
Violence Against Christian Serbs and Their Holy Places
The Black Hole of Europe
source: balkanalysis.com
by Christopher Deliso
Wednesday, 15 November 2006
Kosovo interventionists cover up their crimes
In a recent article in Canada's Globe & Mail, former Canadian Ambassador to Yugoslavia James Bissett invokes the famous words of Otto von Bismarck, who once said, "If there is ever another war in Europe, it will come out of some damned silly thing in the Balkans."
As it turned out, the "Iron Chancellor" was right. He was specifically vindicated by the onset of World War I, sparked by the assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand by a Bosnian Serb in 1914. Of course, then as now tensions had been brewing and the spark itself was only the necessary formality; Serbia's successes in the Balkan Wars of 1912-1913 deeply concerned imperial Austria, eager to shore up its own pretensions of Balkan dominance. Now, the tensions building up are different: on the "traditional" front, the U.S.-Russian competition for power; on the front of asymmetrical war, the pan-Islamist movement's quest for dominance in the Balkans versus local and Western interests. But essentially, Bismarck's Balkan admonition has continued to echo down the ages, even though war itself has changed and will no doubt manifest differently this time around.
Indeed, in the current "war on terror" and great-power rivalry over control of multinational energy and telecommunications networks, the war is being expressed in decentralized, often territorially distant ways. For example, when Russia defended Serbia's right to sovereignty over Kosovo in the Balkans, U.S. client state Georgia audaciously arrested Russian diplomats, declaring them spies, a move that enraged the Kremlin and raised the political temperature considerably. Matching the West's increased agitation for Kosovo status resolution, a Russian-backed independence referendum in Georgia's breakaway province of South Ossetia passed on Sunday with 99 percent in favor. On the other side of things, Balkan organized-crime syndicates with ties to al-Qaeda are popping up in relation to planned terrorist attacks as far afield as Norway.
For former ambassador Bissett, the "damned silly thing" going on now in the Balkans is "the seeming determination of Western policy makers to grant the Serbian province of Kosovo its independence." Mr. Bissett would not object, I believe, if we expanded the remit of said "damned and silly things" to cover Western intervention in general in the Balkans since 1990, too. For that whole process has done much more harm than good, enabling and propelling violent ethnic rivalries and building up dangerous mafia groups, appointing war criminals to high political office, and, of course, indulging in various forms of financial corruption and neglect that has helped to leave whole swathes of rural Muslim populations in the UN protectorates of Kosovo and Bosnia funded only by Saudi Arabia and its virulently anti-Western Wahhabi movement.
Interventionist Agitators Demand: Free Kosovo!
However, with the likes of the ICG leading the chorus in calling for Kosovo independence, these more sordid realities are being suppressed. They are simply not convenient for the powers-that-be. Confirming its historic role as nothing more than an Albanian lobbying front, the ICG recently bemoaned the delaying of Kosovo's final status until after Serbian parliamentary elections in January thus: "[I]nstead of finally closing the question of western Balkan borders with an orderly Kosovo settlement, delay would open a new destabilizing chapter." The adjective here gives away the patronizing, quasi-fascistic mindset of the interventionists: the process of ripping apart a country and creating one anew is deemed "orderly" if carried out by the empire. Balkan peons should simply fall into line and behave like good children, while the adults from the West tell them how to make their beds. The phrase "orderly settlement," implying an independent Kosovo supposedly securing a rosy future for the Balkans, is reminiscent of that other old ICG descriptor of the former Serbia-Montenegro union as chronically "dysfunctional." Yet this was hardly more dysfunctional than, say, the UN's disastrous administration in Kosovo.
The dubious wordplay continues: "[T]he longer the Kosovo Albanians are forced to wait," cries the ICG, "the greater the chance they will discredit themselves with unilateral independence moves or riots." Note that "discredited" is rather genteel, compared to the alternatives. After all, they could have said "commit atrocities," "resume ethnic cleansing of Serbs," etc. Most often, the word is used in the context of describing something like, say, a mad scientist's obscure invention or a nonsensical historical claim. In other words, the worst consequence of being "discredited" is to wind up ignored or forgotten, which is exactly what the ICG hopes the world media will do with any future "unilateral independence moves or riots" from "discredited" Albanians.
The Word on the Street: Criminal Neglect
Aside from all the politicized arguments for why Kosovo should be independent, and whose bread would be buttered in so doing, let me just take a moment to relay a message from American and other international soldiers and police who are actually employed in the province. The story they have to tell is somewhat different from the one the lobbyists would have you believe. Indeed, you don't need a National Intelligence Estimate to prove that the Kosovo intervention has made the Balkans demonstrably less safe. It just takes common sense and some looking around.
On my most recent excursion to Kosovo, I spent some time, as always, recording the testimony of various international police and military officials associated with the UN's Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) and NATO's Kosovo Force (KFOR), both of which are tasked with keeping the peace in Kosovo. Despite the formidable range of weaponry, surveillance equipment, money, and other resources available to them, these officials say, the UN has essentially given up the fight against terrorism. "It's just like it was in Bosnia," said one American soldier who had previously served in that other wonderful example of Western peacekeeping. "We got tired of it, gradually withdraw our forces, and the 'bad guys' didn't have to do anything but outlast us."
According to the soldier, the U.S. Army at Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo has now even "farmed out" its intelligence-gathering operations to a Romanian KFOR unit serving under it. Another international police source seconded this, decrying that "the Americans are not even collecting their own intelligence! No wonder they don't know what is going on!" Neither source meant anything personal about the Romanians, but in general it must be said that if you are that world power trying to oversee the security and final status of a province you are occupying, usually it is better to collect your own information than to leave it up to your minions.
Blending bitterness and acquired Balkan black humor, my interlocutors all pointed out that the UN, the U.S., the Europeans, and everyone else were busily trying to wash their hands of the mess in Kosovo, get on with the final status (independence for the Albanians), and get out. None of this was a surprise, of course; it has been the same old story ever since the UN set up shop in 1999. But hearing about the efforts that the UNMIK regime has taken to avoid the glaring truth – that Kosovo is little more than a playground for powerful mafiosi, infested with unemployed paramilitaries and disgruntled, "born-again" Islamists – was especially revealing.
