were
the last sons alive in our families," one says. "Everybody gave
something, everybody hopes we'll be able to get them out, too."

A group of 14 Kurds and six Christians from Iraq who made the journey
together had paid $1,500 a person, and a family of four from Kosovo paid
$1,000 an adult and $500 a child.



Albanians are offered a special package if they make their own way to
Vlore: Three voyages to Italy for a flat $1,200 -- "in case we're caught
the first two times," one explained. Apart from the Albanians, most of
those who are apprehended at sea by the Guardia di Finanza, or on the
beaches by the Italian carabinieri, are refugees eligible to apply for
political asylum, although there is no certainty they will eventually
receive it.



The Italian government will not forcibly repatriate people who arrive
illegally from war-torn countries where they might be imprisoned or
executed as suspected terrorists.

Large numbers of clandestine emigrants from Kosovo, Kurdish Iraq, and
Turkey, and northern Sri Lanka -- especially young men aged 21 to 35 --
are clearly militants who have been identified by law enforcement
authorities in their homelands and obliged to flee.



"Of course I am a Tiger," one refugee says, referring to the
ethnic-Tamil guerrilla army that has waged a bloody 15-year war against
the Sri Lankan government. "Every Tamil my age in our country is a
Tiger."



The apprehended newcomers find themselves on a complicated, demoralizing
road once they reach Italy. The first stop is a cluster of metal sheds,
aluminum truck containers that have been refashioned into temporary
housing and installed on the wharves of Otranto, the Cavaglia's port.



Once the travellers' origins are established, those who are not
identified as nationals of Albania, Morocco, or Tunisia -- countries
that have signed "instant deportation agreements" with Italy -- are
bused to the Casa Regina Pacis. At the refugee camp 25 kilometres north
of Otranto in the town of San Foca they are photographed and
fingerprinted. Within a week, most are freed to the custody of relatives
in Germany, northern Italy, or France, in keeping with legislation
covering asylum applicants. Others are sent to larger holding camps in
Sicily -- or climb over the San Foca fences at night to make their way
north as best they can.



The scene at San Foca recently was Babel revisited, with a dozen
languages pouring into the hallway phones from which the interned called
relatives.



The camp, built to house 300 boy scouts on summer vacations, held nearly
600 emigrants. The walls of the crowded sleeping halls were covered with
graffiti, also in a dozen languages, left by earlier arrivals: "Kosovo I
love You," "I went to Germany" and "Allah protect us."



Down the hall from the phones, two Liberian prostitutes sat quietly on
bunk beds, awaiting a decision on their next destination.



The clandestine traffic has increasingly become a modern slave trade,
with young women, chiefly from West Africa, Ukraine, Russia, and Albania
forced into prostitution and sold to middlemen overseeing sex rings in
Europe.



The Liberian women declined to talk, but many others at San Foca were
eager to tell their stories. "I'm a schoolteacher from a country where
there are no classrooms or books anymore," a refugee from Afghanistan
says. "I am also a Tajik," he adds, drawing a finger across his neck to
suggest a throat-slitting. The Tajik minority in Afghanistan, which
resisted the revolution of the fundamentalist Taleban movement, has been
subjected to genocidal campaigns by the government in recent months.



The Roman Catholic charity organization Caritas, which administers the
camp for the Italian authorities and oversees reporters' visits, asks
only that no names be used.



"These are political refugees," says a Caritas executive. "Their
families could well be in mortal danger if the wrong person reads your
article."



Her concern reflects a widespread mixture of alarm and sympathy over the
influx among Italians, for whom mass immigration is a new phenomenon.



"They arrive with every imaginable problem -- bayonet wounds, broken
limbs, infections of the respiratory system, intestinal disorders, acute
mental trauma. It's heart-breaking," says Dr. Marina Greco, who presides
over a two-physician clinic at Regina Pacis.



"I look at these people, and I can't help but think of how many of my
own family made the same kind of voyage to America," says Mr. Gambino,
the Cavaglia's engineering officer, who is from Sicily. But the
sentimentality does not extend to Albanians.



Unlike the refugees, who share their boats, Albanians in police custody
are returned home within 24 hours. One result is that the ferries that
travel daily between Italy and Albania are nearly empty westbound -- the
voyages in that direction are made in gommones or freighters -- and
crammed full on the eastbound run. The returned are a living
encyclopaedia of the reasons Italian popular opinion has shifted so
sharply -- from open-armed sympathy toward Albania when it threw off
half a century of oppressive Stalinist rule in 1992, to fearful
hostility.



