TO GUIDO.
You know what..........!!!!!
Maja has split personallities as wel. She still thinks after 34 years my sister and i are still one person.OH my my god are we a siamese twin?NO.
Shes just brainless. Never heard of paper either.Thinks everything is done by computers.....
Jee Karadic is a WAR CRIMINAL ALSO NOT ARRESTED YET!!!! PITTY!!!
Quido.... I would almost ask(NOTE) Almost one of your guns to go get him myself, but then againI will never be able to clean myself.Only looking Karadic in the face with his pubic hair haircut makes me throw up.
Really that Maja child is stuped, probably lying about her age too.A 22 year old studying to be a lawyer would have understood this concept long ago.
She also does not recognize the writing from my sister Zoja from mine.....Strange as Zoja's english is much, much, much better.
Good work you doing Btw quido digging up the dirt.
Emina
Guido, you'll have to do better than to call
upon "Kosovapress" with their fantasy stories.
Get this one:
http://www.jbs.org/tna/1999/05-10-99/why_kosovo.htm
Why Kosovo?
by William Norman Grigg
It was a spectacle at once pathetic and horrifying: Hundreds of
thousands — perhaps a
half-million or more — terrified civilians driven from a land their
people had lived in for
centuries. Those not fortunate enough to flee fell prey to the
depredations of merciless
paramilitary death squads, who committed hideous acts of plunder,
rape, and mass
murder. Thousands of civilians perished, and the human tidal wave
generated by this
triumph of "ethnic cleansing" was described by some observers as the
largest human
population displacement Europe had seen since World War II.
Are these snapshots of Kosovo, April 1999? No — these are scenes
from Krajina,
August 1995. The victims were not ethnic Albanians driven from
Kosovo by the security
forces of Serbian dictator Slobodan Milosevic, but rather ethnic
Serbs driven from
Croatia by troops under the command of Croatian dictator Franjo
Tudjman. Although no
decent person can help but be moved by the plight of Kosovo’s
Albanians, their suffering
is not unique. As will be illustrated below, that suffering is a
product — perhaps a
premeditated one — of decisions taken by the same foreign policy
elite that now
describes the forced exodus from Kosovo as a humanitarian disaster
of global
proportions. That same elite was behind the slaughter and forced
exodus of the Krajina
Serbs.
Reward for “Peace”
No threats of military retaliation were issued by the Clinton
Administration and NATO
following Croatia’s rout of the Krajina Serbs. In fact, the massacre
could not have
occurred without timely and generous assistance from the Clinton
Administration.
According to Croatian diplomat Stipe Mesic, the Croatian assault on
Krajina was
Tudjman’s reward "for having accepted, under Washington’s pressure,
the federation
between Croats and Muslims in Bosnia" that was written into the
Dayton "peace"
accords. Croatian assembly deputy Mate Mestrovic explained that the
Clinton
Administration "gave us the green light to do whatever had to be
done." The invasion
plan, code-named "Operation Storm," received specific prior approval
from Peter
Galbraith, the U.S. ambassador to Croatia.
Additionally, the Croatian military campaign received tactical
support from NATO. As
Croat forces began their attack, U.S. aircraft under NATO command
destroyed Serbian
radar and anti-aircraft defenses in the region. American EA-6B
electronic warfare
aircraft patrolled the skies in support of the unfolding offensive,
jamming
communications between Serb units. But there was also a covert
American presence on
the ground in support of the Croats. Military Professional Resources
Incorporated
(MPRI), a private military and intelligence consulting firm based in
Virginia, had been
hired by Tudjman in early 1995 to upgrade his Soviet-created
Ministry of Defense into a
modern fighting force. According to MPRI information officer Joseph
Allred, the firm
exists so that "the U.S. can have influence as part of its national
strategy on other nations
without employing its own
army."
Thanks in large measure to training it received from MPRI, the
"ex"-Communist Croatian military, which had previously been
dismissed as bumbling and inept, performed its grisly mission in
Krajina with unexpected efficiency and professionalism. By
focusing primarily on civilian targets, the Croats minimized their
casualties: Croatia admitted to suffering only 118 dead or
wounded, as compared to an estimated 14,000 civilian casualties
among the Serbs. An AP dispatch filed during the offensive
reported that Croat forces shelled and strafed columns of Serb
refugees.
