emg home
Green groups sue Commission over withheld biofuels documents. FYROM: Gasoline, diesel prices upped FYROM:Ohrid hosts annual conference of European customs administrations Man dead in Skopje armed incident Russia: All four parliamentary parties win seats in regional legislatures. Russia, Bulgaria creating design company for South Stream Greece: Rises in broad consumption goods and fuel Serbian Hypo bank is stable NBS:Money in Greek banks is safe Serbian bank to become development bank Ivan Milutinovic (PIM) on sale NBS foreign exchange reserves declined Attack on Serb near Gnjilan Great potential for Serbian products at German market Serbian PM continues his visit to Kuwait Signing of bilateral protocol with Japan “Ready for challenges of the future” Agreement on reconstruction of Gazela bridge signed Dacic to visit Great Britain Parliament Speaker Djukic-Dejanovic in Istanbul
RSS

News Archive

Serbian police detain 9 over alleged war crimes

14. March 2010. | 08:30

Source: AP

Serbian police have detained nine former paramilitary fighters suspected of killing civilians and looting homes during the Kosovo war, a war crimes prosecutor said yesterday.

Serbian police have detained nine former paramilitary fighters suspected of killing civilians and looting homes during the Kosovo war, a war crimes prosecutor said yesterday.

The group were detained on Friday, prosecutor Bruno Vekaric told The Associated Press. Vekaric said the nine are accused of killing 41 ethnic Albanian civilians in the village of Cuska in May 1999.

Vekaric said that in total 26 people are under investigation for the massacres of 200 people in Cuska and the surrounding villages, which took place during the Nato air war against Serbia.

“Horrific crimes were committed there,” Vekaric said. “The only motive was looting.”

Natasa Kandic, a prominent human rights activist who has investigated war crimes in Kosovo, said the attack on Cuska was a “well-planned, organized action.”

She said the Serb troops raided the village, separated men from the women and children and looted them before rounding them up in a house which was then set on fire.

“Two men managed to jump out of the house and run away,” Kandic said. “I later saw the remains of that house and the bones of the victims.”

Kandic added that the crime in Cuska “illustrates the liberty to kill that was widespread then.”

Vekaric said that many of the suspects live outside Serbia but have been located and will be arrested.

Thousands of people, many of them civilians, were killed during the 1998-99 war.

The arrests in Serbia are a sign of the pro-Western government’s resolve to deal with the war crimes of the Balkan wars as it seeks European Union membership.

The war in Kosovo ended after Nato bombed Serbia for 78 days in 1999. Kosovo declared independence in 2008

Share:

Del.icio.us
Digg
My Web
Facebook
Newsvine

Enter text:

<<

15. March - 21. March 2010.

>>
MON
15
TUE
16WED
17THU
18FRI
19SAT
20SUN
21