Indeed, as one disenchanted UNMIK official put it, "These high UN staffers don't want to endanger their next international posting by taking on the criminals and terrorists, and above all they can't admit that the mission has been a huge failure and created a new base for Islamic terrorists. The outside world is not told of what they are bringing on here."
Indeed, as we speak, Saudi mosques continue to go up, funded by a bottomless pit of oil riches, while the Kosovo Albanian civil administration is being selectively stocked with officials whose allegiances to the Islamic world may outweigh their allegiances to Kosovo. The present reality reflects the words of Albanian scholar Isa Blumi, who warned four years ago that the influx of Saudi charities and schools was creating a new "generation of young men and women whose loyalties are not with Kosovo and [who] sustain a volatile intolerance to anyone who contradicts their training." While such people are still well in the minority, the West's "donor fatigue" and increasing desire to disengage is practically guaranteeing that the poor and needy province will come more and more under the economic control of radical Islamic interests. And one should not forget that on several occasions representatives of Islamic states have affirmed their support in terms of lobbying internationally for Kosovo independence for the Albanians. In return, we may ask, for… what?
Turbulent Events of October 2006: Not Exactly an Encouraging Sign
While the signs of future trouble are all there, let's take a minute to examine the things going on right now in Kosovo – that is, the things that the busy interventionists don't want you to hear about. Of course, if you ask any top official in or involved with Kosovo to speak on the record about security issues, the answers are inevitably the same. They can be boiled down to the following: despite some isolated incidents, the security situation in Kosovo is stable, and it is heading toward a happy future as a thriving, multi-ethnic country.
However, the official UNMIK police log of October's security incidents leaked to me recently attests otherwise. To summarize, the police report chronicles over 70 incidents that occurred during the month throughout Kosovo, ranging from public demonstrations and intimidation to beatings, bombings, and murders. Very few of these events made it into media reports. They indicate not only continuing attacks on Serbs and their Christian heritage in Kosovo, but also more internecine violence between Albanians.
For example, on Oct. 6 at 11:45 p.m. in Prizren, "a K-Albanian male killed a fellow K-Albanian male with a pistol shot for unknown reasons. During the investigation, the perpetrator was arrested but no weapon was found." A day later, at 3:40 p.m. in Lipljan, "a K-Albanian youngster shot with an AK-47 rifle at a fellow K-Albanian youngster for unknown reasons. The victim was hospitalized with head injury and remained in stable condition. During the investigation, a bullet hole on the wall and the weapon were found at the spot. The culprit was questioned in presence of his parents and the rifle with 49 rounds of ammunition was confiscated." At 2 a.m. on Oct. 1 near Suva Reka, "an explosion of unknown origin occurred in a K-Albanian house under construction. No injuries but considerable damages were reported. Two K-Albanian males were later arrested as suspects … the explosion was caused by an equivalent of 5-6 kilos of explosives [similar to an anti-tank mine]." Six days later, the same man found another "8 kilos of explosives with a fuse" in his house, the report added.
Along with a great many ethnic provocations against Serbs, threats, break-ins of apartments rented to internationals, and the ominous testimony to the apparently renewed "Albanian National Army" terrorist group spray-painted everywhere, the month of October saw explosions recorded on four occasions, confiscations of weapons seven times, 13 armed attacks, and three murders. Some were carried out against "outsiders," such as the hapless Chinese shop owner in Pristina, robbed at 1 a.m. on Oct. 9 of "€500 in cash and 3 cell phones. The victim resisted the perpetrators [4 armed and masked males] and was stabbed." A day earlier, an Albanian businessman was shot at 8:30 p.m., some 4 km east-northeast of Klina, after surviving three previous assassination attempts. According to the police report, "the incident has created a strong feeling of insecurity amongst both K-Albanians and the K-Serbian returnee community." October also saw continued attacks on Serbian Orthodox Church facilities as well, a clear extension of the "religious cleansing" that has gone on since 1999, as Albanians have vandalized, damaged, or destroyed over 150 churches, some dating back to the 14th century. On Oct. 7 in Pristina, "children found a hand grenade in the premises of an Orthodox church." Luckily authorities were able to dispose of it safely. In three separate attacks on churches on Oct. 30 in Stimlje, Kacanik, and Djakovica, "unknown persons" tried to set one church on fire, broke into another, and stole the protective fence from the third. The question of whether Albanian militants, whose acronym and political demands were prolifically sprayed around Kosovo in October, could mount a serious threat to stability was revealed on Oct. 1 when police discovered, in the central Kosovo mountains of Malisevo, "68 anti-tank and 97 anti-personnel mines, as well as 20 hand grenades and 1,500 rounds of small arms ammunition … 400 kg of explosives were found in the same area." This is hardly the only contraband arms depot in Kosovo. According to one of my police sources, whole warehouses of rockets can be found in southwestern Kosovo, for example. On Oct. 6 in Pristina at 9:15 p.m., the police logs attest, "a K-Albanian male public prosecutor reported that 2 unknown allegedly armed males introduced themselves as members of the 'National Liberation Army for Presevo, Medvede & Bujanovac' [UCPMB, active in the Southern Serbian Municipalities in 1999-2001] and threatened to kill him if he wouldn't release a K-Albanian male from the Detention center."
Lockstep Silence
When confronted with this record, UN officials said, as expected… nothing. This was not surprising, as past experience has revealed. On May 12, 2006, the UN's Head of Civil Administration, Patricia Waring, sent out an internal e-mail ordering the destruction of a list of recent violent attacks compiled from official sources – some 32 in only 11 days. "Please make sure that the table you presented this morning is destroyed," wrote Waring to the unnamed recipient. "I do not want it circulated at all. Its lack of integrity in assumptions, not backed up by fact, is potentially damaging."
What was more damaging, perhaps, was Waring's reply to my requests for clarifications: "I requested staff to destroy material which was not based on appropriate police reports – merely assumptions and gossip, most gathered at third hand," she wrote on June 22. (I see nothing particularly villainous about reprinting this reply here, as Waring after all proudly copied the e-mail to UNMIK bigwigs at the time, such as Police Commissar Kai Vittrup and then-head honcho Soren Jessen-Petersen.) Yet after this bout of bluster, the civil administrator apparently did not have the self-confidence to answer my further request for elucidation regarding precisely which of these 32 incidents based on official sources were "merely assumptions and gossip." It's because there weren't any. They were all clearly marked by source. No surprise that Waring failed to reply to my recent questions on the security situation in Kosovo today.
