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[Note from www.emperors-clothes.com.
The following excerpts are taken from an interview with pro-Yugoslav
Albanians, driven from Kosovo by the KLA, transcribed and edited
by Greg Elich. Further editing by Jared Israel. Please feel free
to duplicate. Please include all text including this note.]
Kosovo Albanians: The Other Side
(this is the print friendly version)
9-22-99
"My father was killed
two years ago by the KLA terrorists. One day before I left [i.e.,
fled from] Kosovo, a woman came to my flat and said that if I told
people my father was killed by Serbs, I could have a high-ranking
position in the Kosovo Liberation Army, the KLA. The US is heavily
involved with the KLA, they work closely together. What can one
think when one sees Madeleine Albright, President Clinton, [KLA
leader] Hasim Thaci together, and Albright gives Thaci a kiss? We
accuse Mr. Clinton for the crimes Thaci has committed, not only
against Albanians in Kosovo, but against all ethnic groups. Mr.
Clinton is indirectly connected with the murder of my father."
(Albanian leader Fatmir Seholi, Belgrade, 8/9/99)
Interviews are with Faik
Jasari, Corin Ismali, and Fatmir Seholi, all members of the Kosovo
Democratic Initiative.
Comments are by: Biljana
Koteska, First Secretary of the United Nations Law Projects Center
in Belgrade; Bajram Haliti, Secretary of the Republic of Serbia
Secretariat for Development of Information on the Languages of National
Minorities, and editor of "Ahimsa"; Jovan Damjanovic,
President of the Roma organization in Yugoslavia.
Interview conducted by
Barry Lituchy, Joe Friendly, Ayman El-Sayed, Ken Freeland, Jeff
Goldberg and Gregory Elich, members of the North American Solidarity
with Yugoslavia Delegation.
Belgrade, August 9,
1999
FIRST INTERVIEW
Faik Jasari, President,
Kosovo Democratic Initiative, representative at peace talks in Rambouillet,
member of the Temporary Executive Board in the pre-NATO Kosovo Government
Lituchy: Would you tell
us a little bit about the Democratic Initiative?
Jasari: This is a new
political party, formed only last year. Our position was for Kosovo-Metohija
to stay in Yugoslavia, organize humanitarian aid for people, and
oppose secession [from Yugoslavia].
Freeland: How many people
does this party represent?
Jasari: We have 30,000
members. During the NATO aggression, we tried to encourage people
to stay in Kosovo, not to leave. We helped people with food, medicine,
blankets and so on. If anyone had trouble we tried to help.
[Since the NATO occupation
began] about 10,000 members [of our party] have left Kosovo, about
20,000 remain. Many have been kidnapped or tortured by the KLA {EC
Note: Kosovo Liberation Front which is now essentially running Kosovo
under NATO occupation.}The refugees went to Serbia and Montenegro.
Lituchy: Are you a refugee?
Jasari: Yes, of course.
I had to leave on June 18th. Members of the KLA were showing photos
of my family and me to people, taking the pictures from home to
home. One of my colleagues, Cafre Cuka, from Pec, was kidnapped.
We still [know nothing] of his fate.
Lituchy: What did you
leave behind?
Jasari: Our flat, all
our furniture and belongings. My wife and I worked 34 years, now
we have nothing. Nothing.
Lituchy: No assistance
from the United States?
Jasari: No assistance
from any organization. The government of Serbia arranged [accommodations].
Lituchy: Were any members
of your family attacked?
Jasari: No one from my
family. The KLA didn't have time. The KLA is looking for me, even
now. If they find me, they will kill me.
Freeland: Was KFOR {EC
Note: KFOR is the name for the NATO operation in Kosovo.}
Jasari: KFOR does nothing
to protect us. They don't do their job.
Lituchy: Did you have
discussions with KFOR?
Jasari: I sent an open
letter to Mr. Kouchner [UN special representative for Kosovo] to
discuss the situation in Kosovo and with my party but I received
no response. Where is democracy and pluralism in Kosovo? I can't
go there. I can't take part in the political process. Where is democracy?