On a recent voyage from the Italian port of Brindisi to Vlore, the
Illyrian Lines ferry Tirana was packed to the gunwales with young men
who drank themselves into a brawling rage on the night-long voyage,
leaving ransacked cabins and decks full of broken chairs and tables.



Thieves quickly singled out the few foreigners on board -- including two
journalists, who were threatened repeatedly with beatings, and whose
cabin vouchers and return tickets were stolen before the ship even
sailed.

"They have a distorted mentality after all those years of isolation,"
says Antonio Probo, a Cavaglia officer, referring to Albania's years
under Enver Hoxha, a reclusive dictator who shut his country to the
Soviet Union and Mao Tse-tung's China as well the capitalist West.



"They have no sense of a relationship between legitimate work and money.
The worst of them are evil bastards who will throw a baby overboard
without a second thought if it will slow us down in a chase."



The charge is widely repeated by Italian law enforcement authorities and
aid workers. "Every night, in the last few months, a baby or a young
girl has been pushed into the sea," says Alessandro Russo, a medical
aide with the Catholic charity Misericordia who treats injured emigrants
on the Otranto wharf.



At 11:30 p.m., as officers Probo and Gambino scour the horizon with
binoculars, the voice of the radar officer suddenly squawks over the
Cavaglia loudspeakers: "Gommone, 41 degrees 22 minutes north by 18
degrees 43 minutes east, bearing west southwest at 45 knots."



Capt. Lo Presti adjusts course and speed to intercept.



The chase is an exercise in the frustrations that make Europe's
spiralling immigration crisis seem beyond solution to many observers.



Equipped with sensitive computerized navigation instruments, the
Cavaglia can bring the gommone in sight an hour later. But until the
smugglers' work is done -- until the emigrants are safely ashore -- "we
can't do anything but keep track of its location," Capt. Lo Presti says.



"Otherwise just in getting too close, we might accidentally kill a lot
of people. These vessels are dangerously overcrowded and unstable."



The concerns are justified. On Dec. 6, two Italy-bound vessels foundered
in a winter storm. International maritime officials believe they carried
up to 700 Kurds, West Africans, Algerians, Afghans, Iraqis, and
Pakistanis. It is feared that more than 200 people drowned.



"A confrontation at sea with gommones weighed down with mothers and
children is something that cannot be undertaken without the gravest
risks," said Massimo D'Alema, Italy's prime minister.



Yet the frustration only grows when the gommone has landed its
passengers, and probably a cargo of narcotics, and put back to sea. In a
perilous midnight cat-and-mouse game at nearly 80km/h on the high seas,
the Cavaglia brings the motor launch alongside several times, only to be
outmanoeuvred and eventually outrun by its more agile quarry.



"We'd like to put a shot into their sides, that's for sure, and we have
the armaments to do it," says Domenico Di Gianvittorio, a veteran
Guardia di Finanza officer in his 50s.



"But we come out here with shackles on our wrists. The policy is 'No
shooting unless they shoot first,' and the smugglers are well aware of
that. So the result is that we race back and forth, night after night,
to little purpose, and the flesh trade goes on under our noses."



* * * *



Note: This article makes a direct link between Mafia heroin-trafficking
and the KLA in Kosovo. --BCW

Corriere della Sera (Milan)

Janury 19, 1999



6. CRIMES COMMITTED IN ITALY PROVIDE FUNDS FOR KOSOVO GUERRILLAS

By C. B.



Milan -- As long as he was able, until the Milan district Anti-Mafia
Directorate and the Carabinieri ROS [Special Operations Group] locked
him in a solitary isolation cell, Agim Gashi -- the 35-year-old criminal
boss from Pristina, king of the Milan drugs market -- supplied his
brothers in Kosovo with Kalashnikov rifles, bazookas, and hand grenades.
He controlled the heroin market, and at least part of the billions of
lire he made from it was used to buy weapons for the "resistance"
movement of the Albanian Kosovo community.



