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List: NYC-L

[NYC-L] the weasel pops again.

Jeton Ademaj jeton at hotmail.com
Sat Jul 22 05:44:09 EDT 2006


here's an article covering the Serbian Bishop's press conference, Besnik 
gets a shout out on a first-name basis...

http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewCulture.asp?Page=/Culture/archive/200607/CUL20060721a.html



US Accused of Siding With 'Criminals and Jihadists' in Kosovo
By Nathan Burchfiel
CNSNews.com Staff Writer
July 21, 2006

(CNSNews.com) - A prominent Serbian Orthodox bishop Thursday said the U.S. 
was allowing Islamic extremists to wage war on Christians in Kosovo by 
deciding not to oppose Kosovo's independence.

Kosovo is an autonomous province in Serbia with a population of about 2 
million, most who are ethnic Albanian and Muslim. It is currently 
administered by the United Nations Interim Administrative Mission in Kosovo 
(UNMIK), but negotiations which began this year are expected to eventually 
result in independence for the province.

However, Dr. Artemije Radosavljevic on Thursday issued a warning about the 
prospect of and independent Kosovo.

"At a time when America is leading the free world in a global struggle 
against jihad terror, Kosovo-Metohija must not continue to be an exception, 
where for reasons we do not understand, American officials have taken the 
side of the criminals and jihadists," Artemije said during a news conference 
in Washington, D.C.

Artemije, the bishop of Raska-Prizren and Kosovo-Metohija, has traveled to 
the United States on several occasions to meet with government officials and 
urge them to oppose independence for Kosovo.

He told reporters that the region has become a "black hole of corruption and 
crime" since it became a protectorate of the United Nations in 1999, 
following NATO bombings that were intended to encourage then-Serbian 
President Slobodan Milosovic to withdraw his forces from Kosovo.

Since 1999, the Kosovar Albanians have targeted Serbian Orthodox Christians, 
according to Artemije, allegedly burning down more than 150 churches, 
driving more than 220,000 Christians from the region and killing thousands 
more.

Granting Kosovo independence from Serbia would make Serbian Christians more 
vulnerable to violence from the region's Muslim majority.

"Detaching Kosovo from democratic Serbia," Artemije said, "would mean a 
virtual sentence of extinction for my people in the province and create a 
rogue state in which the terrorists are the government."

He added that there have been thousands of Christians captured and killed by 
Muslim extremists, including numerous videotaped beheadings. "Why are jihad 
beheadings an outrage in the rest of the world, but not when they're 
happening in Kosovo to Christian Serbs?" Artemije asked.

Artemije said he has had several meetings with Bush administration officials 
and members of Congress during his current visit, but a spokesman declined 
to name the individuals with whom the bishop met. Artemije told reporters 
that his current trip to the U.S. has been more successful than the one he 
took in February of this year.

"There certainly has been movement forward judging by the number of 
meetings, the quality of meetings, the atmosphere in which the talks where 
held and the obvious presence of a desire to help," he said.

In an October 2005 report titled: "Why Independence for Kosovo?" prepared by 
Muhamedin Kullashi and Besnik Pula - intellectuals from the city of 
Prishtina -- they argued that independence is the "only historically 
justified and politically viable solution that will guarantee peace, 
stability and development in the Balkans."

"Placing sovereignty in Prishtina's hands will finally enable Kosovo's 
integration into regional, European and global institutions, and allow its 
emergence from the institutional, political and diplomatic isolation imposed 
by the international administration of UNMIK, as a result of the unresolved 
status," they wrote.

Muhamedin and Besnik also claimed that "the key generator of conflict in 
Kosovo was Serbia's aggressive and repressive policy against the local 
Albanian population, and not any hatred or lack of trust between ethnic 
communities."

"With its aggression and campaign of ethnic cleansing in 1999, Serbia lost 
any legitimacy to rule over Kosovo in any shape or form," they wrote.

U.S. State Department spokesman Terry Davidson told Cybercast News Service 
that the United States has "not said explicitly that we're for independence 
or against independence. It just has to be something that takes the various 
interests into account and protects the minority populations as well."

He said further information could be found in the remarks that Ambassador 
Frank Wisner, the U.S. representative to the Kosovo Status Talks, made 
during interviews with Voice of America radio on June 23.

"The issue today is to put in place the structure of a Kosovo that will be 
stable," Wisner said last month, one that "will provide the basis of a 
functioning society that can evolve into a full partner in a greater 
European and Western community."

Wisner told Voice of America that, "Whatever the future will be in terms of 
final status -- whether Kosovo will be independent or something else -- 
Kosovo Serbs are going to need protections that will guarantee them their 
full rights."

He also declined to offer an opinion on whether Kosovo should be granted 
independence from Serbia, but said the region's final status would be 
addressed "during 2006."





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