Lituchy: Approximately
how many Albanians were forced out of Kosovo by the KLA?
Jasari: About 150,000.
About 200 were killed.
Lituchy: Tell us a little
bit about the KLA.
Jasari: Initially the
KLA was a separatist organization and then became a military organization.
They killed loyal Albanians, Serbs, also Albanians who held public
office.
Lituchy: What happened
at Rambouillet?
Jasari: During 1998,
the [Yugoslav] government tried to meet with KLA leaders 17 times,
but the leaders refused. When Western countries asked Yugoslavia
to meet the KLA in Rambouillet, Yugoslavia sent representatives.
Lituchy: Did they ever
meet face-to-face?
Jasari: Only once, at
the first meeting with Jacques Chirac.
Lituchy: An introductory
meeting?
Koteska: Yes.
Lituchy: Why no negotiations?
Jasari: Our representatives
tried to meet them face-to-face every day but they refused. They
did only what the United States told them.
Lituchy: Did you ever
walk up to one of the KLA people and say, 'why can't we discuss
this?'
Jasari: We couldn't even
meet them in the hotel. We only had meetings with American and British
officials, their Western supervisors.
Lituchy: Whom did you
meet with from the United States?
Jasari: Ms. [Madeleine]
Albright, Mr. [James] Rubin and Mr. [James] Hill. They told us to
sign our names to the paper drafted by the United States. In this
paper it was written that Kosovo must be a republic [i.e., independent
of Serbia]. At first, they thought the delegation from Yugoslavia
wouldn't go to Rambouillet. Later, they saw that wasn't true, and
when they also saw that not only Serbs, but also Roma, Albanian
and Egyptian representatives were in our delegation, they were shocked.
Lituchy: The Americans?
Koteska: Yes.
Jasari: There were only
three Serbian representatives and one Montenegrin in our delegation.
[French Foreign Minister
Hubert] Vedrine, [British Foreign Secretary] Robin Cook and Albright
told secessionist Albanians in Kosovo that everything will be fine
in Rambouillet, and that any agreement will be in their favor.
But they didn't ask other
nationalities in Kosovo what they want. I told them that the KLA
doesn't represent the opinion of all Albanian people, that there
are three other Albanian political parties who have a different
view, as do Romas, Serbs, Muslims and other nationalities.
They wouldn't listen.
In Paris, the representatives
of Yugoslavia didn't sign the paper. Albright told them, whether
you sign or not, Kosovo will be a republic. When Albright was in
Kosovo, she embraced and kissed Hasim Thaci, the terrorists' leader
[of the KLA].
Lituchy: Why do you think
the United States launched this war?
Jasari: To establish
military bases and extend its occupation of the Balkans, to dictate
to all countries in Europe.
Lituchy: What do you
have to say to groups and individuals who claim Yugoslavia was a
police state, oppressing [Albanians]?
Jasari: It's just not
true. I'm Albanian, and I have all the same rights as any Serbian.
Every country must hold onto its own territory and not give it to
other countries or to an ethnic minority. One third of the people
in Yugoslavia are ethnic minorities. Why do we have problems only
with Albanians? This problem didn't arise yesterday. After World
War II, many Albanians wanted to secede from Yugoslavia; they were
preparing for secession. I asked Albanians from Albania and Albanians
from Kosovo, who has a better life? All the knowledge and property
Albanians have is in Kosovo, not Albania. The Republic of Serbia,
Belgrade, and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia wanted to help
them, to support them. You can find Albanian doctors, professors,
engineers, and all professions. Our government wanted and still
wants to provide education, to help them. Education was free.
SECOND INTERVIEW
Corin Ismali, Under-Secretary
for National Social Questions in the Kosovo Executive Council, Secretary
of the Democratic Initiative.
Lituchy: Would you tell
us what happened after the bombing stopped in Kosovo?
Ismali: We had to leave
Kosovo because KFOR didn't guarantee us freedom, peace, or the possibility
to walk in the evening without being afraid of KLA soldiers.
Lituchy: Were you threatened?
