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Missiles Seized in Albania
IWPR ^

Posted on 12/19/2004 9:59:09 AM PST by ma bell

Albanian police have arrested four people smuggling in surface-to-air missiles allegedly destined for Albanian separatists in Macedonia.

By Neil Barnett in Tirana (BCR No 533, 16-Dec-04)

The seizure in Albania of three shoulder-launched surface-to-air missiles allegedly destined for Albanian separatists in Macedonia has sparked fears of a brewing security threat in the region.

The SA-7B Strela missiles were intercepted on December 13. They are believed to have originated in Bosnia or Serbia and may have been destined for Macedonia, where ethnic-Albanian insurgents fought a brief war against the authorities in 2001.

Albanian police arrested four people – Sokol Mujaj, Ilim Isufi, Armir Troshani and Mentor Cani – in possession of the missiles shortly after they entered the country from Montenegro.

Bajram Ibraj, director-general of the Albanian police, said, "Four men were caught travelling with the missiles on the Rinas-Vlora road, in a van belonging to a company dealing in sausages. This was a police operation prepared in advance. We are still investigating the origin and destination of the missiles, and our counterparts in Montenegro are also investigating."

Security sources told IWPR that an Albanian separatist group operating in Kosovo and Macedonia is believed to have ordered the missile. The deal was allegedly brokered by a Bosnian national, who sourced the weapons from a group with links to Islamist and criminal networks.

The Russian-made Strela and other surface-to-air missiles, SAMs, pose a significant threat to both civilian and military aircraft. Similar shoulder-launched missiles were launched - unsuccessfully - against an Israeli airliner in Mombasa in 2002 and a more advanced version, Strela 3, hit a DHL cargo plane on approach to Baghdad airport in 2003.

According to IWPR’s security source, ethnic Albanian extremists in Macedonia have dramatically stepped up military activities in the last three months.

They have attempted to obtain SAMs from several sources, possibly for use against surveillance drones and Macedonian attack helicopters. There has also been an upsurge in recruitment, local and international funding and the purchase of medical supplies. The source also claims that insurgent radio communication networks silent since 2001 have recently been heard making test broadcasts.

Tension has been rising in Macedonia since mid-November, when up to 300 armed ethnic Albanians appeared in the village of Kondovo near Skopje. The men have since taken control of the village, digging trenches apparently unhindered by security forces.

Their intentions are unclear, as are their loyalties.

The interior ministry has dismissed the men as a group of criminals, while speculation in the local press says they are Islamists linked to a foreign-funded madrassah or religious school in the village.

Some local sources claim they are simply unemployed men airing their frustration with the leader of the Albanian party now in the country’s governing coalition, Ali Ahmeti, over the poor state of the economy.

Whatever the explanation behind the Kondovo incident and the arms intercept, analysts warn that the combination of unfinished political business, porous borders, weak law enforcement and a plentiful supply of weapons continues to pose a threat to the stability of the Balkans.

However, international attempts to step up efforts against organised crime in the region, including arms trafficking, are bearing some fruit.

The announcement of the missile seizure came during a regional conference in Tirana, hosted by Albania’s ministry of public order, on tackling small arms and light weapons trafficking in south-east Europe.

The conference was organised by the Southeast European Co-operation Initiative, SECI, a Bucharest-based centre for regional co-operation on organised crime, and was attended by law enforcement officers from around the region.

As well as SECI, there are numerous police training, liaison and assistance schemes in the region run by Interpol, the United Nations, the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe and the European Union.

It is clear, however, that the task of combating arms trafficking is huge.

One conference delegate, who did not want to be named, pointed out that as no Balkan country grades its criminal intelligence according to the reliability of its sources, it is hard for SECI to assess it.

“The idea of doing serious analysis of criminal organisations – the kind that would allow one to take down a whole network rather than just individuals - is also new,” he added.

Not only is there considerable mistrust between different national police forces, there is also limited co-operation between the various law-enforcement agencies within the same country.

Yet many south-eastern European countries are working to limit the trafficking of weapons through their territory, partly to meet strict membership criteria laid down by the European Union, and also to show the West that they are serious about tackling organised crime gangs.

There is no doubt that Albania and others in the region are making progress, but the improvements sometimes run in parallel to criminal activity that allegedly reaches the highest levels of government.

Erion Veliaj, leader of the Albanian civic protest movement Mjaft! (Enough!), told IWPR, “Everything the government doesn’t traffic itself, it intercepts to impress the international community.”

