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Balkans
KLA provocations in Mitrovica and southwest Serbia
By Chris Marsden
10 March 2000
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The Kosovan town of Mitrovica continues to be a focus of confrontations
between Serbs and ethnic Albanians, but hostilities are rapidly
spreading into Serbia proper. There are clear indications that
the supposedly disbanded Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) is playing
an instrumental role in inciting the conflict. They hope to create
conditions for a renewed military offensive against Serbia and
the realisation of their perspective of making Kosovo part of
a Greater Albania.
Mitrovica is one of the few remaining places in Kosovo with
a substantial Serb population. It is divided into two ethnic cantons,
separated by the river Ibar. The southern part is home to 49,000
Albanians and a handful of Serbs, whilst the north contains 12,000
Serbs and 2,000 ethnic Albanians. It is the location of what is
believed to be one of Europe's most valuable mining complexes,
the Trepca lead and zinc mines, which also contain deposits of
gold and silver ore.
March 7 saw pitched battles between Kosovar Serbs and Albanians
in Mitrovica, during which 16 French NATO (KFOR) troops and 24
mainly Serb civilians were wounded. The incident began when a
fight between an ethnic Albanian and a Serb provoked shooting.
About four to five grenades were thrown and two rockets later
hit a high-rise apartment in northern Mitrovica. Although the
north of the city is predominantly inhabited by Serbs, KFOR has
been forcibly evicting tenants and installing ethnic Albanians
with the stated intention of restoring an ethnically mixed population.
The February 22 confrontation between KFOR troops and a KLA-organised
march by 50,000 ethnic Albanian protesters demanding entry into
northern Mitrovica via the Ibar Bridge has been followed by weeks
of ethnic violence, which have left at least 12 dead.
Richard Holbrooke, US Ambassador to the UN, and NATO Secretary
General George Robertson subsequently blamed forces under the
control of Serbia for provoking the conflicts in Mitrovica. On
the ground, however, KFOR could not but acknowledge the part played
by agitators on both sides. In the following days,
KFOR troops resumed weapons searches in Mitrovica, in an operation
entitled Operation Ibar. Prior to the recent disturbances,
300 US troops searching for munitions had targeted buildings in
the ethnic Albanian enclave of northern Mitrovica.
On Sunday, March 5, KLA leader Hashim Thaci spoke to a crowd
of 20,000 and pledged to liberate Mitrovica and establish an independent
Kosovo. But Thaci, who is now a leading member of the UN/NATO-sponsored
Kosovo administration, made clear that his aims did not end there.
He accused Belgrade of "pursuing a policy of ethnic cleansing
and genocide against the Albanian population" in Presevo,
Medvedja and Bujanovac, the main towns of southwest Serbia, and
home to 60,000-70,000 ethnic Albanians. "We are ... studying
the issue with the international community and in particular with
those good friends of the Albanians, the Americans," he said.
Thaci has identified a major aim of the KLAto take control
of the entire Presevo Valley, east of the Kosovo border. They
routinely describe this 482-square-mile region as "Eastern
Kosovo" and have had military detachments operating there
since November last year, according to the UN, and since late
summer, according to Belgrade.
The KLA's forces are publicly identified as the Liberation
Army of Presevo, Medvedja and Bujanovac (UCPMB). At the end of
NATO's war against Serbia in 1999, a three-mile buffer zone
was established between Kosovostill nominally a Serbian
provinceand Serbia proper, which Yugoslav army units were
not permitted to patrol. The exclusion zone includes the predominantly
Albanian village of Dobrosin, but not Presevo, Medvedja and Bujanovac.
In January, the UCPMB killed three Serbs in Mucibaba, near
Presevo. Serb policemen have been ambushed and killed and bombs
have been planted. In Bujanovac, four bombs were detonated in
February, one near an elementary school, two in a Gypsy neighbourhood
and one next to a cinema. Attacks have also been made on Albanian
politicians opposed to the KLA, including the murder of Zemail
Mustafi, the Albanian vice-president of the Bujanovac branch of
Slobodan Milosevic's Socialist Party. Recent fighting in Dobrosin
resulted in 170 Albanians fleeing into Kosovo. Marcel Grogan from
the UN's Office of Humanitarian Affairs was wounded in the leg
in an attack near Dobrosin.
Following the war against Serbia, the KLA provided the military
and political forces upon which NATO established its protectorate
in Kosovo. But in relying on the KLA, the US has fashioned something
of a rod for its own back. The KLA's gangsterism and corruption,
its anti-Serb attacks and its repression of political opponents
have made attempts to restore a degree of economic and political
stability impossible. Moreover, the NATO powers and the US cannot
but oppose its perspective of a Greater Albania, which would risk
the destabilisation of the entire Balkan region.
Nevertheless, the KLA still hopes to benefit from its relationship
with America. The UCPMB carries out military exercises in the
shadow of US army checkpoints and observation stations on the
Kosovo border, relying on the protection which the KFOR presence
provides from Serb reprisals. KFOR spokesman Lieutenant Colonel
Henning Philipp told the press, We are aware of some people
in groups who are aiming at destabilising the situation in the
Presevo valley, but as yet KFOR has made no real effort
to close the border to KLA forces.
Sources within the UN and the US armed forces have clearly
identified the aim of the KLA's campaign in southwest Serbia.
A UN official told the press they are hoping that the Serbs
will retaliate with excessive force against civilian populations
and create a wave of outrage and pressure on KFOR to respond."
Lt. Col. James Shufelt commented, "The concern here isn't
that the Serbian police will come across [into the buffer zone],
but that Albanian attacks on the Serb police and army will inspire
a response great enough to cause public clamour for a KFOR response."
Such observations are not remarkably insightful, since this
is exactly the modus operandi the KLA employed prior to NATO's
declaration of war against Serbia. Under conditions of growing
tension between ethnic Albanians and Serbs, stoked by the Serb
nationalist regime of Milosevic in Belgrade as well as Kosovan
Albanian nationalists, the KLA waged a campaign of political assassinations,
bombings and shootings inside Kosovo following the end of the
war in Bosnia in 1995. The KLA's aim was to provoke Belgrade into
intensifying its repression, while convincing the US that it could
be a useful ally in any military attack on Serbia.
The US was eventually won to this position. On January 19,
1999 the Clinton administration demanded that Serbia withdraw
almost all its security forces and grant Kosovo broad autonomy.
The pretext for this, and the war that followed, was provided
by the alleged massacre of 45 ethnic Albanian peasants outside
the village of Racak on January 15. The Serbian government claimed
that either the KLA carried out the killings itself to provide
a pretext for US and NATO intervention, or took casualties from
a previous fire fight between KLA and Yugoslav forces, dressed
them in civilian clothes and fired single shots into the heads
of each corpse to simulate a mass execution. To this day the truth
about the events in Racak remains a matter of dispute.
At the time, Belgrade's version of events was dismissed out
of hand by the NATO powers, and Serbia was ascribed sole responsibility
for the deteriorating situation in Kosovo. America's previous
description of the KLA as a terrorist organisation
was abandoned in favour of depicting them as heroic freedom
fighters, which the West was obliged to aid in the struggle
against Serbian tyranny. Today, the Western powers cannot deny
a similar scenario of provocation by the KLA in Mitrovica and
southwestern Serbia.
See Also:
NATO troops clash with Kosovan
Serbs and Albanian protesters in Mitrovica
[24 February 2000]
The Balkans
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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