Ismali: Yes, because
I opposed secession.
Lituchy: Why do [some]
Albanians support Yugoslavia?
Ismali: Because we want
to live with other ethnic groups in Yugoslavia. We don't want to
live in a country with only one ethnic group.
Lituchy: Why do some
join the KLA?
Koteska: [For many] if
they didn't join, they'll kill and torture them, rape their wives,
daughters. They had to.
Lituchy: Would you like
to return to Kosovo?
Ismali: Of course. Why
not? If our army and police return, I'll go the same day. I must
have peace, freedom, and no one to threaten me before I can return.
Friendly: Does the KLA
give any indication of their interest in democracy, or do they tend
to be more totalitarian?
Ismali: I think it won't
be democracy.
THIRD INTERVIEW
Fatmir Seholi, Chief
Editor, Radio/Television Pristina
Lituchy: Tell us about
the media available for Albanians.
Seholi: Albanians had
more media than Serbs. In Kosovo, you could find only one newspaper
in Serbian but about 65 in Albanian.
Lituchy: Did you go to
Pristina University [in Kosovo]?
Seholi: Yes.
Lituchy: In what language
were your courses?
Seholi: Albanian.
Lituchy: Are you aware
that in America, the television and radio and newspapers were regularly
saying Albanians have no rights in Yugoslavia?
Seholi: I think America
didn't have the right information.
ORIGINS OF THE KLA
Seholi: Until I arrived
here as a refugee, I worked as Chief Editor at Radio/Television
Pristina, in Albanian. I spoke with KFOR about a peaceful solution
for problems in Kosovo.
El-Sayed: Did the United
States create the KLA?
Seholi: The KLA received
great support from America and Germany. According to our Secret
Service, they created the KLA. But why? The United States was the
leading country against terrorism, but in our case the United States
supported and still supports KLA terrorism. Two years ago, on a
night in January 1997, the KLA killed my father, Malic Seholi. He
was called a "traitor" because he supported Yugoslavia
and the Serbian government, not the KLA. He loved living with all
ethnic groups in Kosovo. He was 51 years old.
The KLA told us that
they did it.
Lituchy: The KLA themselves
said that?
Koteska: Yes, yes.
Seholi: The KLA said
they killed more than one thousand people because they were not
Albanian or wanted Kosovo to stay in Yugoslavia. And that doesn't
even include members of the Yugoslav army they killed.
Lituchy: Who else from
your family was injured or killed by the KLA?
Seholi: About two weeks
ago, two of my brothers were tortured in Podujevo. After they beat
them they let them go home. But they must call every day at 10 AM.
Lituchy: They have to
call the KLA?
Koteska: Yes, yes.
El-Sayed: Do you know
what torture methods the KLA use?
Seholi: What more do
you want? They're killing people. By strangulation, by torture.
Koteska: In some places
their torture implements were found, like those used by the Inquisition
centuries ago. I think the Inquisition would say, 'These new methods
are better.'
Lituchy: Why did they
torture them?
Seholi: Because they
stayed in Kosovo and still support the Yugoslav government. Also
because they worked in our government.
Lituchy: So the KLA will
not allow anybody to live in Kosovo who doesn't agree with them?
Seholi: Exactly.
Lituchy: Where was KFOR?
{NATO}
Seholi: KFOR was in Podujevo
while the KLA threatened my two brothers. The KLA Commander walks
the streets, armed, drunk, firing a rifle in the air. KFOR does
nothing.
Lituchy: Which sector?
Seholi: British and American.
Goldberg: Does anyone
willingly join the KLA?
Seholi: I think many
join because they're forced. If someone refuses, he's tortured or
killed. They used to say, "They vanished..." People value
their lives.
NATO SETS UP A KLA
AMBUSH
Seholi: I left Kosovo
June 28th. The day before, I spoke with Maj. Kennedy from KFOR about
the return of Albanians to the office, to work with Serbs and other
non-Albanians. We formed a commission to plan programming for Radio/Television
Pristina for the next five months.
