Posted on 12/26/2008 3:08:56 PM PST by BabaYaga
26 December 2008 | 09:37 -> 17:34
PREEVO -- The Interior Ministry (MUP) has arrested 10 former KLA members in Preevo on charges of war crimes committed against civilians in Gnjilane, Kosovo.
MUP Gendarmes bring one of the arrested ex-KLA members to the MUP HQ in Belgrade (Tanjug)
The suspects were transferred to MUP HQ in central Belgrade at 16:09 CET, and were led into the building one by one, in the presence of numerous reporters.
Nine of the former KLA members were taken into the building, while a tenth remains in police custody in Vranje, pending further investigation.
Interior Minister Ivica Dačić and the War Crimes Prosecution confirmed for B92 that the operation began early this morning and is related to crimes against Serb and non-Albanian civilians in Gnjilane in 1999.
Dačić was at the scene and says that the operation was progressing smoothly.
"On the basis of a criminal complaint and on a warrant issued bz War Crimes Prosecutor Vladimir Vukčević, MUP members have arrested a number of people, members of the so-called KLA Gniljane Group on suspicion of perpetrating crimes against the civilian population, Serbs and non-Albanians, in Gniljane in 1999," said the minister.
Those arrested include Nazif Hasani, Ahmet Hasani, Faton Hajdari, Samet Hajdari, Ferat Hajdari, Kamber Sahiti, Agush Memishi, Burim Gazliju and Selimon Sadiki.
They will processed by the War Crimes Prosecution, though Fatmir Sahiti will remain in the custody of the Prosecution in Preevo.
"Ten people have been taken into custody. I should point out that the leaders of the group are Fazlia Aydari, Rexhep Aliji and Shaqip Shaqiri, who are currently outside this region. They are currently out of the reach of our authorities and live in Gniljane," added Dačić.
War Crimes Prosecution spokesman Bruno Vekarić told B92 earlier today that it was still too early to say how many individuals had been arrested as the operation was still under way.
"We're looking here at the arrest of a significant number of individuals, members of the so-called Gnjilane Group of the Kosovo Liberation Army suspected of kidnapping 159 Serb civilians and killing at least 51 between June-October 1999. What stands out in these cases is that these crimes were perpetrated in a particularly cruel manner, in three locations in Gniljane," he said.
"What's especially interesting are the locations, the school that prisoners were taken to and where they were tortured in the grossest possible manner. It's hard to describe the atrocities that took place there as I don't believe it's in keeping with any media ethics," said the spokesman.
The KLA members are accused of violating the provisions of international and national law, murder, rape, imprisonment, torture and looting in an effort to remove Serbs and non-Albanians from the territory of the municipality of Gnjilane, an earlier statement from the prosecution read.
"What's also important is the identities of those members of the Gniljane Group. These were chiefly people from outside Kosovo and Gniljane. In order not to come into conflict with their neighbors, they brought in people from outside to commit these crimes," Vekarić said.
The crimes were allegedly committed in three locations in Gnjilane after the withdrawal of Serbian troops and police from Kosovo. The arrests were conducted with help from security service officials and was planned for several months because of the high level of risked involved and the fact that almost all of the suspects were armed, the statement concludes.
The crime
The crime in Gnjilane against local Serbs and other non-Albanians took place after NATO troops, KFOR, arrived in Kosovo in the wake of the 1999 war.
The suspects arrested today were members of the so-called Gnjilane Group, tasked with cleansing the remaining Serbs from that area of the province.
Many of the victims were killed in a boarding school in the town. They were first taken there, stripped naked, tied up, severely beaten and stabbed with knives. Parts of their bodies were cut off before they were viciously murdered.
Several of the victims died after their killers checked "how many bodies a single bullet can go through". The victims' bodies were then dismembered and taken to different locations in order to hide the crime.
The Gnjilane Group had some 100 members from southern areas of central Serbia, and from Macedonia.
The group operated as part of the so-called Kosovo Liberation Army, KLA an armed group of ethnic Albanians set up in the mid 1990s which Serbia designated a terrorist organization.
This is gonna get interesting.
"Riza Halimi, an ethnic Albanian political leader from Presevo, accused Serbian police of excessive use of force during the arrest operation on Friday.
"It certainly does not contribute to the stability in the region," Halimi told Beta news agency."
No, "excessive force" would have involved doing to them what they did to their victims ten years ago!
"Action of police personnel are, with the help of the BIA and the Ministry of Interior of the Republic of Serbia, planned several months due to extremely high risk of its implementation,
due to the fact that almost all the suspects were armed.
Spokesman for the Prosecutor's Office for War Crimes Serbia Bruno Vekaric said that the arrested dozens of suspects, who were from Kosovo or from abroad came to southern Serbia,
and during the action this morning there was not any victims, or shooting. "Action is brilliantly executed, without victims, since all were armed," said Vekaric, adding that there was no shooting"
well of course, they are always victims, even if they were criminals - same old albanian method ...
Kosovo fighters = Kosovo murderers ... how brave they were fighting against all those dangerous civilians ...
That’s what Muslims do—they cry foul when the hand of justice (finally) grabs them by the scruff of their necks. Albanians are no different than any other Mohammedan heathens.
ROLL EM UP
I wonder if the usual list of Jihad apologists will come up with something new to cry about?
Good for the Serbs that they nabbed these guys and quite funny that the Albanians are whining about “excessive force”. In arresting these guys, the Serbs are simply doing what Croatia does when Serbian war criminals step onto Croatian soil.
Can you ever come up with a sentence that doesn't have the word "Croatia" in it?
Issat right...Oh, the irony.
Read the sentence before that one.
My mistake — “Can you get through one POST without the word Croatia in it — where you don’t even live?”
Yes. Look at my first post on this thread.
And this post and the one preceeding it.
Serbia urged to free KLA suspects
The speaker of the Kosovan parliament has called on Serbia to free 10 suspected former Kosovo Liberation Army fighters it accuses of war crimes.
Police in the south Serbian region of Presevo seized them on Friday on suspicion of abductions, murders and rapes during the conflict in 1999.
They are said to include Kosovans visiting relatives in Presevo, which has a big ethnic Albanian population.
Serbia continues to regard Kosovo as part of its own territory.
Jakup Krasniqi, speaker of a parliament not recognised by Belgrade, said in a statement that the arrests were "intended to make Albanians and Serbs enemies and provoke Kosovo".
"We call upon the authorities of Belgrade to be responsible at these important historic moments the region and our two countries are going through," he said.
"In this regard we expect the release of the arrested citizens."...... BBC
Peace and justice will return to Kosovo alongside the Serb Army.
“In this regard we expect the release of the arrested citizens.”
well of course, maybe after 40 years or never?
funny little guys those “kosovan” politicians ...
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