KOSOVO: TERROR ON RISE
AHEAD OF SECURITY COUNCIL MEETING, SERBS WARN
AKI - June 19, 2006; 15:10
Belgrade, 19 June (AKI) - Ahead of a United Nations Security Council session on
Kosovo, local Serbs warned on Monday of growing "ethnic Albanian terrorism" in
the province which has been under UN administration since 1999. The warnings
came the same day as Kosovan police told the SRNA news agency they had found a
powerful explosive device on a road some 2.5 kilometres from the Kosovan
capital, Pristina, near the building housing offices of a number of
international organisations and a Serb police office.
Security for Serbs and other non-Albanians has worsened in the last few months
as the international community neared a decision on the final status of the
province whose overwhelmingly ethnic Albanian majority demands independence,
Milan Ivanovic, a Kosovo Serb leader, told a press conference in the Serbian
capital, Belgrade.
In the northern district of Kosovska Mitrovica alone, there have been 70
incidents directed against Serbs, including several murders and woundings, as
well as bombings, said Ivanovic, ascribing these to "Albanian terrorism."
Ivanovic accused the departing UN chief in Kosovo, Soren Jessen Petersen, of
lobbying for the Albanian cause and of misinforming UN secretary general Kofi
Annan on the situation in the province.
Petersen, a Danish diplomat who leaves his post this month, will submit his
final report to the UN Security Council - the UN's top decision-making body - on
Tuesday. Serbian officials, who oppose Kosovo's independence, suspect that
Petersen will present what they see as a false picture of the situation in the
province in order to enhance the case for independence. Annan has already
submitted his report to the Security Council, saying that the situation in
Kosovo has improved, Ivanovic told reporters. Annan's report was based on a
"false report by Jessen Petersen," said Ivanovic.
Another Kosovo Serb leader, Marko Jaksic, said two-thirds of Kosovan Serbs have
left the province since 1999, with just 100,000 having remained in the province,
living in isolated enclaves without basic security and freedom of movement.
Serbian Orthodox Church Kosovo bishop Artemije pointed out that 150 Orthodox
churches have been damaged and destroyed since 1999, and the "Serbian church
heritage in Kosovo has been endangered to the point of destroying all traces."
The influential German daily Die Welt also criticised Petersen in an article on
Monday, saying he has become increasingly aggressive in supporting the ethnic
Albanian cause before his departure at the end of June.
Belgrade has disputed Petersen's claim that great progress has been made in the
Kosovo in last two years, saying that barely 10,000 Serbs of the 230,000 who
have fled the province since 1999 have returned there. In a strongly worded
letter to Jessen Petersen earlier this month, the Serbian government's
coordinator for Kosovo, Sanda Raskovic Ivic, told him the province is a 'black
hole' for Serb human rights and that Serbs there risk annihilation.
Since the continuing talks on Kosovo's final status started last October, more
than 180 ethnically motivated incidents against Serbs have taken place. Some
3,000 Serbs and other non-Albanians have been killed or listed as missing since
UN took control of the province.
Copyright 2006 AKI
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