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BELGRADE, March 21 (Xinhuanet) -- No sooner had grief-stricken people attending the funeral of two Albanian boys dispersed than many began wondering the bloody riot, which was unleashed by their deaths and reopened the tinderbox in Balkan, was either an instant eye-for-eye revenge or a premeditated ethnic cleansing. But
who should take the blame?
The funeral was held in the village of Cabar, 40 km
north of Kosovo's capital Pristina, after peace was restored following daysof
rioting, looting and arson. The unrest left 24 people killed, over 850 wounded
and thousands more homeless.
The violence was triggered on Wednesday by the
allegation that three ethnic Albanian boys were chased by Serb youths and
drowned in the Ibar River. Public anger quickly exploded and spilled over to the
ethnically-divided city of Kosovska Mitrovica in a scale which defied any
previous example.
Although, the international peacekeeping forces
temporarily kept a lid on the emotional torrent, the nature of the deadly
turmoil remained shrouded in mystery. People couldn't help questioning: was it
an eye for an eye action just sparked by the drowning tragedy, or a premeditated
ethnic cleansing bent on driving the minority Serbs out? And who should take the
blame?
ORGANIZED ETHNIC CLEANSING
Many Serbia-Montenegro and international officials
believed this rioting was a premeditated genocide in an attempt to sow ethnic
hatred between Kosovo's mostly Muslim Albanians, who long for independence, and
Orthodox Christian Serbs, who want to remainpart of Serbia-Montenegro.
Branko Krga, chief of the General Staff in the
Serbia-Montenegro army, signaled Saturday to the press that the military
intelligence agency had controlled Kosovo extremists' plan about cleansing local
Serbians, but failed to intervene beforehand.
The chief UN administrator for the province Harri
Holkeri and another official of the UN-Interim Administration in northern Kosovo
echoed Krga's views, acknowledging that at first, they mistook this violence for
an instant revenge rioting, but later itturned out to be an organized genocide.
On the same day, the police army of the UN
administration said in a statement the allegation that the Albanian boys were
drowned because they were chased by Serb youths, was completely unfounded.
These views received welcome from Serbia-Montenegro
Defense Minister Boris Tadic, who termed the remarks as "encouraging" since it
marked the first time for the past 14 years the international community
acknowledged the existence of ethnic cleansing targeted at the Serbs.
He expressed that the government would do its utmost
to defuse the crisis through diplomacy and avoid resorting to forces. กก
NATO SHARES BLAME
The NATO-led international peacekeeping forces should
also share the blame for the deadly rioting.
On March 19, Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav
Kostunica said the UN interim administration and the NATO-led Peacekeeping Force
in Kosovo (KFOR) failed in governance and military management.
The 1999 military campaign succeeded in stopping the
genocide against Albanians and replacing the then Yugoslavia with
currentlySerbia and Montenegro.
However, a successful government reshuffle didn't
necessarily replace hostility and hatred with tolerance and coexistence.
Reluctant to adopt active measures to solve the final
future ofKosovo, the international community, NATO in particular, also fared
disastrously with maintaining security in the area.
To make things worse, NATO even turned a blind eye to
the ethnic undercurrents in the UN protectorate. With reprisal killing,looting,
bombing, arson, kidnapping and drug or arms trafficking plaguing the area,
Kosovo became a haven for those harboring extremism and terrorism.
A NATO spokesman warned Friday that Kosovo had been
pushed to the verge of complicated and dangerous situation, reminiscent of that
before the NATO-led bombing campaign began in 1999. And the only difference was
at that time, the ethnic cleansing was targeted at Albanians and this time vice
versa.
HATRED RUNS DEEP
Days of violence not only took life casualties, but
also dealt a deadly blow to the fragile Albanian-Serbian relations.
On the one hand, many Serbs were forced to flee their
hometown with hopes of reconciliation extinguished. On the other hand, hatred
was also deep-rooted in Albanians' hearts.
A 13-year-old Albanian boy once told Xinhua reporters
that he was ready to join the army to fight for the Albanian independence.
"If I got killed, that would make me a martyr; and
many more would rise to fight following my steps."
No matter which side gets the upper hand in this
decades-long feud, innocent people would never emerge unscathed. As long as this
animosity takes hold, Kosovo remains a ticking time bomb for the Balkan as well
as the world. Enditem |