Conversations monitored by ROS, on file with so-called "Operation
Africa," contain recollections of his established reign. Gashi spoke in
Serbo-Croat with his men and with the Turkish-route heroin suppliers.
That is, the language of the Serbian "enemy," of the hated Orthodox
religion. The one against which he rallied his Muslim brothers. He is
known to have made a telephone call to encourage Turkish heroin
suppliers during Ramadan -- a violation of religious rules for the sake
of a more important cause: "to submerge Christian infidels in drugs."



With Gashi's arrest, the ethnic Albanian Kosovar clans' rule in Milan
has apparently not come to an end. The old 'Ndrangheta families, the
Mafia "dozens" ["decine" -- traditional groupings], and the old Egyptian
"lords" depend on the new masters of the drug market, acknowledging
their authority. In any case, the route is secure. From Turkey, via
Romania, Bulgaria, and Albania, it reaches Germany, and from there,
Italy. On board trucks or regular cars, it supplies heroin from East to
West. On the return trip it has to ensure the invisibility of profits
totaling billions of lire. These are needed to buy weapons in Bulgaria,
Romania, and Albania for the Kosovo resistance.



http://www.rcs.it/corriere



* * * *



THE DAILY TELEGRAPH 13th January 1999, page 13



7. Crisis talks as Milan is hit by wave of killings

Italy's Prime Minister, Massimo D'Alema held crisis talks with police
and local officials in Milan yesterday to try to restore order to a city
that has seen nine murders so far this year.



The government has deployed an extra 800 police and 90 patrol cars to
Milan as a stopgap measure to ease the "crime emergency".



Diego Masi, an Interior Ministry under-secretary, blamed the Albanian
mafia, which has entered the city on a tide of illegal immigrants. An
official report puts the Albanians top among foreign crime
organizations. It says they concentrate on drugs and prostitution. Their
lack of Western moral values allows them to settle scores with appalling
coldness, often murdering people in crowded streets and bars.

Bruce Johnston, Rome........"



It has been long established that the UCK gets most of its funds from
mafia racketeering and extortion in Western Europe. The Swiss, French,
Italian, and German police have published numerous reports on this
issue. The UCK gangsters operating in Milan are no different than the
UCK gangsters operating in KosMet.

--AV, South Salem, NY



* * * *



8. Subj: The (Irish) Mirror CALL THIS JUSTICE

The (Irish) Mirror

January 22, 1999, Friday

SECTION: NEWS; Pg. 9



CALL THIS JUSTICE; PARENTS' FURY AS KILLER WHO STABBED SON 15 TIMES IS
SENT TO JAIL FOR JUST FIVE YEARS

BYLINE: By Caoihme Young



A DISTRAUGHT father whose son's killer was sentenced to just five years
in prison told The Irish Mirror last night: "I feel like I've been
raped."



Liam Martin, 23, was killed in a vicious attack outside Abrakebabra fast
food shop on Dublin's O'Connell Street less than two years ago.



His grieving father Seamus, who has turned up to every hearing since the
case began 18 months ago, said: "I can't believe it - this is worse than
the day my son Liam was stabbed 15 times on a Dublin city street. "The
sentence is an insult to our family."



The Martin family are heartbroken with the judge's decision. Relatives
and friends gathered last night at their home in Graigueallen, Co
Carlow, to comfort them.



"The judge didn't even mention us once, he never even said he was sorry
for our troubles," said Seamus. "I'm so angry - I don't know what we
will do now.



"It was like they thought that Liam somehow deserved what he got. He was
stabbed in his heart, twice in his lungs, everywhere - who can say he
deserved that?



"I know it's a dreadful thing to say but honestly I feel like I've been
raped.



"My wife, Bridie, just cried in the car the whole way home from Dublin.



"Everyone is shocked, people have been calling in all afternoon to tell
us they are disgusted with the verdict."



And Seamus revealed that Liam wanted to leave Dublin because he thought
it was too dangerous. Afrim Xhafa, 22, pleaded guilty on October last
year to the manslaughter of Liam.



He stabbed him 15 times after a row broke out in a pub in May 1997 when
racist abuse was allegedly hurled at Xhafa.



Liam was sitting in an all-night restaurant later when he was attacked
just after 1am.



Xhafa also pleaded guilty to maliciously wounding with intent Bedrija
Hoti, an asylum-seeker from Kosovo, who is living in Drimnagh.



Xhafa is originally from the Kosovo region of Yugoslavia on the border
with Albania.



