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Hysteria Over Albanian 'Plot' [NEXT!]
IWPR ^ | 9/04 | Petar Komnenic

Posted on 09/07/2001 7:08:33 AM PDT by oxi-nato

The killing of a Serbian woodcutter in the north of Montenegro has prompted anti-Albanian campaigners to whip up a storm of hysteria. The murder was cited as evidence that Albanian terrorists were plotting a rebellion against the Montenegrin government. The uprising threat was strongly disputed by supporters of President Milo Djukanovic. They say the killing, on August 24, was a straightforward robbery by Albanian criminals, and was unconnected with politics. This view was shared by the local police in Plav, the small town close to the scene of the crime.

The murder victim, Nenad Markovic, had come to Montenegro with his colleague Damjan Bozic from Bosnia and Herzegovina to earn money during the summer felling trees in the border area. After killing Markovic and severely wounding Bozic, the Albanians fled with their cash to Kosovo. Pro-Serbian writers in the Montenegrin media seized on the incident and started splashing stories about an imminent revolt by "Albanian terrorists". Stark parallels were drawn with the conflict in Macedonia. The language was a replay of the campaign waged during parliamentary elections on April 22 by parties who want to keep Montenegro inside the rump Yugoslav federation.

Supporters of Djukanovic and his drive for independence poured scorn on the notion that Montenegro's Albanian minority, which makes up around 7 per cent of the population, is plotting a rebellion. They insisted that mutual coexistence with the Albanians remains possible. Following the April election, two pro-Yugoslav daily papers, Dan and Glas Crnogoraca, maintained a drumbeat of warnings about an Albanian terrorist threat. They claimed that Albanians intended to take over chunks of Montenegrin territory as part of a Greater Albania. These two newspapers, based in the capital, Podgorica, reported the existence of three training camps for Albanian terrorists in Montenegro, located on the Kosovo-Albanian border. The uprising was supposed to be at Plav and Gusinje in the north, and at Ulcinj in the south, both areas with predominantly Albanian populations.

Local politicians, however, told a different story. Milutin Vujosevic, a senior official of the People's Party from Plav told IWPR, "I think Nenad Markovic's murder had nothing to do with Albanian terrorism. This was an armed robbery." Adem Dzurlic of the Bosniak Party of Democratic Action, also from Plav, agreed. Dzavid Sabovic, a Social Democratic Party official and director of a Plav cultural centre, said speculation of terrorism was laughable, but he expressed concern that the robbery would be used to stir up trouble for Albanians. The citizens of Plav - Montenegrins, Albanians and Muslims - are especially worried. They say many Balkan wars began first in the media and then flared up over seemingly isolated incidents.

In Plav, the main preoccupation now is not terrorism but the poverty of a region where hardly any factories or companies now operate. Because about a third of the population has moved away during the past decade, the municipality has the same number of people it had at the start of the 20th century. Not far from Plav, near the border with Kosovo, stands a little village called Vusanje which is now inhabited only by old people. Many younger residents moved away to look for jobs, others left in fear of ethnic revenge following the NATO action in Kosovo. One old Albanian sitting in front of his house scoffed at the stories of terrorism. Pointing his stick at a group of village elders he said, "There are only old people left here and they can hardly hold a glass of brandy in their hands, let alone a rifle."

Besides Plav, the coastal town of Ulcinj is also a focus of Montenegrin media attention. Albanians and Montenegrins have lived peacefully together here for decades. But, according to the newspaper Dan, Ulcinj played host to Albanian radicals this summer, including Hashim Thaci, a former Kosovo Liberation Army commander turned Kosovo Albanian political leader. A senior official from the ministry of interior who wished to remain anonymous, denied that Thaci had visited Ulcinj. "The only people who invaded Ulcinj this summer were tourists," the official said.

Estimates put the number of summer visitors to Ulcinj at a record figure of more than 100,000, mainly Albanians from Kosovo and Albania. However, people also came from Serbia, judging by the number of Serbian registered vehicle licence plates. Stories of a looming uprising are rejected on all sides in Ulcinj. "You can see how crowded the city is and yet we did not have a single incident the whole summer," said Gavrilo Subregovic, a Montenegrin who oversees one of the town's most famous beaches. Most residents seem too busy counting their takings from the tourist trade, believed to be several million German marks a day, to worry about terrorism.

Despite all this, the woodcutter's murder still brings a chorus of accusation against Montenegrin Albanians. "This incident can threaten peace in our republic," stated the opposition Serbian People's Party. A spokesperson for the Socialist People's Party, Dragan Koprivica, claimed that "secret plans for total Albanian domination of Montenegro are under way". Montenegro, he said, "could soon experience a similar fate to Macedonia". The pro-Yugoslav Serbian People's Party warned that President Djukanovic's plan for a referendum on independence could deepen the crisis.