Earlier in 2004, Prime Minister Fatos Nano was accused of facilitating the trafficking of arms to the ethnic Albanian Kosovo Liberation Army, KLA, on the strength of allegedly incriminating conversations he had in 1997. He subsequently said that assisting the KLA was morally justifiable.

“[Nano’s] Kosovo trafficking admission proves people at the top of government know how to traffic arms, and so it may have happened in other incidents. I’ve seen Albanian-made Kalashnikovs in Rwanda with my own eyes,” said Veliaj.

Moving weapons, drugs, human beings or contraband across Balkan borders is slowly becoming a riskier business, but it will be many years before trans-national criminals decide that the likelihood of being captured and successfully prosecuted outweighs the attractiveness of illicit profits.

Neil Barnett is an independent foreign correspondent (www.neil-barnett.com)


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Philosophy; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: albania; axisofweasels; balkans; cache; clinton; globaljihad; gwot; macedonia; missiles; muslims; napalminthemorning; religionofpeace; wot

1 posted on 12/19/2004 9:59:09 AM PST by ma bell
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To: joan; FormerLib; kosta50; Honorary Serb; DTA; Diocletian; DestroyEraseImprove; wonders; Wraith

FR Serb apologist bump


2 posted on 12/19/2004 10:00:15 AM PST by ma bell ("Goddamn it, you'll never get the Purple Heart hiding in a foxhole! Follow me!" - Captain Henry P. ")
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To: ma bell

"The interior ministry has dismissed the men as a group of criminals, while speculation in the local press says they are Islamists linked to a foreign-funded madrassah or religious school in the village."

One had to read the entire posting to find a hint at who these people really are, Muslim terrorists.


3 posted on 12/19/2004 10:05:20 AM PST by DJ Taylor
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To: ma bell
I'm guess sex slavery, kidnapping and heroin don't keep the Albanian Islamofascists occupied.
4 posted on 12/19/2004 10:12:16 AM PST by Reactionary
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To: DJ Taylor
They were using a sausage dealer's van. Are the sausages halal for moslems (and moslem terrorists)? If not, then the incident might be more criminal than moslem. And just imagine shoulder-fired sausages.
5 posted on 12/19/2004 10:16:19 AM PST by GSlob
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To: ma bell
"Four men were caught travelling with the missiles on the Rinas-Vlora road, in a van belonging to a company dealing in sausages.

Do any of you think it was the vehicle that made them look suspicious?


6 posted on 12/19/2004 10:20:30 AM PST by Dont_Tread_On_Me_888 (John Kerry--three fake Purple Hearts. George Bush--one real heart of gold.)
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To: All

According to IWPR’s security source, ethnic Albanian extremists in Macedonia have dramatically stepped up military activities in the last three months.

They have attempted to obtain SAMs from several sources, possibly for use against surveillance drones and Macedonian attack helicopters. There has also been an upsurge in recruitment, local and international funding and the purchase of medical supplies. The source also claims that insurgent radio communication networks silent since 2001 have recently been heard making test broadcasts.


Tension has been rising in Macedonia since mid-November, when up to 300 armed ethnic Albanians appeared in the village of Kondovo near Skopje. The men have since taken control of the village, digging trenches apparently unhindered by security forces.

Their intentions are unclear, as are their loyalties.


where is the outrage?


7 posted on 12/19/2004 10:24:21 AM PST by Esteemed Scholar Jack Bauer
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To: Joey Silvera; Strategerist

Serb Apologist bump...who do you prefer to have us (USA) to have on our side in the war against terrorism, the Serbs or Albanians? Select one only.


8 posted on 12/19/2004 10:42:42 AM PST by ma bell ("Goddamn it, you'll never get the Purple Heart hiding in a foxhole! Follow me!" - Captain Henry P. ")
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To: ma bell
Ethnic Albanian Separatists is a mouthful, I prefer Jihadi.
9 posted on 12/19/2004 12:49:30 PM PST by American in Israel (A wise man's heart directs him to the right, but the foolish mans heart directs him toward the left.)
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To: ma bell

Weren't Boris and Natasha from Albania?


10 posted on 12/19/2004 12:59:01 PM PST by dljordan
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To: ma bell
They are probably destined to support the insurgents who are infiltrating southern Serbia. The government in Belgrade is extremely nervous, and has recently held a security conference regarding the situation there. In a reversal of a planned withdrawl (probably under external pressure), a decision was made to keep the army units in place and augment them with units of paramilitary gendarmes to mee the growing threat.

