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[NYC-L] [AMCC-News] News: MACEDONIA: NEW TWIST IN "TERRORIST" SHOOTING SAGA: Seven so-called terrorists killed by Macedonian police a ppear to have been workers trying to reach Athens to get jobs (fwd)

Mentor Cana mentor at alb-net.com
Mon Jun 24 15:20:52 EDT 2002


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                Human Rights Violations in Macedonia
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WELCOME TO IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS REPORT, No. 342, June 12, 2002

****************** VISIT IWPR ON-LINE: www.iwpr.net ****************

MACEDONIA: NEW TWIST IN "TERRORIST" SHOOTING SAGA

Seven so-called terrorists killed by Macedonian police appear to have been
workers trying to reach Athens to get jobs at the Olympic Games

By Saso Ordanoski in Skopje

Macedonia's media have questioned official accounts of the killing of
seven men shot dead by police earlier this year on the outskirts of
Skopje.

Police said the men, six from Pakistan and one from India, planned attacks
on Western embassies in the Macedonian capital.  They said bags containing
uniforms of the Kosovo Liberation Army, KLA, and weapons were found with
the "mujahedin" fighters.

Media suspicions were aroused by the fact that the interior ministry
altered its version of events several times.

Initially, the ministry said police intercepted the seven men in a van.
It later withdrew all mention of a van and said the group of seven opened
fire on a police patrol from a two-door jeep.  TV pictures showed a jeep
whose windscreen had two bullet holes.

The latest official version of the March 2 incident said police knew the
group was coming and ambushed them, thus explaining why none of the police
sustained any injuries.

One Western diplomat who was permitted to view the corpses said they were
riddled with dozens of bullets.  But none of the bags containing KLA
uniforms that police said they found with the men had holes in them.

This raised suspicions that police planted the bags on the bodies after
the killing, as part of their propaganda war against ethnic Albanian
militants in Macedonia and their allies in Kosovo.

Western diplomats voiced particular alarm over the reliability of the
police account when the interior ministry rejected a request for foreign
forensic experts to look at the bodies.

The police said they had sent photographs of the bodies and their
fingerprints to Interpol and had requested help in identifying the men.

But the police version of events sustained another blow when a US
newspaper identified at least one of the men, Bilal Kazmi, as a Pakistani
migrant worker looking for a job in Greece.

The discovery came to light after Christopher Cooper, a reporter from The
Wall Street Journal, contacted Kazmi's brother Dabir in Athens, where he
had migrated in 1999.

Cooper showed him a book published by the Macedonian interior ministry
called "Islamic fundamentalism in Macedonia".  Among photographs of the
seven dead men, Dabir recognised his brother Bilal.

In a front page article on May 28, the newspaper recounted Bilal's tragic
journey from Pakistan through Iran, Turkey and Bulgaria to Greece, where
he had hoped to join his brother and find work in the run-up to the 2004
Olympic games.  The article claimed that the Macedonian police spun the
story about terrorists for their own benefit.

Since then, the Greek newspaper Elefterotipia contacted other relatives of
the dead men in Greece, as well as the family of the Indian national back
in India.  All confirmed that their relatives had been trying to get to
Athens to find work.

The title also revealed that the six Pakistanis belonged to the Shiite
Muslim community, a religious minority in Pakistan that has been
frequently targeted by Sunni extremists linked to Osama Bin Laden's
al-Qaeda network.  This discovery cast further doubt on Macedonian claims
that the men were terrorists.

The newspaper said the Macedonian authorities had resorted to desperate
methods in their attempt to link their own internal battle with ethnic
Albanian insurgents to last year's US-led war against the Taleban
Islamists in Afghanistan.

Macedonia's hard line interior minister, Ljubo Boskovski, not
surprisingly, has refused to budge, saying the case is now closed. His
spokesmen insist the seven men were indeed terrorists.

However, Boskovski's critics say it may have been no accident that the
"terrorists" were shot dead only days before The Hague war crimes tribunal
were due to exhume the bodies of ethnic Albanians killed by police in the
village of Ljuboten in last year's conflict.

Boskovski says attempts to link the two events - and suggestions that the
shooting was a diversion - form part of a campaign by his internal enemies
and their western friends to undermine him.

The bodies of the seven men remain in a morgue in Skopje.  An official
Pakistani delegation is expected to come and eventually take them away.
In the meantime, relatives of the dead have not been allowed to remove
them while the investigation continues.

Saso Ordanoski is IWPR coordinating editor in Macedonia

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