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To: Seselj
That proves my point.

No. It most definitely does not.

In the aftermath, UNMIK would do all it could to bring to justice all those who provoked or engaged in the violence, he said, noting that some 270 arrests already had been made. The priority now was to target investigations on the principal organizers, as well as on homicides and arson. Local prosecutors were handling over 130 cases directly related to the riots. Some 50 cases of a more serious nature had been entrusted to international prosecutors.

That means that in 130 cases, where the defendants weren't taken into custody by the police at the scene of the crime, local prosecutors investigated the crimes, and then submitted applications for prosecution to Kosovo's Judges, who then issued orders for arrest for the suspects - per article 270 of the Provisional Criminal Procedure Code of Kosovo.

That never happened, that's just anti-Serb propaganda. There was NO looting of houses, or intentional destruction of houses, in Kosovo by the Serb army.

Yeah, whatever - tell you what, sport, let's try denying something more annoying than history: you, your ignorance, and your stupid prejudices.

Bye.

114 posted on 05/26/2004 12:51:29 PM PDT by Hoplite
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To: Hoplite

Hophead: That paragraph you quoted refers to arrests carried out for last March's riots. We are discussing arrests for war crimes committed by the KLA since 1998. You have yet to provide any proof at all that Albanians have made any effort to bring KLA war criminals to justice, the way Serbia has.


115 posted on 05/27/2004 7:31:57 AM PDT by Seselj
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