The Albanian separatists have no reason to attack Macedonia at this point. For a worthless recognition of their name, Macedonians sold out to the West and basically set themselves up for a failure, satisfying Albanian demands for greater autonomy and language, etc. -- all the same tactics used in Kosovo and recently in southern Serbia.

But Serbian press has been reporting increased tensions in southern Serbia that seem to be on the brink of violence. I would venture to say that those missiles are intended for support of Albanian separatists in southern Serbia when their Kosovo-based bosses under NATO protection decide to renew hostilities.

11 posted on 12/19/2004 1:38:28 PM PST by kosta50 (Eastern Orthodoxy is pure Christianity)
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To: kosta50
Kosta,

while in Presevo 45 days ago, i was chased by an Albanian while he was riding on his tractor. Of course, I didnt help the matters any when he did see that i was taking pictures of a downbelow village/selo near the Kosovo boundaries.

I stated it months earlier, there will be fighting again next spring or early summer. The Albs have their way with the Maks every step of the way. The Maks I do know want the Serb Army to help them with the area security.

Again, the fighting is not about civil rights/liberties, it is all about drug trafficking etc... Soon, KFOR will end its "tolerance" of the Albanians when the KLA/KPC rears its ugly head and embarrasses KFOR/UNMIK. That is when the Serb forces will be unleashed to cooperate with KFOR/UNMIK in place of KLA/Albanians.

You have gotta understand, everyone knows the Serbs are willing to sort out the problems in cooperation with KFOR and provide a smooth alliance.

Look at Northern Kosovo (Leposavic) region. UNMIK pulled out and the Serbian Army is back in there policing and enforcing the SCG law/constitution.

Everyone knows that the Albanians will never go along with KFOR/UNMIK as they have their own illicit trade/trafficking agenda. Whereas, all the Serbs want is to live in peace and make a living raising a family while working on their farms/businesses.

We all must remember, Policy Agenda is being adhered to and that is the reason for the tacit tolerance of the Albanian illicit trafficking/smuggling, etc..

12 posted on 12/19/2004 5:26:50 PM PST by ma bell ("Goddamn it, you'll never get the Purple Heart hiding in a foxhole! Follow me!" - Captain Henry P. ")
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To: ma bell

The only thing the Serbs are doing by "cooperating" with NATO is allowing Albanians to breed freely. The last thing Serbs need is to become a minority in their own country -- as what happened in Kosovo. Nice guys finish last.


13 posted on 12/19/2004 7:19:31 PM PST by kosta50 (Eastern Orthodoxy is pure Christianity)
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To: ma bell

Why don't these Albanians just move to Albania? Its only a few miles to the West.


14 posted on 12/19/2004 7:24:32 PM PST by Cowboy Bob (Fraud is the lifeblood of the Democratic Party)
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To: kosta50
Serbs are slowly being wedged to work alongside KFOR, while the Albs are being pushed aside. long-term, the Serbs win. History repeats itself in the Balkans as the happenings are cyclical. What went around, will return to repeat.
15 posted on 12/19/2004 7:55:32 PM PST by ma bell ("Goddamn it, you'll never get the Purple Heart hiding in a foxhole! Follow me!" - Captain Henry P. ")
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To: ma bell
The operative term is slowly. Actually, the Arabs are being pushed aside because our foreign policy is radicalizing the Islamic world and soon we will be facing 1 billion Muslim fundamentalists -- thanks to the same people who fed and then bled Osama, namely us (with or without capital letters).

Any changes that do happen will not be because suddenly the West discovered their true friends in Serbs, but because the exigencies of the world thus created will necessitate new allies (not friends), and thus they will be used as they were abused at the pleasure of the powers to be.

Judging from the goings on in Bosnia, this process of slowly empowering Serbs to clean up the mess left behind did not make it to the agenda of the imperial powers there. The viceroy in Bosnia is still a staunch friend of SDA and their Islamic agenda.

The problem is, even if the Serbs do eventually return and reclaim what is theirs, they will have ruins of what's left of monasteries that cannot be rebuilt, of artwork that cannot be recreated, or culture that has been destroyed in a genocide presided over by the very ssame people who will now they really didn't mean to because they are really our friends.

Oh I hope Serbs never fool themselves again that they have friends in the West. That belief has made them useful fools too many times in the past.

16 posted on 12/19/2004 8:11:05 PM PST by kosta50 (Eastern Orthodoxy is pure Christianity)
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