------- Forwarded Message Follows ------- Date sent: Tue, 18 May 1999 11:39:32 -0700 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] From: Sid Shniad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: A PUZZLE IN ONE YUGOSLAV VILLAGE The International Herald Tribune Paris, Tuesday, May 18, 1999 A PUZZLE IN ONE YUGOSLAV VILLAGE ''As an Albanian, I am convinced that the Serbian government and security forces are not committing any kind of genocide'' — spokesman for Kosovo Democratic Initiative, ethnic Albanian political party opposed to KLA By Paul Watson Los Angeles Times Service SVETLJE, Yugoslavia - Something strange is going on in this Kosovo Albanian village in what was once a hard-line guerrilla stronghold, where NATO accuses the Serbs of committing genocide. About 15,000 displaced ethnic Albanians live in and around Svetlje, in northern Kosovo, and hundreds of young men are everywhere, strolling along the dirt roads or lying on the grass on a spring day. The presence of so many fighting-age men in a region where the Kosovo Liberation Army fought some of its fiercest battles against Serbian forces poses a challenge to the black-and-white versions of what is happening here. By their own accounts, the men are not living in a concentration camp, nor being forced to labor for the police or army, nor serving as human shields for Serbs. Instead, they are waiting with their families for permission to follow thousands who have risked going back home to nearby villages because they do not want to give up and leave Kosovo. ''We wanted to stay here where we were born,'' Skender Velia, 39, said through a translator. ''Those who wanted to go through Macedonia and on to Europe have already left. We did not want to follow.'' Mr. Velia, his wife, Hajiri, their three children and his mother, Farita, 56, were among as many as 100,000 Kosovo Albanians who fled the nearby northern city of Podujevo in the early days of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's air war, which began March 24. Some said the Serbs had driven them from their homes, while others said they had simply been scared and left on their own. They all moved from one village to another, trying to escape fighting between Kosovo Liberation Army guerrillas and Serbian security forces. A foreign journalist spent two hours in Svetlje during the weekend, his second visit in less than a week, without a police or military escort or a Serbian official to monitor what was seen or said. Just as NATO accuses Yugoslav forces of using ethnic Albanian refugees as human shields, the Serbs say Kosovo Liberation Army fighters hide among ethnic Albanian civilians to carry out ''terrorist attacks.'' Mr. Velia and other ethnic Albanians interviewed in Svetlje said they had not had any problems with the Serbian police since being allowed to come back. ''For the month that we've been here, the police have come only to sell cigarettes, but there hasn't been any harassment,'' Mr. Velia said. Kosovo Albanians continue to flee Yugoslavia, often with detailed accounts of atrocities by Serbian security forces or paramilitaries. Yet thousands of other ethnic Albanians are coming out of hiding in forests and in the mountains, hungry and frightened, and either going back home or waiting for police permission to do so. While the Serbian police seize the identity documents of Kosovo Albanians crossing the border into Albania or Macedonia, government officials in Pristina, Kosovo's provincial capital, issue new identity cards to ethnic Albanians still here. The Kosovo Democratic Initiative, an ethnic Albanian political party opposed to the Kosovo Liberation Army's fight for independence, is distributing aid, offering membership cards and gathering names of Serbs accused of committing atrocities. ''As an Albanian, I am convinced that the Serbian government and security forces are not committing any kind of genocide,'' Fatmir Seholi, the party's spokesman, said Sunday. ''But in a war, even innocent people die. In every war, there are those who want to profit. Here there is a minority of people who wanted to steal, but that's not genocide. These are only crimes.'' His father, Malic Seholi, was killed Jan. 9, 1997, apparently for being too cooperative with Serbian authorities. The Kosovo Liberation Army claimed responsibility for the slaying, Mr. Seholi said. Asked whether he thought NATO's bombing was helping or hurting, Mr. Velia shifted at the wooden desk where he was sitting in one of the school's classrooms. ''My blood is the same as yours,'' he said. ''I just want the situation stabilized. People are not very interested in what is going on with big political discussions here and there. They are just interested in going home.'' Despite the mass exodus, several hundred thousand Kosovo Albanians remain in the province, many of them still hiding without proper food, medicine or shelter. After waves of looting, arson, killings and other attacks turned many of Kosovo's cities into virtual ghost towns, the government took steps to restore order, and ethnic Albanians began to move back, often under police protection. Of an estimated 100,000 people living in Pristina, roughly 80,000 are ethnic Albanians, and a quarter of those are displaced people from the Podujevo area living with relatives or friends or in abandoned homes, Mr. Seholi said. In Svetlje, the biggest problem is getting enough to eat. None of the foreign relief agencies delivering food to refugees outside Kosovo has been able to come to feed those ethnic Albanians left behind.
[PEN-L:7001] (Fwd) A PUZZLE IN ONE YUGOSLAV VILLAGE
ts99u-1.cc.umanitoba.ca [130.179.154.224] Tue, 18 May 1999 22:25:22 -0500