Canadian General Alain Forand, who was assigned to UN "peacekeeping"
duty in Krajina during Operation Storm, has testified,
"There is no doubt in my mind that the Croats knew they were
shelling civilian targets" in the city of Knin, which was where the
Krajina Serb parliament was located. Colonel Andrew Leslie, another
Canadian "peacekeeper," estimated that of the more than
3,000 shells fired at the city, no more than 250 hit military
targets; accordingly, he concluded, "the fire was deliberately
directed
against civilian buildings." Leslie has also described seeing bodies
of the dead at Knin Hospital "stacked in the corridors … in
piles."
Milwaukee attorney Nikola Kostich, who has served as counsel for
Bosnian Serbs at the UN’s war crimes tribunal for
Yugoslavia, told The New American in late 1997 about his visit to a
mass grave in Mrkonjic Grad, a small town in southwestern
Bosnia near Krajina where Croats and Bosnian Muslims liquidated Serb
civilians during the period of Operation Storm. "I was
present when the site was exhumed," Kostich recalled. "The bodies
were not those of military personnel. They were civilians,
including people as much as 80 years old."
“Highway of Hell”
As is the case with Kosovo’s ethnic Albanians, the Krajina Serbs
were secessionists seeking to create an independent polity in
what they considered an ancestral ethnic homeland.
However, just prior to the beginning of the Croat offensive on
August 4,
1995, the leaders of the Krajina Serbs, fearing the consequences to
continued resistance, were willing "to discuss terms for
reintegrating territory they hold into Croatia’s domain," reported
the AP.
This contrasts sharply with the position of the so-called
Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), the Maoist insurrectionary group that
seeks to wrest Kosovo from Serbia and integrate it into a
"Greater Albania" which would include parts of Montenegro,
Macedonia, and Greece.
In the months leading up to the beginning of the Kosovo War on March
24th, the KLA escalated its guerilla campaign, while
urging NATO to bomb the Serbs — even if this meant that hundreds of
thousands of ethnic Albanians would perish or be driven
from their homes once the war began in earnest. According to a
diplomatic insider quoted by the April 1st Chicago Tribune,
when KLA officials were warned that NATO air strikes against
Yugoslavia would trigger retaliatory violence by Serb forces in
Kosovo, one KLA leader replied: "We don’t care. 400,000 Kosovars can
be sacrificed for our independence." ! ! !
[...]
http://www.jbs.org/tna/1999/05-10-99/why_kosovo.htm
Refugees Besides
Kosovars Ignored
Friday May 21, 1999 12:10 pm
WASHINGTON (AP) - While the world has
focused on the abuses suffered by Kosovo
Albanians, it has barely cast a glance at
the millions elsewhere driven from their
homes.
Consider the global silence that has
accompanied the displacement of 780,000
Angolans since the start of the year,
virtually all victims of a conflict largely
fought, like Kosovo, along ethnic lines.
"I don't see anybody at the moment who
is willing to do anything about them,"
says James Woods, a longtime Africa
watcher and former Pentagon official.
Woods says African crises are
political-military problems that have
created immense humanitarian suffering,
but solving them would require high-risk
intervention that neither the United States
nor Europe is willing to undertake.
As refugees go, the Kosovo Albanians for
the most part are an elite group. The
international community has rushed to
their defense with offers of food, shelter
and a promise of repatriation. Beyond
that, NATO has punished Serbia for its
abuses with eight weeks of air strikes.
There is no international constituency for
displaced Angolans or for many of the 50
million or so other people worldwide whom
the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees
says have been forced from their homes in
recent years. Countless people have
known brutality and the pain of losing
everything, family members included.
In Angola, the number of displaced people
has averaged about 6,500 a day since
Jan. 1, most of them victims of attacks on
cities and towns by a rebel group that
once received U.S. backing. Others are
victims of attacks by government forces.
Among African countries, Angola is hardly
alone with refugees and so-called
internally displaced persons. The
continent, according to the private U.S.
Committee for Refugees, had 2.7 million
refugees at the end of 1998 and 8.7
million displaced people. Most are from
long standing conflicts.
Sudan is the world leader in this category
with an estimated 4 million. Another
350,000 have fled the country. Worldwide,
Afghanistan ranks first in producing
refugees, with 2.6 million as of 1998.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, who
was born in Ghana, has lamented the lack
of political will from the international
community in assisting refugees,
especially in his homeland, even as he
has put Africa high on the U.N. agenda.
"I have made peace and progress in Africa
a priority of my tenure as
secretary-general not only because I am
an African but because I believe that the
United Nations cannot rest until all of
Africa is at peace," Annan said earlier this
month in Washington in a
commencement address at Howard
University.