Passing sentence, Mr Justice Diarmuid O'Donovan said he took into
account That Xhafa had pleaded guilty and that he had no previous
record.



But the judge said while there might have been provocation in the row,
he had to put the message across that carrying knives would not be
tolerated.



He had returned home from America to work nearer home and see more of
his sisters Fidelma, Jenny and Sheila, and his older brothers Michael
and Joey.



Liam was living in Dublin's Phibsboro and was working as a security
guard.



But he was determined to go back and live in New York because he thought
the streets of Dublin were not safe.

A grieving Seamus said: "All the time Liam was in America he was not
afraid, but he was seriously afraid in Dublin.



"He was thinking of asking his bosses for a transfer to Cork. He thought
he might be safer there.



"He told us: 'I hope you and Mammy don't mind but I'm thinking of going
back to America.' He never got that chance."



Seamus is not angry with the man who stabbed his son to death - he is
angry with the Irish criminal system.

"The court tried to make out that my son was racist and that's why he
was killed.



"My son did not deserve to be murdered."



GRAPHIC: VICTIM: Liam was just 23;; HEARTBROKEN: Liam's parents Bridie
and Seamus;; GUILTY: Afrim Xhafa is led from court yesterday after being
jailed



* * * *



9. Subj: MEDIA CENTER: Incidents in Kosovo Feb 4

Date: 99-02-05 11:50:11 EST

4 February 1999 10:00 PRISTINA

- Milan Stevanovic (1979) from Gorazdevac was killed last night around
2:30 AM in the center of Djakovica.



Attackers opened fire on his vehicle with automatic weapons. Another
three persons were in the car but they were not wounded.



The OSCE verifying mission was informed about the incident. Police are
searching for the ones who committed this crime.



* * * *

10. AP: A Christian Orthodox Monastery Robbed In Kosovo

Date: 99-02-05 11:48:53 EST



PRISTINA, Yugoslavia (AP) - Thieves broke into an equipment shed at the
farm of a Serbian Orthodox Church monastery and made off with supplies
including tractor engines, furnishings, machinery and "even the front
door," the Serb Media Center reported Thursday.



The incident occurred Tuesday night at the monastery of Devic about 30
kilometers (18 miles) northwest of Pristina in an area held by the
ethnic Albanian rebel Kosovo Liberation Army.



According to the center, the Mother Superior, known as Sister Anastasia,
drove to a nearby police station the following day to report the
break-in when her car collided with a vehicle containing several men
armed with automatic rifles and wearing black uniforms and the black and
red patch of the KLA.



No injuries were reported and the Mother Superior and two companions
were not mistreated, the center said.



The monastery is home to nine Serbian Orthdox nuns who have continued to
live there despite the conflict between ethnic Albanians, who are mostly
Muslims, and the Serb minority.



The protection of Serbian churches and monasteries that dot Kosovo's
undulating countryside is one of the primary concerns of Serbs in their
conflict with the ethnic Albanians who demand independenc



* * * *



The Guardian 30th September Main Section page 15



11. Thousands of Albanian children in hiding to escape blood feuds.

Vengeance of the most direct kind is making a comeback in the wild north
of Albania, Owen Bowcott in Shkoder reports



GJIN Mekshi is a school teacher and a man of "good reputation". His flat
is decorated with icons of the Virgin Mary. His calling involves
reconciling vendettas and blood feuds.



In a cramped fifth floor flat looking out on Albania's semi-lawless
northern mountains, he deplores the spread of violence and the lack of
respect for traditional codes of behaviour.



As a leading member of the Shkoder-based Committee for Blood
Reconciliation, he works within a moral framework devised by a tribal
chieftain excommunicated for his "most un-Christian code".



The 15th century kanun (code) of Lek Dukagjini which regulates revenge
killings to preserve the honour of the clan, or fis has been revived in
northern Albania since the demise of communism. Up to 6,000 children are
said to be in hiding from blood feuds.



But the code's harsh justice is no longer being respected. "The kanun is
a good way for resolving arguments, but not in the way most people
interpret it as always ending in killings,'! Mr Mekshi explains.

"The code doesn't allow women to be killed, but there have been cases in
Tropoje [on the Kosovo border] this year where women have been forced
into hiding by death threats.



"In some families there are no men left. So far no women have been
killed."