Nobody except local journalists ever tries to hold these UN officials accountable for their failures, ignorance, and corruption. To their credit, local Kosovo Albanian reporters produce some good work, but who on the outside ever listens to them?
It is ironic that a Western world allegedly so anxious to listen to the opinions of the people it came to liberate only listens to what it wants to hear. If one wants to speak about Serb oppression or the perceived wonders of spontaneous self-determination, there is an audience in the international press – less so when you want to expose UN corruption and crimes, or what the catastrophic UN rule has meant for safety, security, and the war on terror in Kosovo. These are things that local journalists, Serbs, Albanians, and others, have written extensively about. However, no one on the outside ever hears about them. This is because the UN is taking great pains to cover up the fact that it is, and has always been, a part of the problem – not the solution. Instead, the whole story of Kosovo is boiled down to a simplistic and bogus tale of Serbs vs. Albanians, eternally divided by sheer ethnic hatred. Outside forces, such as the UN or Islamic states, are never part of this pithy narrative.
What the outside world does not realize is that the rule of these favored UN bureaucrats is creating a Kosovo in which not even they, let alone the rest of us, will be allowed free passage in a future of corrupt police, xenophobic nationalist villages, and Islamist-dominated "no-go areas." A great part of the UN's declared success in making Kosovo a more peaceful place is that, for over a year, they have simply stopped patrolling in the dangerous places. Fewer patrols also means fewer reports to burn later.
And don't imagine that when the UN is gone and Kosovo is independent that anything will remain in terms of paperwork. Fortunately, there are literally thousands of good UN human sources, who are only going to get riper with time as fear of crackdown from their former employer recedes. Yet their stories are verbal; future historians are going to have a hell of a time getting anything good on paper. Ironically, today's powers-that-be are directly prolonging the same Balkan impulses toward the anecdotal, the apocryphal, and rule of insinuation and rumor that they lament as being to blame for the historical misunderstandings by Balkan nationalists of the most recent to the most remote past. The foreigners have become more Balkan than us. Perhaps there is a shred of truth to the legends of a curse on all who enter these lands?
In any case, what is clear is that the powers-that-be will continue to destroy or suppress everything that paints their occupation in a negative light. This is why it is so important, whether you are a journalist or not, to get your questions in now. Challenge these people while they still at least hypothetically are supposed to be accountable for something. They have gotten away with a free ride for far too long; unlike in a real country, none of them were ever elected to the positions they have held and profited from. Nevertheless, they are the ones scolding Kosovo about its need to be democratic and obey the rule of law.
Unless more people try to call them on it, the Kosovo that is already physically the black hole of Europe will become historically a black hole as well – a perfect crime perpetrated by a phantom administration of individuals coming and going on temporary contracts, parasitically taking what they need from the system and moving on, and doing away with all the records afterwards. Such could not happen in a real country, though Kosovo is apparently about to become one.
http://www.antiwar.com/deliso/?articleid=10011
In a recent article in Canada's Globe & Mail, former Canadian Ambassador to Yugoslavia James Bissett invokes the famous words of Otto von Bismarck, who once said, "If there is ever another war in Europe, it will come out of some damned silly thing in the Balkans."
As it turned out, the "Iron Chancellor" was right. He was specifically vindicated by the onset of World War I, sparked by the assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand by a Bosnian Serb in 1914. Of course, then as now tensions had been brewing and the spark itself was only the necessary formality; Serbia's successes in the Balkan Wars of 1912-1913 deeply concerned imperial Austria, eager to shore up its own pretensions of Balkan dominance. Now, the tensions building up are different: on the "traditional" front, the U.S.-Russian competition for power; on the front of asymmetrical war, the pan-Islamist movement's quest for dominance in the Balkans versus local and Western interests. But essentially, Bismarck's Balkan admonition has continued to echo down the ages, even though war itself has changed and will no doubt manifest differently this time around.
Indeed, in the current "war on terror" and great-power rivalry over control of multinational energy and telecommunications networks, the war is being expressed in decentralized, often territorially distant ways. For example, when Russia defended Serbia's right to sovereignty over Kosovo in the Balkans, U.S. client state Georgia audaciously arrested Russian diplomats, declaring them spies, a move that enraged the Kremlin and raised the political temperature considerably. Matching the West's increased agitation for Kosovo status resolution, a Russian-backed independence referendum in Georgia's breakaway province of South Ossetia passed on Sunday with 99 percent in favor. On the other side of things, Balkan organized-crime syndicates with ties to al-Qaeda are popping up in relation to planned terrorist attacks as far afield as Norway.
For former ambassador Bissett, the "damned silly thing" going on now in the Balkans is "the seeming determination of Western policy makers to grant the Serbian province of Kosovo its independence." Mr. Bissett would not object, I believe, if we expanded the remit of said "damned and silly things" to cover Western intervention in general in the Balkans since 1990, too. For that whole process has done much more harm than good, enabling and propelling violent ethnic rivalries and building up dangerous mafia groups, appointing war criminals to high political office, and, of course, indulging in various forms of financial corruption and neglect that has helped to leave whole swathes of rural Muslim populations in the UN protectorates of Kosovo and Bosnia funded only by Saudi Arabia and its virulently anti-Western Wahhabi movement.
Interventionist Agitators Demand: Free Kosovo!
However, with the likes of the ICG leading the chorus in calling for Kosovo independence, these more sordid realities are being suppressed. They are simply not convenient for the powers-that-be. Confirming its historic role as nothing more than an Albanian lobbying front, the ICG recently bemoaned the delaying of Kosovo's final status until after Serbian parliamentary elections in January thus: "[I]nstead of finally closing the question of western Balkan borders with an orderly Kosovo settlement, delay would open a new destabilizing chapter." The adjective here gives away the patronizing, quasi-fascistic mindset of the interventionists: the process of ripping apart a country and creating one anew is deemed "orderly" if carried out by the empire. Balkan peons should simply fall into line and behave like good children, while the adults from the West tell them how to make their beds. The phrase "orderly settlement," implying an independent Kosovo supposedly securing a rosy future for the Balkans, is reminiscent of that other old ICG descriptor of the former Serbia-Montenegro union as chronically "dysfunctional." Yet this was hardly more dysfunctional than, say, the UN's disastrous administration in Kosovo.