On Thursday, Annan's attention was back
on Kosovo when he visited a refugee
camp on the edge of Kukes, Albania. "We
are all doing our best to get them home
before the winter," he proclaimed. "I hope
we succeed."
James Bishop, a former ambassador to
Liberia, laments that the Congress has
been willing to appropriate billions for
humanitarian relief and military outlays for
Kosovo but has been reluctant to allocate
$10 million for relief in Sierra Leone,
another African country stricken by war
and human misery.
Bishop, of the umbrella group for private
humanitarian groups, InterAction, says
attention to the Africa crises is more
muted because the media coverage has
been far less compared with Kosovo.
Peter Takirambudde, of the New
York-based Human Rights Watch, says
that since the end of the Cold War, the
strategic importance of Africa to the West
has diminished sharply.
He also says the West has been
encouraging African solutions to African
problems, an approach that, he contends,
allows the international community to
relinquish its responsibility for addressing
in a fashion similar to Kosovo the
problems of Africa.
The West knows there is no African
equivalent of NATO so the notion of
made-in-Africa solutions "may sound
noble but it's a copout," Takirambudde
says.
http://www.newsunlimited.co.uk/Breaking_News/International/0,3561,273382,00.html
DIRTY SERBIAN TACTICS...ALBANIANS USED (IN USE) AS A HUMAN SHIELDS AGAINST NATO-ATTACKS BY SERB BARBARIAN TERRORIST ARMY!
NATO'S DEMANDS
This operation seeks to:
Stop the Serb offensive in Kosovo
Force a withdrawal of Serb troops from Kosovo
To allow democratic self-government in Kosovo
To allow a NATO-led international peacekeeping force into Kosovo
Allow the safe and peaceful return of Kosovar Albanian refugees
NATO HQ
Press Release (1999)079
15 May 1999
Statement by the NATO Spokesman on the Korisa Incident
Following Serb claims about a NATO attack on the village of Korisa in Kosovo, NATO has conducted an extensive review throughout the night of its operations in that area.
This was a legitimate military target.
The Serb claims of an attack involving cluster bombs against a non-military target are both false.
NATO identified Korisa as a military camp and command post. Military equipment including an armoured personnel carrier and more than ten pieces of artillery were observed at this location. The aircraft observed dug-in military positions at the target before executing the attack.
NATO cannot confirm the casualty figures given by the Serbian authorities, nor the reasons why civilians were at this location at the time of the attack.
NATO deeply regrets accidental civilian casualties that were caused by this attack.
Allied Force
DAMNIELA,
LOOK AT THE EVIDENCE OF "CHEAP SERBIAN PROPAGANDA WICH DOES COST MANY ALBANIAN LIVES
FACTS IN THEIR OWN PICTURES...."
http://www.kosova.nu/
Quote of the century
Be aware of Serb lies, fabrications and war propaganda !
"Lying is a form of our patriotism and is evidence of our innate intelligence. We lie in a creative, imaginative, and inventive way." - Dobrica COSIC - former president of self styled Yougoslavia by Kosova-Info
Friday, May 21, 1999
Albright: Serb Forces Will Collapse
By BARRY SCHWEID, AP Diplomatic Writer
WASHINGTON--Disputing reports of divisions within NATO, U.S. and British officials today insisted the alliance would not compromise over Kosovo and predicted that Serb forces will collapse.
British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook, speaking to reporters at the British ambassador's residence this morning, described Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic as "taken aback" and "depressed" at NATO's ability to hold together and keep up the bombing campaign for more than eight weeks.
"We are well-coordinated," Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said today on ABC's "Good Morning America." "We are very supportive, all of us, of an intensified bombing campaign in which we will prevail. And the goal here is to get the refugees back, and we are all united on that."
Cook insisted there is "no crack in the alliance," over the touchy issue of when NATO ground forces should be assembled in the Balkans and whether they would begin returning ethnic Albanian refugees to Kosovo without first gaining Milosevic's consent. Britain and the United States differ on this, though not on the objective of getting the refugees back in Kosovo under the protection of an international force.
Cook said London believes that if Milosevic continues to resist NATO's demands, his forces in Kosovo will become so diminished by allied bombing that they could not mount an organized defense against a NATO ground force. In an earlier appearance with Albright on ABC, Cook said that time is nearing.
"I don't see any sign that the Yugoslav army at the present rate of attrition is going to hold out until August or September," Cook said.