Modern reproductions of the kanun are on sale in the Tirana's kiosks.
Its author is thought to be Lek Dukagjin, Lord of Dagmo and Zadrima, who
fought the Turks until 1472, then fled to Italy. His intention was to
limit the cycles of bloodletting among the mountain tribps which
sometimes destroyed entire communities by enabling a council of tribal
elders to arrange a besa, or truce once honour had been obtained.



Enver Hoxha's regime suppressed it. But the privatisation of land, which
reopened ancient disputes, and the breakdown of law and order last year,
when Albania's armouries were looted, have encouraged direct
retribution.



"Since the committee was set up in 1991 we have resolved 365 cases in
Albania and 38 feuds abroad," Mr Mekshi records. "One feud has been
running for more than 80 years.



"Sometimes the vendettas start through killings or land disputes but
they also begin with a fight over a drink or a car accident. Usually
it's a killing for a killing, a beating for a beating. The kanun doesn't
specify how killings should be carried out, but if you mutilate a
victim's face, attack him from behind or kill him after you gave your
word not to, the bad blood comes back to you.



"Within the first 24 hours you may kill anyone from the clan to which
the person who carried out the initial killing belonged-but not a woman.
After that you can kill a member of the family. After a year, it must be
only the murderer or whoever lives in his house."



The Committee of Blood Reconciliation has 3,000 members in Albania and
is pressing the government to accept its arbitrations as part of the
legal process.



"I have a good reputation and my father was a man of good reputation,
too," says Mr Mekshi. "I am approached to arrange truces by those who
are in hiding and dare not go out during the day. When we agree a deal,
we sanctify the arrangement with a procession led by the local priest."



* * * *



BELGRADE, 18 January 1999


12.Police Report: FACTS REGARDING POLICE OPERATIONS OF SEARCH AND ARREST


OF A TERRORIST GROUP IN THE VILLAGE OF RACAK NEAR STIMLJE ON 15 JANUARY
1999



On 15 January 1999, in the early morning, in an attempt to arrest a
terrorist group, police officers blocked the village of Racak,
municipality of Stimlje.



In the village of Racak, five days before this arrest operation, the
terrorist group killed police officer Svetislav Przic. This terrorist
group committed many criminal acts of terrorism punishable under Article
125 of the Penal Code of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, by killing
police officers Sinisa Mihajlovic, Nazmija Aluri and Svetislav Przic, a
member of the Urosevac police reserve, Stimlje police station (they were
killed in attacks carried out on 10 September and 29 October 1998 and on
10 January 1999); Sasa Jankovic and Ranko Djordjevic, members of the
Gnjilane police reserve (killed on 2 August and 12 October 1998), and by
killing civilians Miftar Resani (on 31 December 1998) and Enver Gasi (on
2 January 1999). In the municipalities of Urosevac and Stimlje, this
terrorist group abducted members of the Albanian as well as of the
Romany ethnic group and burned the house of Djemalj Bitici, an Albanian
from the village of Racak (on 18 November 1998).



In the approaches to the village of Racak, the terrorist groups attacked
police officers from trenches, bunkers and fortifications, using
automatic weapons, portable grenade launchers and mortars. In this
attack police officer Goran Vucicevic was wounded while a number of
official vehicles of the Interior Ministry of the Republic of Serbia
were damaged. In response to the attack, police officers used firearms
and destroyed the terrorist groups. Several dozen of terrorists were
killed in the fighting, among who the majority were wearing uniforms
with the insignia of the terrorist so called KLA.



On this occasion, police officers confiscated one 12.7mm "Browing"
machine gun, two submachine guns, 36 automatic rifles, two snipers, a
large amount of ammunition and hand grenades, radios and other military
equipment.



The OSCE Kosovo Verification Mission was informed of the beginning of
the arrest operation and arrived at the scene of the fighting.



Immediately after the fighting, the police investigating team came to
the scene headed by Investigating Magistrate Danica Marinkovic of the
Pristina District Court and the Deputy Public Prosecutor Ismet Sufta,
but the terrorists who were concentrated in the neighbouring highlands
opened fire and prevented the further on-site investigation.



The next day, on 16 January 1999, the on-site investigation was again
prevented because the OSCE KVM insisted that the Investigating
Magistrate carry out the investigation without the police presence,
explaining that the fighting might be resumed.



