Kosovo Crisis
August 1st, 1998
Air campaign brings death to Kosovars
AS FIRST-HAND observer to the aftermath of Yugoslavian President Slobodan Milosevic’s
policy of ethnic cleansing and genocide in Bosnia and Herzegovina, I agreed
with the NATO air campaign to save the Kosovars from a similar fate. The brutal
war started by the Yugoslavian Army through their vassal Bosnian Serb allies
came dangerously close to destroying an entire people. Two-hundredfifty-thousand
people are missing and presumed to be dead and 1.5 million are refugees (out
of a prewar population of only 4 million). Virtually every mosque, religious
school, library and museum that had any connection to the Ottoman period that
was or is in Serbian-held territory was destroyed. The ground in what’s left
of Bosnia and Herzegovina is sewn with more than 100,000 land mines. Thousands
of villages and hamlets sit empty as the residents have fled or are dead. The
transportation system is largely destroyed, electric production is a fraction
of pre- war levels and unemployment is 60 to 70 percent – all in a nation that
prior to the war had a higher standard of living than Portugal, Greece or Turkey
(all NATO members).
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U N M I B H
March 30th, 1998
SPECIAL REPORT CRIMINAL ACTIVITY IN STOLAC IPTF AOR DURING BOSNIAK RETURNS MARCH
26-28, 1998 AND THE LOCAL POLICE RESPONSE
SUMMARY:
During the period of March 26-28, 1998 the Stolac IPTF area of responsibility
witnessed one of the most intense periods of criminal vandalism since the program
of Bosniak returns began. Several dwellings were destroyed by explosions and
many more were burned. There were no physical injuries in any of the cases as
the structures directly effected were uninhabited, however, the psychological
trauma to residents living in nearby dwellings must not be overlooked. The incidents
were concurrent with the return of Bosniak displaced persons to areas outside
of the pilot project area in Stolac town, which was in itself concurrent with
a highly visible SFOR military exercise. Their impact on the continuing return
process remains to be seen.
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Westendorp gives Tuđman ultimatum
February 25th, 1998
A spokesman for Carlos Westendorp, The International Community’s chief representative in Bosnia and Herzegovina, said in Sarajevo on 25 February that Westendorp has given Tudjman one week to sack the ultranationalist mayor of the Herzegovinian town of Stolac or face the loss of his own political credibility (see “RFE/RL Newsline,” 25 February 1998). The spokesman said this is Tudjman’s “last chance” to prove that he supports the Dayton agreement.
Source: http://www.hri.org/news/balkans/rferl/1998/98-02-26.rferl.html