In the general hysteria, few people took notice of the police statement that the woodcutter was killed by robbers, not terrorists. The fact that the Montenegrin interior ministry, together with the UN in Kosovo, had already identified five suspects who carried out similar assaults near Pec received scant attention. "Anti-democratic forces in Montenegro and elsewhere are trying to portray Albanians as a dangerous element, although they are themselves aware this isn't true," Ferhat Dinosa, a spokesperson for the Democratic Union of Albanians, in Montenegro told IWPR.

He noted that an uprising predicted for the summer had not materialised and called on the government to take measures against the perpetrators of these allegations. The state prosecutor has since brought charges against journalists of Dan and Glas Crnogoraca, accusing them of spreading religious and national hatred.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:
They say the killing, on August 24, was a straightforward robbery by Albanian criminals, and was unconnected with politics.>>>

UH, WHAT DO YOU THINK THE KLA IS AND DOES???

1 posted on 09/07/2001 7:08:33 AM PDT by oxi-nato
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To: oxi-nato
IWPR is yet another one of Soros's propaganda outlets. So, relax.
2 posted on 09/07/2001 7:19:38 AM PDT by Leonora
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To: oxi-nato
"Anti-democratic forces in Montenegro and elsewhere are trying to portray Albanians as a dangerous element...

It does not matter if the Albanians are terrorist or bandits, the wood cutters met a violent death!

He [Ferhat Dinosa] noted that an uprising predicted for the summer had not materialised and called on the government to take measures against the perpetrators of these allegations.

So this Albanian wants freedom of speech supressed!

And the Montenegran regime complies...

The state prosecutor has since brought charges against journalists of Dan and Glas Crnogoraca, accusing them of spreading religious and national hatred.

3 posted on 09/07/2001 7:45:16 AM PDT by F-117A
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To: oxi-nato
It was also said that the Macedonians blew up there own church and that the two poor guys blown up in the motel were victims of some other criminal activities.
4 posted on 09/07/2001 8:19:17 AM PDT by Viktor
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To: F-117A
You must be totally naive to think that total freedom of speech exists anywhere. The fact is the KLA in this article is not at all denied to be a terrorist organization. Not even by the Albanian man. So, the threat is indeed very possible. The amount of Albanians living in certain areas doesn't matter. There are plenty of KLA terrorists coming from Kosovo and Albania to take care of Macedonian right now. GREATER ALBANIA Mr. F-117!!! Ever thought of that? You can find that manifest on lots of Albanian websites.
I bet you actually believed G. Bush Senior when he said he was going into Kuwait to "restore democracy"....when Kuwait was and is a country that suppresses speech far more than Montenegro and doesn't allow their women to vote nor contribute to society as a Kuwaiti man.
The KLA doesn't respect borders and doesn't play by the rules. So, in my mind they have always been a threat to peace and productivity.
Besides, what the hell do terrorists know about freedom and rtights in the first place. Do you think all of a sudden they are going to be the ones to be even handed, fair, and respectful of other groups and freedoms? Do you think a bunch of thugs know what freedopm means and what it takes to make sure everyone has it? Wake up, it's a land grab.
5 posted on 09/07/2001 8:26:39 AM PDT by SQUID
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To: SQUID
My my Squid, you must have gotten up on the wrong side of the bed this morning!

If you re-read my post you will see that I am critical of the Montenego government for attempting to supress Dan and Glas Crnogoraca's reporting and opinion about the UCK terrorists! Do you support that crack-down?

If you read any number of my post you will see that I'm well aware of the UCK/KLA/UCPMB/UCK/NLA/ALA terrorist and have always condemned their activities.

p.s. George Bush went into Kuwait because of the OIL.

6 posted on 09/07/2001 10:12:55 AM PDT by F-117A
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To: oxi-nato
My prognosis:

Current histeria will be used by Cherna Gora Albanians. They will call The International Community to preotect them from anti-albanian campaign and/or declare that they have to defend their rights with AK-47s - until Albanian will not be recognised as a official state language in Chernogoria/Montenegro. Add here demand of ethnic police/stormtroopers - and there is Kosovo-3 or Macedonia-2.

7 posted on 09/07/2001 4:41:54 PM PDT by Alexandre
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To: F-117A
Sorry. My bad. 1000 opologies.
8 posted on 09/08/2001 10:26:57 PM PDT by SQUID
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