* * * *



13. MAXIM Magazine

Jan/Feb. 1999



Confessions of a Strip Club Bouncer, pp. 132…138

As told by Steve "Sonny Coats" Hart to Jon Hart



I wasn't there the night of the murders. I didn't see the Albanian hit
man reach into his jacket, draw his gun and blow away two of my friends.
But while working at Scores [a high-priced Topless Dance Club in
Manhattan], I've seen plenty of crazy shit…



When Shots Rang Out



…At 4 AM, the club closes. Willie and his girlfriend, Lori, are hanging
out, having a few drinks before locking up. Jon, Mike, a few of the
dancers, and three Albanians reputed to be hit men are there, too.
Everything's pretty low-key until Jon and one of the Albanians start arm
wrestling. Jon beats the guy…and then starts laughing. Big mistake. The
Albanian lifts Jon up by his shirt. Lori screams, and the Albanian tells
her to shut the fuck up. Nobody talks to Willie's girlfriend like that,
and Willie instructs Jon and Mike to show the Albanians the door. As
Jon's unlocking it, according to my friends, one of the Albanians slips
his gun from his jacket and, pulls the trigger four times. Jon goes
down. Dead. Mike turns to run. But before he can get away, he takes a
bullet. too… His head had been blown off… Five months later, federal and
state investigators raided the club, looking for evidence against the
Gambino crime family.



A New York Post writer and others tell me the Albanian gunmen were
subsequently executed by the Cosa Nostra (Gambino famiglia) as a means
of getting the Albanian Mafia back in line.



* * * *



14. UN, EU Launch $7.6 Anti-Drug Project in Balkans



SOFIA, Feb. 12, 1999 -- (Reuters) The United Nations and the European
Union launched a $7.6 million project on Thursday to combat drug traffic
through Bulgaria, Macedonia and Romania, three countries on the
notorious Balkan route.



"Drug trafficking in Europe is growing. It was realized no country could
defeat it on its own. The only way to stop it is to work together," Joem
Kristensen, U.N. Drug Control Program (UNDCP) senior program manager,
told reporters.



In its first phase the project will include Bulgaria, Macedonia and
Romania, which lie on a drug trafficking route for smuggling heroin and
hashish from southwest Asia, particularly Afghanistan, to Western
Europe, Kristensen said.



Some 80 percent of drugs supplied to Europe originate in Afghanistan and
are mostly smuggled along this route, he said.



Kristensen said the three-year project could later include other
countries in the region, such as Turkey and Yugoslavia.



Kristensen said the war in former Yugoslavia had forced traffickers to
find alternatives to the more direct route through Turkey, Bulgaria and
former Yugoslavia, such as the route via Romania.



"The peace that followed the war in Yugoslavia re-established the old
routes, but previous one still continue to exist, so there are now more
smuggling groups, more routes, and maybe the challenge we are now facing
is bigger," he said.



"The situation has now become more difficult and we have to undertake
new opportunities to fight drug trafficking."



The project will offer police and customs officials in the three Balkan
states advanced training in profiling techniques and provide them with
modern drug detection equipment and drug-sniffing dogs.

The project also provides for setting up sophisticated criminal data
analysis systems to aid police investigations.



Two thirds of the project's budget will come from the European
Commission while the remainder is expected from UNDCP donors.



According to UNDCP data, an average of more than a tonne of heroin and
over 10 tonnes of hashish are seized along the Balkan route each year.



Bulgaria, which lies between Turkey, Greece, Macedonia, Serbia and
Romania, seized 220 lbs (100 kg) of heroin last year, compared to 688
lbs (312 kg) in 1997, figures collated by the country's Chief Customs
Directorate showed. ( (c) 1999 Reuters)



* * * *



15. BBC crew robbed by armed men in northeast Albania



LONDON, April 14 (Reuters) - The British Broadcasting Corporation said
three staff covering the Kosovo crisis were held up and robbed in
northeast Albania on Wednesday by two masked men armed with
Kalashnikovs.



Correspondent Jeremy Bowen, cameraman Vaughan Smith and a translator
were physically manhandled but were not injured in the incident in which
the robbers fired about a dozen rounds into the air, the BBC said in a
statement.



`Everything they had, including all their camera equipment, flak jackets
and money, was taken but not the tape they filmed today,'' it said.



The BBC said the three managed to make their way back to their base in
the town of Kukes from where they filed a report for Wednesday night's
television news bulletins.