Italy and Greece are lobbying for a pause in NATO's bombardment of Yugoslavia, while Germany is threatening to veto any ground force being sent into the conflict. Britain, on the other hand, has urged the allies to consider a ground attack against the Serbs.
The United States has not explicitly ruled out the option.
Evidently anxious that these diverse and ambiguous views of the tactics NATO might adopt could encourage Milosevic to keep fighting, Albright and Cook appeared together on CNN's "Larry King Live" program Thursday night to affirm not only their unity but that of the entire alliance.
Army Gen. Wesley Clark, the top NATO commander, spent much of the day at the Pentagon briefing Defense Secretary William Cohen and the military service chiefs. Cohen's spokesman, Kenneth Bacon, said Clark's main message was, "We are making significant progress."
But the NATO commander also was here to "sensitize people" to the time constraints for employing various options, including any use of ground forces, Bacon said.
Clark's point, Bacon said, was to ensure that options aren't foreclosed by failing to move ahead now on planning the role ground troops might play if Milosevic remains defiant through the summer.
On the diplomatic front, another round of talks between Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott and Russia's Balkans mediator, Viktor S. Chernomyrdin, failed to bring Russia in line with the U.S. and NATO demands.
But Albright said the gaps were narrowing, and Cook said Milosevic in the process was losing the support from Russia he had counted on.
Albright told a Senate subcommittee the allies also were discussing whether some of the 40,000 Serb troops in Kosovo would be allowed to remain "somewhere around some of their holy sites" as part of an agreement to end the conflict, now in its ninth week.
Orthodox religious and Serb cultural sites are in northern Kosovo.
The terms initially proposed by the United States, Russia, Britain, France, Italy and Canada would have permitted 2,500 Serb troops to stay, and another 2,500 for one year, as a show of continued Serb sovereignty in the province and to guard its borders.
But with ethnic havoc in Kosovo, most of which the Clinton administration blames on Serb forces, the permitted Serb force has been scaled down.
Albright insisted, meanwhile, that an international peacekeeping force must have NATO at its core or the refugees will not go back. The projected force would have up to 50,000 troops, including 7,000 Americans.
"The refugees will not go back if the Serb forces are there and if there are not Americans in an international force," Albright said. Also, she said, "Americans have to be part of a NATO command structure."
Cook discussed the conflict with members of the House International Relations Committee and met later with Albright for more than an hour.
Asked on television why there were persistent reports of disagreement on whether to consider using ground troops in the conflict, Cook said "papers have to write something."
President Clinton, meanwhile, insisted that the nearly 2 -month-old bombing campaign was working and that NATO would not back away from its demands for the return of ethnic Albanians to Kosovo under allied protection.
"The refugees must go home with security and self-government," he said at the White House. "Serbian forces must leave Kosovo, an international security force with NATO at its core must deploy to protect people of every ethnicity and faith in Kosovo. On this, our country is speaking with a single voice."
The Senate, meanwhile, passed on a 64 -36 vote a compromise $15 billion emergency spending measure that includes $12 billion to cover U.S. costs of the bombing campaign and humanitarian aid. Clinton said he would sign the bill, despite extraneous amendments. The measure previously passed the House.
MORE PROTESTS AND DESERTIONS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Hey, you Slob Milo honeys!!
Look at this. Freedom of speech in your beloved country!
CACAK CITIZENS CALL ON MILOSEVIC TO END THE WAR. The
self-proclaimed Citizens' Parliament of Cacak on 20 May
urged Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic to "stop the
war immediately," the Serbian news agency Beta reported.
The parliament, formed by 20 prominent citizens of the
town on 18 May, said in a letter to the president that
"at this moment, you are deciding the fate of all people
of Yugoslavia." It asked him to end the "terrible
suffering of all the people...whom you lead." NATO
spokesman Jamie Shea said the setting up of the
parliament is evidence of "an expanding mood of war
weariness." Anti-government protests have also taken
place in the nearby towns of Krusevac and Alexandrovac.
The Yugoslav Foreign Ministry, meanwhile, has denied
reports that more than 1,000 troops deserted after
hearing of the protests in the towns.
Slob Milo the great (sorry Guido) doesn't even have the courtesy of saying it was a'mistake'. He only denies.
To all the Majas, Niques, Sergeys, Danielas, and so on, and so forth.
Underneath you will find another perfect example of how your beloved Yugoslav democracy is treating its people. Will Slovenia be next..... Run, Maja, run!!
