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Παρασκευή 7 Ιανουαρίου 2011

EU charges former Kosovo rebels with war crimes


afp, yahoo.news

European prosecutors charged two former top Kosovo Albanian guerrillas with war crimes during the 1998-99 conflict, according to a definitive indictment obtained by AFP Friday.


The former commander of the military police for the guerrilla Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) Sabit Geci, 52, and Riza Alija, 50, were charged with "war crimes against (the) civilian population" committed in two KLA camps in neighbouring Albania, the indictment said.
The indictment, seen by AFP in its Albanian version, was issued by EULEX, the European Union Rule of Law Mission in Kosovo.
It was filed for EULEX by US prosecutor Robert L. Dean, said the camps in the northern towns of Kukes and Cahan set up by the KLA were "logistic, training and supply" sites.
However, the two accused used them to detain "civilians and persons who were not taking part in the war," it said.
It was not clear when the trial would start.
The war between KLA guerrillas and Serbian forces loyal to then Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic ended after the June 1999 NATO air campaign ousted Serbian forces from Kosovo.
Kosovo unilaterally declared independence from Serbia in February 2008 and has so far been recognised by 72 countries, despite Belgrade's strong opposition.
The 3,000-member EULEX mission was launched in December 2008 to enforce the rule of law in the newly declared country and supervise its police, customs and judiciary.
EULEX has the power to step in and take on cases that the local judiciary and police are unable to handle because of their sensitive nature.
The indictment comes at a time when Pristina is still reeling from allegations of atrocities committed by the KLA in a report by the Council of Europe's envoy Dick Marty.
Marty linked Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci and other senior KLA commanders to organ trafficking and organised crime.
Thaci has denied the allegations, condemning them as a smear campaign.
One of the indicted men, Geci is mentioned in Marty's report as suspected of the "killing of a civilian in Kukes who was beaten and shot."
According to Dean's indictment, the two men accused allegedly detained Kosovars who fled the conflict and were suspected of collaborating with the then Serbian regime or had "political views that differed from the KLA."
Geci and Alija were "directly involved in ordering and took part in mistreating persons kept in these detention centres," from the end of March or beginning of April to June 1999, the document said.
Civilians "were beaten regularly and were hit with batons and nightsticks (truncheons), kicked, mistreated and verbally abused," it added.
"They were kept in filthy and... unhealthy conditions.... They were denied food, water and medical treatment," the indictment said.
The indictment described an incident in Kukes where two detainees were ordered to put on bulletproof jackets and afterwards "were shot by a firing squad" as a way of torture.
A EULEX pre-trial judge has already decided that the Kosovo judiciary has the jurisdiction over the case despite the alleged war crimes having taken place in Albania.
Geci had been arrested by European police in May and Alija in June.
The EULEX prosecution provided testimonies of around 20 detainees -- whose identities were not revealed -- who had said they has suffered great physical and psychological trauma "because of the conditions they were being kept and as the result of beating and torture."
Their names are coded in a special, confidential annex of the indictment as a way for the court to keep their identities secure.
Following the release of Marty's report, Thaci warned that those "fake patriots" in Kosovo who had cooperated with the Council of Europe envoy in his investigation might face consequences.
"These names are known and they will be made public very quickly," Thaci said in a weekend interview with Kosovo private TV station Klan.