Albania is a frequently lawless country and has made little progress
economically since emerging from communist isolation in 1990.



17:27 04-14-99



* * * *



16. CRISIS IN KOSOVO

Kosovars also finding enemies among their hosts

By Anne Kornblut, Globe Staff, 04/14/99



  KUKES, Albania - Aziz Sallahu began his refugee odyssey afraid only of
the Serbs, who had driven his family out of the Kosovar town of Suhareka
into the hills of northern Albania. Yesterday, he stood shivering n the
rain, fearing a new threat: Albanians.



  As explosions rocked the neighboring hills, indicating that Serb
forces had made an incursion across the border, reports flew through the
refugee camp that Albanian gangsters were on the prowl for unarmed
Kosovars, and local police said bandits had hijacked a refugee vehicle
on its way to Tirana the night before. A mob attacked a US military
helicopter delivering humanitarian relief yesterday morning, according
to officials, looting stacks of tents and food.



  Still, most refugees gushed with gratitude for the Albanian government
that has received them with open arms and Sallahu, 18, said he felt
''safer than in Kosovo.'' But he shook his head in disbelief when he
considered that the refugees are being victimized twice, saying he still
felt surrounded by danger.



  Armando Foresti, an Albanian who works as a French teacher, said those
fears were warranted.    ''Sometimes,'' he said, ''we are more Serbian
than the Serbs.''



  Violence has always been a fact of life in northern Albania, where the
central government has virtually no presence and local arms dealers are
unofficially king. In recent days, however, several outside agencies
stepped up security following carjackings in the border district of
Tropolje, including an attack Monday afternoon when three Albanians
brandishing Kalashnikov rifles overtook a Land Rover operated by the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and ordered the
passengers out.



  Humanitarian agencies have begun warning refugees about the dangers of
traveling the winding northern roads, particularly at night. Jeff
Rowland, a spokesman for the UN World Food Program, said it was only a
''matter of time'' before incidents such as the hijacking Monday night
occurred.



  ''Everybody should know that road isn't safe,'' he said. ''Bandits
travel that road all the time.''



  Owen O'Sullivan, director of the OSCE office in Kukes, said groups of
armed robbers began staking out the border crossings immediately after
the refugee influx began, ''eyeing attractive vehicles, eyeing girls for
export.''



  He said the agency had even received reports of a kidnapped baby,
although it could not be independently verified.



  ''We have had reports of stolen vehicles, racketeering, and tractors
being stolen that'' refugees ''had to buy back,'' he said. ''Everything
depends on the flow of refugees. Obviously, if there is more traffic on
the road, there is more opportunity for the gangsters.''



  Incidents of local Albanians stealing food intended for refugees have
caused some alarm as well. The problem in part has been the result of
chaotic distribution, particularly by local Albanian governments, which
only sporadically monitor the aid intended for refugees. Yesterday, a
local aid truck tossed piles of clothing and food out the back as it
sped along an open field to the refugees, as locals ran behind picking
up what they could.



  ''There is no control whatsoever of who gets what,'' said Catherine
Bertini, executive director of the UN World Food Program after watching
socks and sweaters fly through the air. ''What's happening with the
distribution on the part of the local prefect is disturbing. It's not a
good way to be sure that relief gets distributed to the right people.''



  When two helicopters carrying an American aid shipment landed Monday
night, there were no distribution trucks to meet them. Dozens of local
residents sneaked into the camp where the shipment had been unloaded and
stole perhaps as much as half of the 40-ton delivery of nutritional
formula, sleeping bags and tents, officials said.



  Although refugees were among the looters as well, villagers were seen
carrying cartons of supplies into town last night.



  And yet to some of the refugees, at least, the concerns in Albania
seem overshadowed by their fear of the Serbian troops assembled along
the border. Rowland said, ''The refugees need to be aware of how close
the threat is.''



  ''If I had a trailer with a family of 20 inside, I would take that
threat 18 kilometers away very seriously,'' he said.



  Although the Serb incursion into Kamenica ended quickly, OSCE monitors
said, several refugees who were planning to go to Tirana last night said
they would rather risk the bandits than the Serb forces they had fled.



  Sallahu said he was ''not really afraid. ... I would still rather be
here than there.''



  This story ran on page A16 of the Boston Globe on 04/14/99.

  © Copyright 1999 Globe Newspaper Company.





* * END FILE * *
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to