The dubious wordplay continues: "[T]he longer the Kosovo Albanians are forced to wait," cries the ICG, "the greater the chance they will discredit themselves with unilateral independence moves or riots." Note that "discredited" is rather genteel, compared to the alternatives. After all, they could have said "commit atrocities," "resume ethnic cleansing of Serbs," etc. Most often, the word is used in the context of describing something like, say, a mad scientist's obscure invention or a nonsensical historical claim. In other words, the worst consequence of being "discredited" is to wind up ignored or forgotten, which is exactly what the ICG hopes the world media will do with any future "unilateral independence moves or riots" from "discredited" Albanians.
The Word on the Street: Criminal Neglect
Aside from all the politicized arguments for why Kosovo should be independent, and whose bread would be buttered in so doing, let me just take a moment to relay a message from American and other international soldiers and police who are actually employed in the province. The story they have to tell is somewhat different from the one the lobbyists would have you believe. Indeed, you don't need a National Intelligence Estimate to prove that the Kosovo intervention has made the Balkans demonstrably less safe. It just takes common sense and some looking around.
On my most recent excursion to Kosovo, I spent some time, as always, recording the testimony of various international police and military officials associated with the UN's Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) and NATO's Kosovo Force (KFOR), both of which are tasked with keeping the peace in Kosovo. Despite the formidable range of weaponry, surveillance equipment, money, and other resources available to them, these officials say, the UN has essentially given up the fight against terrorism. "It's just like it was in Bosnia," said one American soldier who had previously served in that other wonderful example of Western peacekeeping. "We got tired of it, gradually withdraw our forces, and the 'bad guys' didn't have to do anything but outlast us."
According to the soldier, the U.S. Army at Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo has now even "farmed out" its intelligence-gathering operations to a Romanian KFOR unit serving under it. Another international police source seconded this, decrying that "the Americans are not even collecting their own intelligence! No wonder they don't know what is going on!" Neither source meant anything personal about the Romanians, but in general it must be said that if you are that world power trying to oversee the security and final status of a province you are occupying, usually it is better to collect your own information than to leave it up to your minions.
Blending bitterness and acquired Balkan black humor, my interlocutors all pointed out that the UN, the U.S., the Europeans, and everyone else were busily trying to wash their hands of the mess in Kosovo, get on with the final status (independence for the Albanians), and get out. None of this was a surprise, of course; it has been the same old story ever since the UN set up shop in 1999. But hearing about the efforts that the UNMIK regime has taken to avoid the glaring truth – that Kosovo is little more than a playground for powerful mafiosi, infested with unemployed paramilitaries and disgruntled, "born-again" Islamists – was especially revealing.
Indeed, as one disenchanted UNMIK official put it, "These high UN staffers don't want to endanger their next international posting by taking on the criminals and terrorists, and above all they can't admit that the mission has been a huge failure and created a new base for Islamic terrorists. The outside world is not told of what they are bringing on here."
Indeed, as we speak, Saudi mosques continue to go up, funded by a bottomless pit of oil riches, while the Kosovo Albanian civil administration is being selectively stocked with officials whose allegiances to the Islamic world may outweigh their allegiances to Kosovo. The present reality reflects the words of Albanian scholar Isa Blumi, who warned four years ago that the influx of Saudi charities and schools was creating a new "generation of young men and women whose loyalties are not with Kosovo and [who] sustain a volatile intolerance to anyone who contradicts their training." While such people are still well in the minority, the West's "donor fatigue" and increasing desire to disengage is practically guaranteeing that the poor and needy province will come more and more under the economic control of radical Islamic interests. And one should not forget that on several occasions representatives of Islamic states have affirmed their support in terms of lobbying internationally for Kosovo independence for the Albanians. In return, we may ask, for… what?
Turbulent Events of October 2006: Not Exactly an Encouraging Sign
While the signs of future trouble are all there, let's take a minute to examine the things going on right now in Kosovo – that is, the things that the busy interventionists don't want you to hear about. Of course, if you ask any top official in or involved with Kosovo to speak on the record about security issues, the answers are inevitably the same. They can be boiled down to the following: despite some isolated incidents, the security situation in Kosovo is stable, and it is heading toward a happy future as a thriving, multi-ethnic country.
However, the official UNMIK police log of October's security incidents leaked to me recently attests otherwise. To summarize, the police report chronicles over 70 incidents that occurred during the month throughout Kosovo, ranging from public demonstrations and intimidation to beatings, bombings, and murders. Very few of these events made it into media reports. They indicate not only continuing attacks on Serbs and their Christian heritage in Kosovo, but also more internecine violence between Albanians.
For example, on Oct. 6 at 11:45 p.m. in Prizren, "a K-Albanian male killed a fellow K-Albanian male with a pistol shot for unknown reasons. During the investigation, the perpetrator was arrested but no weapon was found." A day later, at 3:40 p.m. in Lipljan, "a K-Albanian youngster shot with an AK-47 rifle at a fellow K-Albanian youngster for unknown reasons. The victim was hospitalized with head injury and remained in stable condition. During the investigation, a bullet hole on the wall and the weapon were found at the spot. The culprit was questioned in presence of his parents and the rifle with 49 rounds of ammunition was confiscated." At 2 a.m. on Oct. 1 near Suva Reka, "an explosion of unknown origin occurred in a K-Albanian house under construction. No injuries but considerable damages were reported. Two K-Albanian males were later arrested as suspects … the explosion was caused by an equivalent of 5-6 kilos of explosives [similar to an anti-tank mine]." Six days later, the same man found another "8 kilos of explosives with a fuse" in his house, the report added.