read more: afp, yahoo.news

Τρίτη 4 Ιανουαρίου 2011

Greece plans anti-migrant fence at Turkish border


uk.news.yahoo.com

Yesterday, 06:23 pm

Reuters

Greece plans a 12.5 km fence at its border with Turkey to prevent a wave of immigrants from flowing into the country, its public order minister said on Monday. Skip related content
Asian and African migrants increasingly use the northern Greece Evros border with Turkey to reach the EU, after the bloc stepped up surveillance at its sea borders and Spain and Italy signed repatriation deals with African countries.
Last year, some 128,000 illegal immigrants crossed into Greece, more than 40,000 of them at the Evros border post, Citizen Protection Minister Christos Papoutsis said in a statement.
"This is the hard reality and we have an obligation to the Greek citizen to deal with it," Papoutsis said.
"In an effort to manage the inflow of illegal migrants, we are proceeding with the installation of means to deter illegal entries along a 12.5 km land border in Evros."
Greece's land border with Turkey is more than 200 km (124.3 miles) long and mostly runs along a river. The fence will be built in the area where most migrants arrive, officials said.
Athens has long complained that Turkey is not doing enough to stop illegal migrants and that Ankara's refusal to take back immigrants who have crossed from its territory encourages would-be migrants to use that route.
But both countries have pledged over the last months to improve their cooperation on that front and Papoutsis said the measures were "in no way against Turkey, on the contrary they ease and boost our cooperation."
Arrivals of illegal migrants jumped at the northern border last year -- by an annual 369 percent in the nine months to September, according to the EU border agency Frontex -- and rights groups have severely criticised the conditions in which the migrants are kept.
Greece, whose asylum and migration laws have also been criticised for years, will pass in the coming days a law creating an independent authority examining asylum requests and an independent service to oversee detention centres, the statement said.
Nine out of 10 illegal immigrants use Greece as their springboard into the European Union and the debt-choked country is struggling to cope with the swelling numbers.
A European Commission spokesman had said earlier in the day: "Fences and walls have proven in the past to be really short term measures that don't really help addressing and managing the migratory challenges in a more consolidated and structural way."
(Reporting by Ingrid Melander; Additional reporting by Justyna Pawlak in Brussels; Editing by Jon Boyle)

read more: uk.news.yahoo.com

Κυριακή 2 Ιανουαρίου 2011

Trafficking report threatens Kosovo-Serbia talks: Thaci


uk.news.yahoo.com

Thursday, December 30 07:37 pm

AFP Ismet Hajdari

Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci warned on Thursday that a Council of Europe report linking him to organ trafficking and organised crime could endanger long-awaited EU-brokered talks with Serbia. Skip related content

"It is an attack by Dick Marty against the dialogue (between) Kosovo and Serbia," Thaci told AFP in an interview, referring to the report drawn up by the Council of Europe envoy.
Thaci slammed the report as "racist" and described it as "Goebbels-style propaganda", a reference to Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels.
Marty's report was released just as Pristina and Belgrade were expected to begin "closing the chapter of darkness and opening the chapter of the future between the two states and two nations", he noted.
But Thaci said he was still committed to taking part in the talks with Serbia.
"I have expressed readiness to meet with (Serbian) President (Boris) Tadic as the two most legitimate leaders of our countries, Kosovo and Serbia," Thaci said.
The dialogue would lead to ending a "century-old conflict between the Albanians and the Serbs", he added.
The report by the Council of Europe alleges that Thaci and other senior commanders of the rebel ethnic Albanian Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) were involved in organised crime and organ trafficking during and after the 1998-1999 war with Serbia.
Kosovo unilaterally declared independence from Serbia in 2008. Despite Belgrade's fierce opposition, it has so far been recognised by 72 countries, including the United States and all but five members of the European Union.
Although Belgrade and Pristina have agreed to the EU-brokered talks to resolve issues related to Kosovo's declaration of independence, a date has yet to be set for them to start.
Brussels is pushing them to start the talks on basic issues such as communications, transport and energy as soon as possible.
As the dialogue progresses, the parties are expected to move on to more sensitive issues like those who went missing, the return of refugees and property rights.
Marty's report indicates that Thaci headed a KLA faction which controlled secret detention centers in Albania where the organ trafficking was alleged to have taken place in the aftermath of the war.
The parliamentary assembly of the Strasbourg-based Council of Europe is set to adopt Marty's report in late January.
Thaci insisted that the affair had already been investigated by the UN warcrimes tribunal in The Hague, but no case has so far been brought to justice.
"As nowhere else in the region, Kosovo has had a strong international presence and the justice was administered by the international authorities," Thaci said.
"We have nothing to hide," he insisted.
After the end of the conflict in June 1999, Kosovo was administered by the United Nations. Following the declaration of independence, a European Union police and justice mission in Kosovo (EULEX) was established in order to assist in rule of law issues.
It also has a mandate to try cases that the Kosovo judiciary cannot or will not handle because of their sensitive nature, like war crimes and corruption claims.
Thaci said he had "confidence in the justice system", adding that "planted fabrications" from Marty's report will come to nothing.
But Pristina officials were concerned the report, if adopted by the top European rights body, would affect further international recognitions of Kosovo's independence.
In 2010 only eight more countries have recognised Kosovo.
read more: uk.news.yahoo.com