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FEROCITY OF CLASHES STUNS ALL
By Jeta Xharra and Alex Anderson in Pristina, Caglavica, Merdare
and Obilic
March 18, 2004 (IWPR News) The scale, viciousness and timing
of the violence has taken many by surprise. As the KFOR APC drove
quickly through the centre of Pristina on the night of March 17,
pushing along a rubbish container placed in the middle of the street
to obstruct its progress, an angry protester shouted, Stop
if you dare.
But the APC moved on regardless, as did other vehicles of the Kosovo
Police Service passing by the crowd.
The smell of petrol and singed metal came from four UN cars, burning
near the building of the National Library. The flames eventually
caused several explosions, which echoed around Pristina at around
midnight.
While the police had sealed off UN headquarters in the city, they
more or less abandoned the rest of Pristina to mobs of angry young
men who were hanging around looking for trouble.
This sight and smell of anarchy in the capital was illustrative
of what was going on in the whole of Kosovo. The violence that was
unleashed had a cathartic, bacchanalian feel about it, the extent
of which nobody would have predicted even a day before. It spread
like a contagious epidemic of madness to almost every town.
The pure irrationality of it all, overcoming all logic and reason,
created the feeling that Kosovo was descending - if only for a day
- into civil war.
?NATO?s largest deployment in the world,? as Colonel Horst Piper
of KFOR put it. Now 17,000 strong, the alliance forces were busy
protecting themselves, as well as the embattled Serbian enclaves
in central and southern Kosovo.
The same NATO troops who were welcomed with flowers five years ago
have been reeling from the attacks of angry Albanian men who ignored
calls from local leaders to go home.
The sudden arrival of spring and the first good weather had allowed
several different strands of tension in Kosovo to coalesce to explosive
effect, among them a growing sense of humiliation at the hands of
both the Serbs and the internationals.
Demonstrations the previous day in Pristina, Prizren and other locations
included many people aggrieved at the internationals? treatment
of the former Kosovo Liberation Army, KLA, fighters and the imprisonment
of former commanders of the rebel force. That had already produced
such newspaper headlines in Epoka e Re as, 'UNMIK watch yourself,
there's gunpowder for you too.'
On March 17, the Democratic League of Kosovo, LDK, demonstrated
in Pristina after a grenade attack on the house of Kosovo?s president
and LDK leader Ibrahim Rugova. Trade union protests about privatisation
we re planned for later this week.
A highly emotive media report about the drowning of three children
in the divided town of Mitrovica, allegedly caused by Serbs, provided
the spark that ignited this latest upsurge in violence.
The initial trouble started on March 16 in Caglavica, five kilometres
south of Pristina, where Serb villagers blockaded the highway from
the Kosovo capital to Skopje in protest against a drive-by shooting
of a local Serb, attacking Albanian-owned and KFOR vehicles and
hurting several Albanians.
As news of ethnic violence in Mitrovica spread, by early afternoon
on March 17 Albanians were pouring out of Pristina to attack the
Caglavica Serbs as UN police struggled to contain the situation
and KFOR remained in the background. A UN police officer at the
scene said, "What can KFOR do? Only shoot people!"
An anti-UN mood rapidly built up in Pristina itself and the surrounding
area. Driving in what looked like a UN car towards Caglavica we
passed a group of children, one of whom shouted in English, "Fuck
you".
By late afternoon on March 17, UN police were struggling to contain
the Albanian crowds trying to break into Caglavica. As nearby houses
burned, police doused the mob with a water cannon and launched stun
grenades. KFOR shot dead an Albanian who tried to ram his truck
into their lines.
A crowd of up to 5000 students - many from the countryside and more
militant than their city-born counterparts - descended on the UN
headquarters, chanting ?KLA, KLA?, before marching toward Caglavica.
As night fell, they torched police cars and a UN bus on the highway
. A kilometre short of Caglavica, the police, exhausted from battling
for 12 hours in riot gear, withdrew and called for backup.
But help was not forthcoming. With police stretched to the limit
all over Kosovo there were no men to spare . As they and accompanying
KFOR withdrew towards a Swedish army base , more explosions and
gunfire could be heard in Caglavica.
American KFOR reinforcements then arrived from the south, but the
violence in Caglavia continued unabated until late in the evening,
when a Swedish APC was set on fire.
While chaos enveloped Caglavica, there was total confusion on the
road north of Pristina towards Serbia, with protesters blocking
the traffic in and around Podujevo, close to the Kosovo-Serbia border.
The violence, which had earlier seemed like random protests organised
by Albanians angered over the death by drowning of three boys in
the Ibar river in Mitrovica, looked like orchestrated attacks by
extremist groups by evening.
Derek Chappell, UN spokesperson, told IWPR on March 18 that the
synchronised nature of the attacks against Kosovo Serb houses and
churches, as well as against KFOR soldiers and local police in almost
every single town, suggested the attacks had been planned.
?We don?t know who is doing this and what organisations, but we
know that subversive extremists groups from both sides could benefit
from this situation and we fear that since there is a clear target
in each town one of these groups is orchestrating them,? Chappell
said.
On the morning of March 18 in Obilic, a town 10 km north-west of
Pristina, it was clear that the target of these groups of thuggish
and threatening-looking men were local Serbs.
Several Serbian houses were on fire, with crowds of people looting
and ransacking them. The local Serbs had been moved to the police
station under the protection of 40 KFOR soldiers and UN police officers.
The international security presence here was insufficient to protect
the Serbian homes. The local police made two arrests and saved one
Serb who was trapped in his burning house.
Ismet Hashani, the Albanian mayor of Obilic, said he was helpless
to stop the looting. "I went to talk to the crowd and tell
them to refrain from violence and go back to their homes but they
just swore at me," he said.
Kosovo?s Albanian leadership has largely shrunk from tackling the
challenge. President Rugova and assembly chairman Nexhat Daci delivered
calls for calm to little avail.
A far more vigorous reaction came from Xhavit Haliti, one of the
KLA?s founders and a member of the Democratic Party of Kosova, PDK,
who praised the good that the UN has done and accused Kosovo's politicians
of taking cheap shots with their ritual anti-UN declarations.
An anti-UN backlash has long been feared in Kosovo. But most expected
the real trouble to come later this year, or in 2005, if the status
of the territory was not settled in way that satisfied the Albanian
majority. Its frenzied arrival over the last couple of days came
as a shock and almost everyone has been taken by surprise by its
ferocity.
Jeta Xharra is IWPR project manager in Pristina and Alex Anderson
works for an international NGO in Kosovo.
From: http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/bcr3/bcr3_200403_486_3_eng.txt
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