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List: ALBSA-Info[ALBSA-Info] Serbs must face up to Kosovo crimes!Uk Lushi juniku at hotmail.comThu Oct 12 16:22:36 EDT 2000
>Date: Thu, 12 Oct 2000 21:59:30 +0200 > >http://www.guardianunlimited.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,380984,00.html > >Serbs must face up to Kosovo crimes, says freed reporter > >Jonathan Steele in Belgrade >Thursday October 12, 2000 > >Like most first-time prisoners, Miroslav Filipovic, the courageous >Serbian journalist who was given a seven-year sentence for "revealing >state secrets" and "spreading false information", says he learned a >great deal from his time behind bars. > "I shared a cell with two or three others. The inmates were moved >around but I usually had Albanians with me. I had never had such close >contact with them before," Filipovic said in Belgrade after he was freed >on Tuesday on the instructions of the new president, Vojislav Kostunica. > His crime was to be the first Serb journalist to write directly >about atrocities in Kosovo and to try to explain how some Serb units >attacked Albanian civilians. > He was tried in a military court and held in a military prison in >Nis, in southern Serbia. Some of his Albanian fellow inmates were >convicted of membership of the Kosovo Liberation Army. Others were >awaiting trial. He believes most are innocent and ought to be freed. > "The Albanians treated me well. I made friends with several. I had >written about Kosovo and in some way was on their side," he said. They >listened together to radio reports of Slobodan Milosevic's downfall. > Exhausted but neatly dressed in a suit, ready for an interview on a >Serbian TV channel, Filipovic does not look the part of a brave >investigative reporter. Now 50, he was not trying to start a career as a >young journalist with a splash. He had not done any critical reporting >before he joined the London-based Institute for War and Peace Reporting >as its correspondent in Kraljevo, a town in southern Serbia. > "If I had known what would happen to me, I would not have written >those articles. I am not so brave," he said. "I was just in the right >place at the right time." > What he picked up, and then published, was a series of searing >accounts given after the war by several officers and men who had served >in Kosovo. One saw a three-year-old Albanian boy beheaded in front of >his family. Others witnessed the artillery shelling of defenceless >villages, and forces going in to massacre civilians. > Filipovic does not believe that collective guilt can be placed on a >whole people. The atrocities were carried out by particular units. But >he does not accept that few Serbs knew what was happening in Kosovo. > "Everyone who was in Kosovo knew, as well as their friends and >families. They talked about it. There are people who still cannot sleep >properly for thinking about what was done," he said. > Unlike most Serbs, he believes that Mr Milosevic and the other >suspected war criminals should go on trial in the Hague, not in Serbia. >"They will get a fairer trial there," he said. > Serbs have to start to face up to and discuss war crimes fully, he >believes. This is vital if good relations are to be restored with >Croatia, Bosnia, and Kosovo. "We cannot go forward otherwise." > After some rest, Filipovic plans to write a book and more articles >on atrocities. The pieces which caused the military to put him in prison >this summer appeared only on the internet. > >Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2000 > _________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com. Share information about yourself, create your own public profile at http://profiles.msn.com.
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