Along with a great many ethnic provocations against Serbs, threats, break-ins of apartments rented to internationals, and the ominous testimony to the apparently renewed "Albanian National Army" terrorist group spray-painted everywhere, the month of October saw explosions recorded on four occasions, confiscations of weapons seven times, 13 armed attacks, and three murders. Some were carried out against "outsiders," such as the hapless Chinese shop owner in Pristina, robbed at 1 a.m. on Oct. 9 of "€500 in cash and 3 cell phones. The victim resisted the perpetrators [4 armed and masked males] and was stabbed." A day earlier, an Albanian businessman was shot at 8:30 p.m., some 4 km east-northeast of Klina, after surviving three previous assassination attempts. According to the police report, "the incident has created a strong feeling of insecurity amongst both K-Albanians and the K-Serbian returnee community." October also saw continued attacks on Serbian Orthodox Church facilities as well, a clear extension of the "religious cleansing" that has gone on since 1999, as Albanians have vandalized, damaged, or destroyed over 150 churches, some dating back to the 14th century. On Oct. 7 in Pristina, "children found a hand grenade in the premises of an Orthodox church." Luckily authorities were able to dispose of it safely. In three separate attacks on churches on Oct. 30 in Stimlje, Kacanik, and Djakovica, "unknown persons" tried to set one church on fire, broke into another, and stole the protective fence from the third. The question of whether Albanian militants, whose acronym and political demands were prolifically sprayed around Kosovo in October, could mount a serious threat to stability was revealed on Oct. 1 when police discovered, in the central Kosovo mountains of Malisevo, "68 anti-tank and 97 anti-personnel mines, as well as 20 hand grenades and 1,500 rounds of small arms ammunition … 400 kg of explosives were found in the same area." This is hardly the only contraband arms depot in Kosovo. According to one of my police sources, whole warehouses of rockets can be found in southwestern Kosovo, for example. On Oct. 6 in Pristina at 9:15 p.m., the police logs attest, "a K-Albanian male public prosecutor reported that 2 unknown allegedly armed males introduced themselves as members of the 'National Liberation Army for Presevo, Medvede & Bujanovac' [UCPMB, active in the Southern Serbian Municipalities in 1999-2001] and threatened to kill him if he wouldn't release a K-Albanian male from the Detention center."
Lockstep Silence
When confronted with this record, UN officials said, as expected… nothing. This was not surprising, as past experience has revealed. On May 12, 2006, the UN's Head of Civil Administration, Patricia Waring, sent out an internal e-mail ordering the destruction of a list of recent violent attacks compiled from official sources – some 32 in only 11 days. "Please make sure that the table you presented this morning is destroyed," wrote Waring to the unnamed recipient. "I do not want it circulated at all. Its lack of integrity in assumptions, not backed up by fact, is potentially damaging."
What was more damaging, perhaps, was Waring's reply to my requests for clarifications: "I requested staff to destroy material which was not based on appropriate police reports – merely assumptions and gossip, most gathered at third hand," she wrote on June 22. (I see nothing particularly villainous about reprinting this reply here, as Waring after all proudly copied the e-mail to UNMIK bigwigs at the time, such as Police Commissar Kai Vittrup and then-head honcho Soren Jessen-Petersen.) Yet after this bout of bluster, the civil administrator apparently did not have the self-confidence to answer my further request for elucidation regarding precisely which of these 32 incidents based on official sources were "merely assumptions and gossip." It's because there weren't any. They were all clearly marked by source. No surprise that Waring failed to reply to my recent questions on the security situation in Kosovo today.
Nobody except local journalists ever tries to hold these UN officials accountable for their failures, ignorance, and corruption. To their credit, local Kosovo Albanian reporters produce some good work, but who on the outside ever listens to them?
It is ironic that a Western world allegedly so anxious to listen to the opinions of the people it came to liberate only listens to what it wants to hear. If one wants to speak about Serb oppression or the perceived wonders of spontaneous self-determination, there is an audience in the international press – less so when you want to expose UN corruption and crimes, or what the catastrophic UN rule has meant for safety, security, and the war on terror in Kosovo. These are things that local journalists, Serbs, Albanians, and others, have written extensively about. However, no one on the outside ever hears about them. This is because the UN is taking great pains to cover up the fact that it is, and has always been, a part of the problem – not the solution. Instead, the whole story of Kosovo is boiled down to a simplistic and bogus tale of Serbs vs. Albanians, eternally divided by sheer ethnic hatred. Outside forces, such as the UN or Islamic states, are never part of this pithy narrative.
What the outside world does not realize is that the rule of these favored UN bureaucrats is creating a Kosovo in which not even they, let alone the rest of us, will be allowed free passage in a future of corrupt police, xenophobic nationalist villages, and Islamist-dominated "no-go areas." A great part of the UN's declared success in making Kosovo a more peaceful place is that, for over a year, they have simply stopped patrolling in the dangerous places. Fewer patrols also means fewer reports to burn later.
And don't imagine that when the UN is gone and Kosovo is independent that anything will remain in terms of paperwork. Fortunately, there are literally thousands of good UN human sources, who are only going to get riper with time as fear of crackdown from their former employer recedes. Yet their stories are verbal; future historians are going to have a hell of a time getting anything good on paper. Ironically, today's powers-that-be are directly prolonging the same Balkan impulses toward the anecdotal, the apocryphal, and rule of insinuation and rumor that they lament as being to blame for the historical misunderstandings by Balkan nationalists of the most recent to the most remote past. The foreigners have become more Balkan than us. Perhaps there is a shred of truth to the legends of a curse on all who enter these lands?
In any case, what is clear is that the powers-that-be will continue to destroy or suppress everything that paints their occupation in a negative light. This is why it is so important, whether you are a journalist or not, to get your questions in now. Challenge these people while they still at least hypothetically are supposed to be accountable for something. They have gotten away with a free ride for far too long; unlike in a real country, none of them were ever elected to the positions they have held and profited from. Nevertheless, they are the ones scolding Kosovo about its need to be democratic and obey the rule of law.
Unless more people try to call them on it, the Kosovo that is already physically the black hole of Europe will become historically a black hole as well – a perfect crime perpetrated by a phantom administration of individuals coming and going on temporary contracts, parasitically taking what they need from the system and moving on, and doing away with all the records afterwards. Such could not happen in a real country, though Kosovo is apparently about to become one.
http://www.antiwar.com/deliso/?articleid=10011
Violence Against Christian Serbs and Their Holy Places
articles archive:

Saturday, 25 July 2009
KOSOVO & Systematic Persecution by KLA
KOSOVO & Systematic Persecution by KLA

Thursday, 28 May 2009
Kosovo minorities leave, claiming discrimination
Kosovo minorities leave, claiming discrimination

Saturday, 11 April 2009
New witness accounts of KLA torture camps
New witness accounts of KLA torture camps

Friday, 10 April 2009
Horrors of KLA prison camps revealed
Horrors of KLA prison camps revealed

Monday, 8 December 2008
No central Serbia autopsy for Serb couple
No central Serbia autopsy for Serb couple

Sunday, 7 December 2008
Kosovo: Bishop's appeal for protection of monasteries
Kosovo: Bishop's appeal for protection of monasteries

Tuesday, 3 June 2008
Czech Documentary "Stolen Kosovo"
Czech Documentary "Stolen Kosovo"

Saturday, 19 April 2008
Our 'friends' in Kosovo
Our 'friends' in Kosovo

Friday, 11 April 2008
Serb prisoners 'were stripped of their organs in Kosovo war'
Serb prisoners 'were stripped of their organs in Kosovo war'

Friday, 11 April 2008
Serbs slains for their organs, says ex-U.N. lawyer
Serbs slains for their organs, says ex-U.N. lawyer

Wednesday, 9 April 2008
Balkans: Ex-chief UN war crimes prosecutor 'gagged'
Balkans: Ex-chief UN war crimes prosecutor 'gagged'

Friday, 29 February 2008
Marking U.S. Presidential Elections in Kosovo
Marking U.S. Presidential Elections in Kosovo

Tuesday, 26 February 2008
Kosovo Roma today
Kosovo Roma today

Friday, 22 February 2008
Muslims Desecrate Church in Kosovo
Muslims Desecrate Church in Kosovo

Friday, 1 February 2008
Promoting the Birth of a Supremacist State
Promoting the Birth of a Supremacist State

Tuesday, 29 January 2008
Bishop behind barbed wire
Bishop behind barbed wire

Wednesday, 2 January 2008
Explosion hits Serb bank in breakaway Kosovo
Explosion hits Serb bank in breakaway Kosovo

Wednesday, 5 December 2007
Serb Church says Belgrade must act tough on Kosovo
Serb Church says Belgrade must act tough on Kosovo

Monday, 3 December 2007
Ethnic 'cleansing' threat to Serbs in Kosovo
Ethnic 'cleansing' threat to Serbs in Kosovo

Monday, 12 November 2007
The Church: Part of the Problem or Part of the Solution?
The Church: Part of the Problem or Part of the Solution?

Thursday, 1 November 2007
Trilateralists hear of Kosovo independence
Trilateralists hear of Kosovo independence

Friday, 19 October 2007
Cultural cleansing tantamount to ethnic cleansing
Cultural cleansing tantamount to ethnic cleansing

Friday, 19 October 2007
Orthodox church attacked in Kosovo
Orthodox church attacked in Kosovo

Friday, 31 August 2007
Abducted Kosovo Serb escapes
Abducted Kosovo Serb escapes

Friday, 31 August 2007
U.N. troops accused of abetting genocide
U.N. troops accused of abetting genocide

Wednesday, 22 August 2007
Christian girl raped in Muslim dominated Kosovo
Christian girl raped in Muslim dominated Kosovo

Wednesday, 18 July 2007
Monks refuse to remove Serbian flag from monastery
Monks refuse to remove Serbian flag from monastery

Tuesday, 19 June 2007
Kosovo independence not so clear cut
Kosovo independence not so clear cut

Thursday, 31 May 2007
KOSOVO: SERB LEADERS ACCUSE WEST OF ETHNIC CLEANSING
KOSOVO: SERB LEADERS ACCUSE WEST OF ETHNIC CLEANSING

Wednesday, 18 April 2007
Serb official arrested in Kosovo
Serb official arrested in Kosovo

Tuesday, 3 April 2007
The Serbs' case for Kosovo
The Serbs' case for Kosovo

Tuesday, 3 April 2007
Blast near Serb monastery in Kosovo
Blast near Serb monastery in Kosovo

Tuesday, 3 April 2007
1 killed in blast in Kosovo
1 killed in blast in Kosovo

Tuesday, 3 April 2007
UNESCO world heritage site targeted by extremists again
UNESCO world heritage site targeted by extremists again

Tuesday, 3 April 2007
Serbs refuse Kosovo's independence, recall deadly riots
Serbs refuse Kosovo's independence, recall deadly riots

Wednesday, 14 March 2007
Kosovo's Serb Christians Anxious After Talks On Province End In Deadlock
Kosovo's Serb Christians Anxious After Talks On Province End In Deadlock

Friday, 9 March 2007
Council of Europe Secretary General condemns the attack against a Serbian Orthodox Church in Kosovo
Council of Europe Secretary General condemns the attack against a Serbian Orthodox Church in Kosovo

Tuesday, 27 February 2007
Explosion in Kosovo damages vehicles of international security organization
Explosion in Kosovo damages vehicles of international security organization

Tuesday, 27 February 2007
KOSOVO: EXPLOSION ROCKS PRISTINA ON EVE OF STATUS TALKS
KOSOVO: EXPLOSION ROCKS PRISTINA ON EVE OF STATUS TALKS

