Kosovo
Extremists Out of Control
The
international community should intervene to stop
the growing number of attacks on
Serb civilians and their holy sites
By
Father Sava
Decani, Kosovo
August 6, 2002
After the terrorist attack in Klokot village near
Vitina on July 31, in which five Serb homes were
destroyed by powerful explosives, and the recent
unsuccessful raid on the Holy Archangels monastery near
Prizren, it is more evident than ever that Albanian
terrorist groups act freely and with impunity in Kosovo
today.
Their targets are Serb civilians, their homes and holy
sites &endash; especially cemeteries. Dozens of Orthodox
churches destroyed after the war in Kosovo were
demolished with explosives, despite the strong NATO-led
military presence in the area. Such devastating attacks
could have been executed only by well-trained people with
military experience and surely not by ordinary frustrated
civilians.
The cause of today's terrorism is the simple fact that
the paramilitary structures of the Kosovo Liberation
Army, KLA, continued operating after the war either
within the internationally sponsored Kosovo Protection
Corps, KPC - which was nothing but a legalised KLA - or
through a network of semi-legal private security agencies
and mafia gangs associated with wartime heroes and
political leaders.
KLA structures were never disbanded, and the first
consequences were Albanian-armed insurrections in south
Serbia's Presevo valley and in Macedonia. A policy of
tolerating crime and violence has brought the
international mission to a standstill.
The best indicator of the "credibility" of KPC - for
which western taxpayers have generously given millions of
dollars through their governments - is the sheer fact
that almost all its post-war leaders are now either in
prison, have been suspended for various violations or
have been added to President George Bush's blacklist - an
impressive record for an organisation that was proclaimed
as a great post-war success.
While the Security Council applauds the "tremendous
achievements" of the UN Mission in Kosovo, UNMIK, in
everyday life, an objective observer can only witness the
deterioration of the security and human rights
situations.
Attacks on Serb civilians and their holy sites are
becoming more frequent. It appears that Albanian
extremists working on the creation of an "ethnically
clean" Kosovo see the protectorate's remaining Serbs as
the most serious obstacle to the realisation of that long
wished-for goal.
In many ways they are right to believe that not a
single Serb will ever agree to live in a quasi state in
which basic human rights and dignity depend on ethnicity
and religion.
Will the international community continue its
practices of ignoring problems and tolerating Albanian
extremist whims? Or will it begin to challenge extremism
and ethnic discrimination?
One thing is quite clear - the truth cannot be ever
hidden forever, especially not from the omniscient
Almighty.
The American military magazine "Stars and Stripes"
recently published a story on the success of the KFOR
mission in Eastern Kosovo, especially in Klokot. The
message of the article was that the security situation
has improved so drastically that further military
presence is hardly needed.
The truth of this text could be seen on July 31, not
in ink and letters, but in a series of explosions in
which five solidly built Serb houses were destroyed and
two American soldiers almost killed.
Disbanding of checkpoints, visible protective military
infrastructure around Serb enclaves - especially churches
and monasteries - and reducing the number of convoy
escorts for Serbian people will surely not bring
improvement by themselves. They have to be accompanied by
concrete actions against troublemakers.
The present strategy is profoundly wrong and will not
create better conditions of life but will, as we can now
see, encourage even more armed terrorist gangs to cleanse
even that small number of Serbs who have survived the
last three years thanks to KFOR protection.
The roof of a house cannot be built without strong
foundations and solid walls. Showing so-called
"multi-ethnic" Kosovo institutions to cover up a
virtually mono-ethnic and repressive society looks more
like a grotesque attempt to build a house on sand.
Reasonable Serbs would support multi-ethnic
institutions as long as they don't risk death attending
them. True democracy cannot be built as long as the
post-war persecutors of the Serb and Roma population sit
in parliament assured of their political immunity.
Perhaps more than ever, it is evident that the
international policy of tacit approval of ethnic
discrimination has to be replaced by a more constructive
one of building an economically and politically stable
and sustainable multi-ethnic society. Running away from
problems is definitely not the way to achieve this
goal.
Father Sava Janjic serves in the
Serbian Orthodox Diocese of Raska and Prizren.
©
TFF and the
author

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