We worked out a good
agreement. Representatives from KFOR and the UN also attended.
We agreed that the next
meeting would be the following day, at 10 AM.
We arrived at 9.
At 9:30 three or four
thousand Albanians gathered in front of the station. Neither representatives
from KFOR nor from the UN appeared. At 10:15, three or four hundred
Albanians forced their way into the station and smashed windows
and equipment. Employees were threatened and beaten.
Maj. Kennedy arrived
at 10:30 and shouted at the crowd but in such a manner that it was
clear he was merely posturing. He invited three representatives
from the crowd inside for negotiations. After ten minutes one man
came into our office and told us someone had placed a bomb in the
station, so we must leave. Because of the danger, all but 15 employees
left. I was one of those who remained. The KFOR Major and a Russian
representative from the UN wanted us to leave because [they claimed
there was] a bomb. They took us out and brought us through the crowd
of four thousand. When we left the building, before we entered a
KFOR car, the crowd shouted some rough things.
I couldn't go home because
it was possible I might be killed. I couldn't see my own children.
Kotestka: He left Kosovo
without anything.
Seholi: I know now that
KFOR and the UN arranged all of this. There was no bomb.
After the NATO bombing
stopped, I went with [temporary UN special representative for Kosovo]
Sergio de Mello around Kosovo. The trip lasted five days. We visited
almost every village and city in Kosovo and saw what damage resulted
from NATO bombing and what damage resulted from gangs.
I want to point out that
Mr. Sergio de Mello seemed disinterested in damage from NATO bombing.
Most of those who died from bombs were in fact Albanians. In just
one strike in the village of Korisa, they killed 105 people. Mr.
de Mello wasn't interested.
Koteska: Most of those
were little children, women, old men.
Lituchy: What did you
leave behind?
Seholi: My mother and
two brothers.
Lituchy: Have you heard
from them?
Seholi: Yes.
Lituchy: Are they safe?
Seholi: The KLA's secret
police visited my flat three times and removed all they could.
Lituchy: What do you
think the future is in Kosovo?
Seholi: I think powerful
Western countries have their own plans for Kosovo.
Freeland: Following up
this question of the bombing of Albanians inside Kosovo, did you
notice a trend of more of them being bombed earlier in the bombing
vs. later in the bombing? In other words, [did you notice that the
bombing was used to] attempt to get them to flee, to make it seem
like something else [i.e., Serbian persecution] was going on?
Seholi: Albanians got
hurt from all sides, but mainly from NATO bombing. More than 300
Albanians were killed by NATO bombings.
El-Sayed: Do you think
that NATO bombed Albanians purposely, to make them leave?
Seholi: Whether that
was their purpose or not, people were killed. The man who could
command NATO to bomb people isn't human. After the bombing of Djakovica
I saw decapitated bodies. I have pictures. It's horrible.
Jasari: Now we see that
the US doesn't care about any ethnic minority. Before NATO started
bombing us, they said they're protecting Albanians. If they were
protecting Albanians they wouldn't be bombing them.
The aim of the US was
clear: to create a Greater Albania, to sever Kosovo from Yugoslavia.
The Western countries have military bases in Albania. They want
to expand throughout the Balkans and have a controlling influence
in other countries. Unfortunately, our Albanian people are the victims
of that, also of Albanian terrorism.
[KLA leader] Hasim Thaci
was in the US and other Western countries, not in Kosovo. He came
to Kosovo after NATO bombing ceased, and after our army left Kosovo.
What kind of Albanian is that who doesn't protect the Albanian people?
We, as Albanians, together with the other nationalities, protected
everyone in Kosovo. Regardless of whether he is Albanian, Egyptian,
Serb or Turk, he's a human being who lives in Kosovo.
The US used the Albanian
people as the excuse for aggression and perhaps they will again.
KFOR and the United States can't guarantee in Kosovo. They can only
guarantee that terrorists walk armed through cities and villages
and act without restraint. When someone reports that someone is
killed or kidnapped, they do nothing to stop such actions. Many
KFOR soldiers support the KLA.