DJUKANOVIC SAYS BELGRADE PLANNING COUP. Montenegrin
President Milo Djukanovic said on 20 May in Podgorica
that Belgrade is planning a military coup against his
government, Reuters reported. Djukanovic said Yugoslav
soldiers have set up checkpoints on all main roads
leading into Montenegro. They also have halted aid
convoys and prevented raw materials from being imported.
Djukanovic said Belgrade wants to install the army as a
dictatorial power in Montenegro. He said his government
will refrain from opposing the army. The Second Yugoslav
Army has some 25,000 troops stationed in Montenegro,
while the government claims to have some 12,000 armed
police ready to prevent an armed coup.
Serbian troops are decapitating, baby killing, village burning, human shield using, identification document stealing, nose cutting off, propagandizing, emasculating, uneducated(2 planes do not equal 200), ethnic cleansing, brainwashed, wedding ring and gold tooth stealing, megalomaniacal, child raping, genocidal, fascists (these are their good qualities). Anyone defending the Serbs (LIKE DDC) are also guilty of these crimes by association. America will crush the lying NAZI Serbs under the heel of NATO justice.
By
The little girl she said to me
What are these things that I can see
Each night when I come home from school
When mama calls me in for tea
On every night a baby dies
And every night a mama cries
What makes those men do what they do
To make that person black and blue
Grandpa says they're happy now
They sit with God in paradise
With angels wings and still somehow
It makes me feel
Like ice
Tell me there's a heaven
Tell me that it's true
Tell me there's a reason
Why I'm seeing what I do
Tell me there's a Heaven
Where all those people go
Tell me that they're happy now
Papa tell me that it's so
So do I tell her that it's true
That there's a place for me and you
Where hungry children smile and say
We wouldn't have no other way
That every painful crack of bone
Is a step along the way
That every wrong done is a game plan
To that great and joyful day
And I'm looking at the father and the son
And I'm looking at the mother and the daughter
And I'm watching them in tears of pain
And I'm watching them suffer
Don't tell that little girl
Tell me
Tell me there's a heaven
Tell me that it's true
Tell me there's a reason
Why I'm seeing what I do
Tell me there's a Heaven
Where all those people go
Tell me that they're happy now
Papa tell me that it's so
Chris Rea
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/inatl/longterm/balkans/stories/korisa052199.htm
NATO Won't Release Korisa Evidence
By Steven Pearlstein
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, May 21, 1999; Page A26
BRUSSELS, May 20 – When
NATO precision-guided bombs
killed scores of ethnic Albanians in
the Kosovo town of Korisa,
alliance spokesmen blamed the
deaths on Yugoslav authorities,
claiming they had used the refugees
as "human shields" by forcing them
to spend the night next to a military command post and artillery bunker.
But a week after the embarrassing mishap, NATO's military command
announced today that it will not release surveillance photographs and
summaries of intercepted radio transmissions to back up its claim that the
site was a "legitimate military target."
"Everything that's going to be released on that has been released," said
Capt. Steven Warren, a spokesman for Gen. Wesley K. Clark, NATO's
military commander.
The Yugoslav government said 87 refugees were killed, making the attack
the deadliest NATO assault of the war in civilian casualties. The victims
were part of a group of several hundred refugees who had been hiding in
the Kosovo hills for 10 days.
After the bombing, several members of the group said they had been
directed by Serbian police to spend the night at an agricultural
cooperative. Contrary to the assertion of military spokesmen here and at
the Pentagon, however, the refugees said they saw no signs that the
compound was being used as a local military or police command center.
Nor did they report seeing any of the artillery pieces that NATO claimed
were destroyed in the attack.
A Washington Post reporter who visited the scene and talked to survivors
a day after the attack also reported seeing no evidence of a recent military
presence or bombed military equipment.
NATO spokesmen have suggested Yugoslav authorities removed military
equipment from the scene before Western reporters arrived.
© Copyright 1999 The Washington Post Company
Kosovo press being a news source, yeah right. Do they give news with drugs are do journalists have to pay those?
Anyway, I have come up with a great solution to this war, but seems like Albright ( who of course was always right before ) has better ideas.
Maja, you got ICQ ?
Yes Nick, I do. You can e-mail me and we can exchange numbers, okay?
By Maja on Thursday, May 20, 1999 - 10:19 pm:
KOSOVO "FREEDOM FIGHTERS" FINANCED BY ORGANISED CRIME
**** Did not see the need to put the whole artical there.As it stands above. Just a comment.
Maja once said if you want independence fight for it.WEll with the money of a these sympathing people They(UCK) can do that excately.
Emina.