Slobodan Markovic on Wed, 23 Jun 1999 16:29:28 +0200


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Syndicate: AP's article about Kosovo atrocities


[a forward from <nettime>  --sloba]


Mass Graves Found All Over Kosovo

   By Ellen Knickmeyer
   Associated Press Writer
   Tuesday, June 22, 1999; 2:02 p.m. EDT

IZBICA, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Turn down the wrong road in Kosovo looking for
a mass grave of 35 ethnic Albanians, and the men there say, no, that's the
next village -- but we'll show where we buried seven of our fathers and
uncles together.

Ask someone for directions to a field holding the corpses of 142 people
who were executed and he says, after that, if you want, I'll show you a
grave holding six members of a single family.

Mass graves are everywhere in Kosovo: more than outsiders can track down
in their first days back in the province; enough to keep war crimes
prosecutors busy for years, if they choose.

Apparently fearing just such prosecution, Serb soldiers, paramilitary,
police and civilians cremated many of their ethnic Albanian victims, or
returned to exhume corpses for burning or reburial in single graves,
survivors say.

But while the 2 1/2-month war was time enough for killing untold
thousands, it wasn't enough time for cleaning up afterward. The signs of
slaughter abound:

-- A Kosovo Liberation Army guerrilla with a bandana tied over his nose
pulls on a rope snaking from the ground, lifting out the head of one of 10
people buried there. The cord that strangled the victims is still around
the neck.

-- Outside Djakovica, an Italian soldier points his foot at a human
ribcage in a gravel pit that villagers say holds the bodies of 86 people
massacred in the southwestern city. ``A boy,'' the soldier guesses.

-- A woman's skull rests among the charred bones of 26 people who were
shot and then had their house burned around them in the village of Cara
Luka, 22 miles southwest of the capital, Pristina. Hair intact, head
tilted back, her mouth is wide open. ``As if she's still screaming,''
people studying the scene tell each other.

In some cases, as at Cara Luka, residents are waiting for investigators
from the international war crimes tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands, to
come before they properly bury the dead. FBI investigators are to aid U.N.
war-crimes prosecutors in examining the sites, NATO says.

At least one investigator with the war crimes tribunal is touring mass
graves by helicopter, flying into one site for a quick initial survey and
pictures, then flying on to the next one.

On the ground, villagers are scrupulous in telling the stories of the
massacres, even -- or especially -- if traces of the killing are few. They
tally the dead, providing estimates on the number of bodies buried hastily
under the mounds of earth.

``The world will know about these,'' said Sadik Xhemajli, a KLA officer in
the village of Izbica near the northwest city of Mitrovica.

Xhemajli has painstakingly written, and laboriously reads, an account of
Serb killings of 142 people at his village from March 28 to May 10.

The dead include 119 people executed at once, and an 88-year-old woman and
a mentally ill, paralyzed man shot because they were unable to walk to the
Serb-guarded convoy that was to deport them to Albania, the ledger says.

In all, seven of the victims were women. Two were children. Ninety-eight
were men older than 50, up to the age of 102, Xhemajli recites.

Villagers buried the bodies in a field. Serbs came back from June 1 to
June 3 with a backhoe, digging up the corpses and carting them off in a
truck -- villagers suspect for burning at a factory in Mitrovica.

Spy cameras flying overhead caught the sight, and the Pentagon cited it
June 9 as a sign of ongoing Serb atrocities in Kosovo.

Serbs took away the bodies ``just to lose the evidence,'' Xhemajli said.
``To escape The Hague.''

Xhemajli, at a village a long, bumpy ride down a mud road, somehow has
gotten word to authorities of the killings. He awaits The Hague.

Å  Copyright 1999 The Associated Press


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