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LET
US STOP THE WAR IN MACEDONIA!
APPEAL TO THE INTERNATIONAL PUBLIC
This is an appeal to the peaceful women and men in the world, to all the activists
for peace and human rights, to the democratic public of the entire world, and
particularly to the public of the world powers; ultimately, we appeal to all
the powerful world figures, to those who make decisions about the fate of humanity.
The war in Macedonia has escalated to the utmost. It is not only the soldiers,
but also the civilian population who are being killed. There are plausible reasons
to fear the worst.
Helplessness is the main feature of those who are striving for the restoration
of peace in the only country among the successors of the former Yugoslavia that
was spared from war and destruction at the end of last century. Helplessness
is the underlying feeling in the daily lives of the Macedonian population, regardless
of their ethnic denomination. Unlike them, belligerent minorities have come
to claim their own: the outrageous violence of illegal armed Albanian formations
is countered by Macedonian chauvinists retaliation and crime. As a rule,
the victims of retaliation are innocent civilians.
Those who have been following our activities know that Women in Black intermittently
and publicly condemned the repression and crimes committed by the regime of
Slobodan Milosevic, especially the terror against the Albanian population in
Kosovo. We also publicly supported the Albanians non-violent struggle
for the respect of individual and collective rights of the majority population
in Kosovo, who had been exposed to discrimination and apartheid for years. Having
ignored that persistent struggle for years, the international community intervened
only after the spiral of violence had begun spinning, culminating in double
genocide, first against the Albanian majority, and afterwards against non-Albanian
minorities.
There are numerous indications that the international community is, practically,
repeating the same mistakes in the case of Macedonia. We wonder why nobody would
even think of stopping the Albanian terrorists in Macedonia and exerting their
influence in order to reach a compromising solution to the controversial issues
in the Macedonian state. How many more victims will there be before some more
efficient measures are undertaken?
In whose interest is it to see a Macedonian replica of the bloodstained scenarios
from Bosnia and Kosovo? Is the democratic international public able to force
the governments of the major powers to start behaving in accordance with the
principles of humanity?
We hope that our appeal will be heard by those who care about peace and essential
humanity.
In Belgrade, 11th
August 2001
WOMEN IN BLACK AGAINST WAR
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