Friday, 23 February 2007
U.N. envoy calls for separate Kosovo
U.N. envoy calls for separate Kosovo

Friday, 23 February 2007
INTERVIEW-U.N. plan for Kosovo unacceptable-Serb bishop
INTERVIEW-U.N. plan for Kosovo unacceptable-Serb bishop

Wednesday, 10 January 2007
Koštunica: Attempted ethnic cleansing
Koštunica: Attempted ethnic cleansing

Wednesday, 10 January 2007
Serbs harassed and under constant threat in 'stable' Kosovo
Serbs harassed and under constant threat in 'stable' Kosovo

Monday, 8 January 2007
Serbia has offered highest possible autonomy to Kosovo
Serbia has offered highest possible autonomy to Kosovo

Saturday, 6 January 2007
Kosovo Serb family to leave village due to "torture" of repeated police raids
Kosovo Serb family to leave village due to "torture" of repeated police raids

Thursday, 4 January 2007
Kosovo Serb shot for reclaiming own home
Kosovo Serb shot for reclaiming own home

Wednesday, 27 December 2006
Serbian Minister in Kosovo threatened
Serbian Minister in Kosovo threatened

Monday, 18 December 2006
Masked Men Rob Villagers In Kosovo
Masked Men Rob Villagers In Kosovo

Monday, 18 December 2006
UNMIK confirms Kosovo rail blast - Serbian TV
UNMIK confirms Kosovo rail blast - Serbian TV

Monday, 18 December 2006
Kosovo is a Classic Example
Kosovo is a Classic Example

Monday, 11 December 2006
Bus carrying Serbs stoned in southern Kosovo
Bus carrying Serbs stoned in southern Kosovo

Monday, 11 December 2006
Explosion damages railway tracks
Explosion damages railway tracks

Tuesday, 21 November 2006
Grenade explodes in Kosovo elementary classroom
Grenade explodes in Kosovo elementary classroom

Monday, 20 November 2006
Schoolbus with Serb and Roma children stoned in Obilic
Schoolbus with Serb and Roma children stoned in Obilic

Thursday, 16 November 2006
Rocket launcher found in Kosovo
Rocket launcher found in Kosovo

Wednesday, 15 November 2006
The Black Hole of Europe
The Black Hole of EuropeMonday, 6 November 2006
Albanians prevent Serbs from visiting cemetary
Albanians prevent Serbs from visiting cemetary

Thursday, 2 November 2006
Kosovo Serb official's car "blown up" four hours before referendum vote
Kosovo Serb official's car "blown up" four hours before referendum vote

Thursday, 2 November 2006
Don't Support Independence for Kosovo, Urges Former Envoy
Don't Support Independence for Kosovo, Urges Former Envoy

Wednesday, 1 November 2006
Keep an eye on that 'damned silly thing' in Kosovo
Keep an eye on that 'damned silly thing' in Kosovo

Tuesday, 24 October 2006
Strpce In Kosovo, 20 Hours a Day Without Power, For Ten Days
Strpce In Kosovo, 20 Hours a Day Without Power, For Ten Days

Friday, 20 October 2006
Slain Serbs from Kosovo reburied in Belgrade
Slain Serbs from Kosovo reburied in Belgrade

Friday, 6 October 2006
Serb bus attacked again
Serb bus attacked again

Thursday, 5 October 2006
A Separate Peace?
A Separate Peace?

Wednesday, 4 October 2006
Kosovo still "potential hotbed of crisis", says NATO officer as arms depot found
Kosovo still "potential hotbed of crisis", says NATO officer as arms depot found

Tuesday, 3 October 2006
Bomb attack shows "law of terror" rules Kosovo - Serbian Coordination Centre
Bomb attack shows "law of terror" rules Kosovo - Serbian Coordination Centre

Tuesday, 3 October 2006
AI: Imposed solution for Kosovo might pose a threat
AI: Imposed solution for Kosovo might pose a threat

Tuesday, 3 October 2006
Explosion damages home of Gorani minority members in Kosovo, no injured
Explosion damages home of Gorani minority members in Kosovo, no injured

Tuesday, 26 September 2006
Orthodox Christians Oppressed in Kosovo
Orthodox Christians Oppressed in Kosovo

Tuesday, 26 September 2006
House of Serb returnee in western Kosovo attacked with firearms
House of Serb returnee in western Kosovo attacked with firearms

Wednesday, 20 September 2006
UN condemns Kosovo 'revolt' talk
UN condemns Kosovo 'revolt' talk

Tuesday, 19 September 2006
Serbian PM's party slates Kosovo Speaker's public advocacy of "violence, terror"
Serbian PM's party slates Kosovo Speaker's public advocacy of "violence, terror"

Tuesday, 19 September 2006
Explosion injures 4 Serbs in western Kosovo
Explosion injures 4 Serbs in western Kosovo

Wednesday, 13 September 2006
Unknown Attackers Shoot at Serbs in Kosovo
Unknown Attackers Shoot at Serbs in Kosovo

Wednesday, 13 September 2006
UN confirms bombing of Kosovo Serb home near Klina
UN confirms bombing of Kosovo Serb home near Klina

Tuesday, 12 September 2006
Serb returnee's house blasted in central Kosovo
Serb returnee's house blasted in central Kosovo

Tuesday, 5 September 2006
Tanjug: Demand presented for fighting Albanian terrorism in Kosovo
Tanjug: Demand presented for fighting Albanian terrorism in Kosovo

Sunday, 3 September 2006
Stability for the Balkans
Stability for the Balkans

Wednesday, 30 August 2006
Kosovo Albanians reportedly stone bus carrying Serb schoolchildren
Kosovo Albanians reportedly stone bus carrying Serb schoolchildren

Monday, 28 August 2006
Explosion in northern Kosovo injures 9, including British policeman
Explosion in northern Kosovo injures 9, including British policeman

Thursday, 17 August 2006
The New World Disorder
The New World Disorder

Tuesday, 15 August 2006
Armed Kosovo Albanians reportedly enter Serbia, fire shots at former Serb mayor
Armed Kosovo Albanians reportedly enter Serbia, fire shots at former Serb mayor