Lituchy: How many Albanians
live in Serbia?
Jasari: In Belgrade alone
you can find about 80,000, many as long as twenty years. They have
rights, they work, they have offices, no one bothers them.
Jasari: According to
the Serbian Constitution, everyone has the same rights. It doesn't
depend on nationality. After the visit of Mr. [Bob] Dole and [Joe]
DiGuardi [in 1990] some Albanians started pushing for a Greater
Albania. They [i.e., the U.S. government] promised a Greater Albania,
providing support, both monetary and other.
Friendly: What is your
comment on the allegations of wrong-doing by the Serbian military
in Kosovo? How would you compare that with what NATO did. Is there
some basis for the allegations that the Serbian army was wantonly
killing villagers, or were they actually after the KLA?
Jasari: It's not true.
It's propaganda. The Yugoslav army never attacked anyone in Kosovo.
They only defended themselves.
Lituchy: An argument
certain U.S. officials made was that the US had to go to war because
these people couldn't live together. Comments?
Jasari: There was no
reason to bomb us. We lived together. Why didn't the United States
influence the KLA to negotiate with our government before Rambouillet?
El-Sayed: When you met
Albright [at Rambouillet], why did she say they were in Kosovo?
Did she say the Yugoslav army was killing innocent civilians?
Jasari: She told me that.
I told her, "Don't speak from your imagination. Do you have
some facts? We have facts that this isn't happening." But she
said, "We don't need facts." You couldn't say anything
to her.[Now] Albanians have lost everything. They no longer have
property, accommodations. They have a Narco-Mafia [the KLA]. Kosovo
is [or was] multi-ethnic, multi-cultural and multi-religious. Unfortunately,
these days Serbians, Romas ("Gypsies"), Muslims, Egyptians,
Albanians who don't support the political aims of the KLA have fled.
One only one ethnic group will live in Kosovo.
Lituchy: Are you getting
help right now from abroad?
Jasari: None.
Lituchy: What kind of
help can Americans give?
Seholi: Any kind: food,
medicine. Clothes, because winter will come.
Lituchy: Is there an
Albanian Yugoslav organization we can deal with directly?
Jasari: It is best to
deal through the International Red Cross or the Yugoslav Red Cross.
But when you send help, arrange to whom the aid should go, otherwise
it may be diverted to the terrorists.
CONCLUDING REMARKS
Haliti: Do the US and
the 19 countries who bombed us know that Hasim Thaci's [KLA]army
has no ethnic groups but Albanians? They said the reason they bombed
us is because there is no multi-cultural life in Kosovo.
Lituchy: Did American
human rights officials ever contact you?
Seholi: No, but I had
a conversation with Mr. Jerzy Dienstbier from the UN human rights
organization.
Jasari: There was one
visit from the United States called the Mission of Peace, before
the war. We spoke with a Colonel Robert from that group. They asked
about the situation and our rights and listened to us. But the other
delegations came with their own opinions, to support the terrorists.
They never told the truth back in their countries. Some delegations
visited only Albanians who supported terrorism, never our side.
I want to travel to tell the truth about what has happened.
Seholi: One day before
I left Kosovo, a woman came to my flat and said that if I told people
my father was killed by Serbs I could have a high-ranking position
in the KLA.
The United States is
heavily involved with the KLA, they work closely together. Why didn't
the United States do anything many months ago, when the KLA was
killing citizens of Kosovo? The US took measures only when the KLA
was about to be destroyed. What can one think when one sees Madeleine
Albright, President Clinton, [KLA leader] Hasim Thaci together,
and Albright gives Thaci a kiss? We accuse Mr. Clinton for the crimes
Thaci has committed, not only to Albanians in Kosovo but to all
ethnic groups. Mr. Clinton is indirectly connected with the murder
of my father.
* End of interview *
For first-hand information
and in-depth analysis of Yugoslavia and the war, go to: http://www.emperors-clothes.com
For an interview with
the leader of Kosovo's Jewish community, driven out of Pristina
by the KLA, see http://www.emperors-clothes.com/interviews/ceda.htm
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