Air-raid sirens mark NATO bombing of Serbia

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AFP

AFP - 1 hour 23 minutes ago 

BELGRADE (AFP) - - Air-raid sirens wailed on Tuesday as Serbia marked the
10th anniversary of NATO's bombing campaign against the regime of late
president Slobodan Milosevic to halt its violent Kosovo crackdown.

Solemn ceremonies were held at Belgrade monuments to children and
journalists killed in the NATO sorties as the sirens were sounded across the
ex-Yugoslav republic for 60 seconds from midday (1100 GMT).

Ministers gathered at the same time to lay wreaths at spots where people
were killed during the air war -- at the time the biggest military operation
in NATO history.

"The attack on our country was illegal, contrary to international law,
without a decision by the United Nations" Security Council, Prime Minister
Mirko Cvetkovic told a special commemorative sitting of his cabinet.

"The air strikes have not solved problems in Kosovo, and did not help to
bring peace and the rule of law.

"On the contrary, they resulted in ethnic cleansing and gross violations of
human rights, international standards and fresh tensions," he said after
schools held a minute's silence before class.

NATO launched the strikes on March 24, 1999 after Milosevic refused to sign
up to a peace deal to end his forces' crackdown on the rebel Kosovo
Liberation Army (KLA) and the ethnic Albanian majority in the southern
territory.

It set out to destroy military targets, and went on to strike infrastructure
and the Milosevic propaganda machine. Some strikes went astray, hitting
scores of civilian sites and even China's embassy in Belgrade.

Milosevic eventually conceded 78 days later, paving the way for NATO to
enter Kosovo.

Some 15,000 NATO-led peacekeepers remain in Kosovo, which 56 nations
recognise after its ethnic Albanian-dominated parliament declared unilateral
independence from Serbia 13 months ago.

As part of the commemorations, the bells of Orthodox churches are to be
tolled for the victims at 7:45 pm (1845 GMT) -- the moment NATO's first
attacks were launched 10 years ago.

Separately, a hardline nationalist group plans to stage an anti-NATO rally
in the main square of Belgrade, according to posters that have gone up
around Serbia's capital.

"Better war than NATO" membership, say some of the posters seen in
underground passageways of the city, where similar protests against Kosovo's
formal secession from Serbia turned violent last year.

Human Rights Watch put the civilian death toll from the bombing campaign at
around 500.

But Milosevic's government estimated that the NATO strikes killed more than
1,000 soldiers and 2,500 civilians, including 89 children, while 12,500
people were wounded and at least 30 billion dollars in damage was caused to
its infrastructure.

Health concerns also remain about the danger to civilians from weapons NATO
used during the campaign.

Thousands risk life and limb from cluster bomblets still scattered across
Serbia as well as from depleted uranium, according to European
non-governmental groups.

Many analysts contend the "humanitarian intervention" was necessary to
prevent any recurrence of events like the 1995 Srebrenica massacre by
Bosnian Serbs of some 8,000 Muslims -- Europe's worst atrocity since World
War II.

Up to 9,000 people were killed in Kosovo's 1998-99 conflict, most of them
ethnic Albanians.

"What is often forgotton about the bombing is the context and the context
was the failure to act in Bosnia, culminating in the Srebrenica massacre,"
Tim Judah, a prominent British author of the Balkan wars of the 1990s.

"The KLA were no angels but Srebrenica changed everything. After that there
was no guarantee that Serbian forces might not do such a thing again," Judah
told AFP in an email.

"As to whether it was worth it -- a classic 'what if' of history. It was
short (ish) and brutal but if it had not been for the bombing we might still
be living with a rumbling and brutal insurgency and low level conflict."

In 2006, Serbia joined NATO's Partnership for Peace programme -- a framework
for practical cooperation with countries aspiring to join NATO -- but
Belgrade has yet to take any steps to join the alliance.

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