Tuesday, 15 August 2006
The Balkan Mirror
The Balkan Mirror

Tuesday, 15 August 2006
US Accused of Siding With 'Criminals and Jihadists' in Kosovo
US Accused of Siding With 'Criminals and Jihadists' in Kosovo

Tuesday, 15 August 2006
Serbs threatened
Serbs threatened

Tuesday, 15 August 2006
A bishop's faith
A bishop's faith

Monday, 14 August 2006
Serb Leader: Kosovo Serbs Live in Fear
Serb Leader: Kosovo Serbs Live in Fear

Monday, 14 August 2006
230 Attacks Against Serbs and Other Non-Albanians Committed in Kosovo Since October
230 Attacks Against Serbs and Other Non-Albanians Committed in Kosovo Since October

Monday, 7 August 2006
Kosovo risks "ethnic cleansing" again-rights group
Kosovo risks "ethnic cleansing" again-rights group

Sunday, 6 August 2006
14th century Kosovo church robbed
14th century Kosovo church robbed

Saturday, 5 August 2006
Kosovo Albanians Stab 18-year-old Serbian
Kosovo Albanians Stab 18-year-old Serbian

Thursday, 3 August 2006
Kosovo's Not Ready for Independence
Kosovo's Not Ready for Independence

Thursday, 20 July 2006
Blind Eyes Over Kosovo
Blind Eyes Over Kosovo

Sunday, 16 July 2006
Serbs Escape Lynch in Kosovo Village
Serbs Escape Lynch in Kosovo Village

Saturday, 15 July 2006
Taking a licking in the Balkans
Taking a licking in the Balkans

Wednesday, 5 July 2006
World Cup shots scare Italian-guarded Serbs
World Cup shots scare Italian-guarded Serbs

Tuesday, 4 July 2006
Kosovo Serbs report 70 incidents to UN envoy
Kosovo Serbs report 70 incidents to UN envoy

Saturday, 1 July 2006
Police Arrest Five Albanians for Attacking Kosovo Police Patrol
Police Arrest Five Albanians for Attacking Kosovo Police Patrol

Tuesday, 20 June 2006
Serb returnee killed in central Kosovo
Serb returnee killed in central Kosovo

Tuesday, 20 June 2006
Concerns of Serb Exodus Growing
Concerns of Serb Exodus Growing

Tuesday, 20 June 2006
Serb cemetery desecrated in Kosovo
Serb cemetery desecrated in Kosovo

Monday, 19 June 2006
Serb bishop accuses Kosovo Albanians of vandalizing church
Serb bishop accuses Kosovo Albanians of vandalizing church

Monday, 19 June 2006
Kosovo: Terror on Rise Ahead of Security Council Meeting, Serbs Warn
Kosovo: Terror on Rise Ahead of Security Council Meeting, Serbs Warn

Thursday, 15 June 2006
Kosovo Tensions Put More Than People at Risk
Kosovo Tensions Put More Than People at Risk

Tuesday, 6 June 2006
Kosovo: Province is a Human Rights "Black Hole" for Serbs, Official Warns
Kosovo: Province is a Human Rights "Black Hole" for Serbs, Official Warns

Monday, 5 June 2006
Letter from Dr. Sanda Raskovic-Ivic President of the Coordination Center for Kosovo and Metohija, to Mr. Soren Jesen Peterson (UNMIK)
Letter from Dr. Sanda Raskovic-Ivic President of the Coordination Center for Kosovo and Metohija, to Mr. Soren Jesen Peterson (UNMIK)

Thursday, 1 June 2006
Christians Under Siege in Kosovo
Christians Under Siege in Kosovo

Wednesday, 31 May 2006
UN braced for Serb exodus from Kosovo - report
UN braced for Serb exodus from Kosovo - report

Tuesday, 30 May 2006
Kosovo: Criminal Justice System Fails Victims
Kosovo: Criminal Justice System Fails Victims

Friday, 26 May 2006
UN envoy in Kosovo condemns attack on convoy escorting 2 Serbs
UN envoy in Kosovo condemns attack on convoy escorting 2 Serbs

Thursday, 25 May 2006
Kosovo Serb convoy stoned, UN fires tear gas
Kosovo Serb convoy stoned, UN fires tear gas

Wednesday, 24 May 2006
Who Will Protect Kosovo’s Christians?
Who Will Protect Kosovo’s Christians?

Friday, 19 May 2006
Kosovo campaign against Christians
Kosovo campaign against Christians

Sunday, 14 May 2006
Kosovo anti-Christian violence continues
Kosovo anti-Christian violence continues

Thursday, 11 May 2006
Two Serbs wounded in Kosovo petrol pump attack
Two Serbs wounded in Kosovo petrol pump attack

Friday, 5 May 2006
Kosovo Fact Finding Mission - August, 2004
Kosovo Fact Finding Mission - August, 2004

Friday, 5 May 2006
UNMIK Database of Photographs of Crimes
UNMIK Database of Photographs of Crimes

Friday, 5 May 2006
The Kosovo Tragedy
The Kosovo Tragedy

Thursday, 20 April 2006
Muslim Albanian violence against Serbian Christians
Muslim Albanian violence against Serbian Christians

Tuesday, 18 April 2006
Europe Prepares to Evacuate 40,000 Kosovo Serbs
Europe Prepares to Evacuate 40,000 Kosovo Serbs

Saturday, 15 April 2006
Threat Against Bishop Artemije
Threat Against Bishop Artemije

Friday, 14 April 2006
Demonstrations in Decani - Threats against UNMIK for protecting Visoki Decani Monastery continue
Demonstrations in Decani - Threats against UNMIK for protecting Visoki Decani Monastery continue

Saturday, 8 April 2006
UNMIK gets ultimatum for protecting Visoki Decani Monastery
UNMIK gets ultimatum for protecting Visoki Decani Monastery

Wednesday, 5 April 2006
Kosovo: The real test of U.S. foreign policy
Kosovo: The real test of U.S. foreign policy


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