STOP NATO: ¡NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK --------------------------- ListBot Sponsor -------------------------- Have you visited eBayTM lately? The Worlds Marketplace where you can buy and sell practically anything keeps getting better. From consumer electronics to movies, find it all on eBay. What are you waiting for? Try eBay today. http://www.bcentral.com/listbot/ebay ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [Zoran Djindic, Hashim Thaci and Agim Ceku together.... One of the more interesting gatherings since Munich in 1938.] Serbian Prime Minister Wants to Discuss Missing Serbs With Kosovo Leader BELGRADE, Jul 4, 2001 -- (Agence France Presse) Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic said Tuesday he wants to meet Hashim Thaci, former head of Kosovo's ethnic Albanian guerillas, to discuss the fate of more than 1,300 Serbs who went missing in the province during and after the conflict there. "A 10-member team grouping representatives of the families of the missing, the Serbian government and myself will ask for a meeting with Albanians who wield influence in Kosovo," Djindjic said here. Djindjic said the team would also demand a meeting with Kosovo's UN administrator, Hans Haekkerup, and urge him to organize talks with Thaci and Agim Ceku, leaders of the now dismantled Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), to "discuss and resolve the fate of our 1,300 citizens." Thaci now leads his own political party, the Democratic Party of Kosovo (PDK), while Ceku is commander of the KLA's civilian successor, the Kosovo Protection Corp, tasked with civil disaster relief. More than 1,300 Serbs were abducted or have gone missing since the start of the war in the province in 1998, but most vanished after Belgrade's troops withdrew from Kosovo in June 1999 after NATO's bombing campaign. Djindjic met with representatives of the families of missing Serbs, who have accused the former KLA guerillas of being behind the kidnappings. "All the war criminals -- Albanians, Croats, Muslims and Serbs -- should answer for their crimes ... That day will come, sooner or later," Simo Spajic, of the union grouping the relatives of the missing. The union has been trying in vain for three years to obtain information about their kin, meeting only with "smiles of sympathy or goodwill rhetoric," from Western officials they asked for assistance, Spajic said. ((c) 2001 Agence France Presse) __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get personalized email addresses from Yahoo! Mail http://personal.mail.yahoo.com/ ______________________________________________________________________ To unsubscribe, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]