Another great RocketTheme Joomla Template brought to you by the RocketTheme Joomla Template Club.

User

Mirësevini, Vizitor. Ju lutemi të identifikoheni ose regjistrohuni.


Sponsor











Faqe: [1] 2   Shko poshtë
PërgjigjjaDërgojeni këtë temëPrintojeni faqen
Autori Temë: Das Krieg im Kosova/War of Kosova  (E lexuar 38831 herë)
0 anëtarë dhe 2 Vizitore po shikojnë këtë temë.
Gjumashi
« më: 03-11-2004, 03:12:14 »
Citojeni

MASAKRA DRENICA-MARCH98 Liste e te vrareve dhe masakruarve


Edhe Flasin sot te lirë për krimin e bërë vete gjakepiresit

Enkele reis Den Haag Abazi Avdi / Abazi Flamur / Abazi Mark / Abazi Pashk / Abazi Pjeter / Abazovic Hajradin / Abdullahu Flora / Abdullahu Sadik / Abdyli Liman / Ademaj Ajmane / Ademaj Bekim / Ademaj Shemsi / Ademi Adem / Ademi Bislim / Ademi Ejup / Ademi Hamit / Ademi Ibrahim / Ademi Isuf / Ademi Jetulla / Ademi Mazllam / Ademi Xhevat / Adjancic Dusan / Adjancic Pero / Adjancic Zoran / Adzic Tomislav / Agushi Cemalj / Ahmetaj Adem / Ahmetaj Emine / Ahmetaj Ismet / Ahmetaj Jeton / Ahmetaj Liridon / Ahmetaj Ramadan / Ahmetaj Rasim / Ahmetaj Shaban / Ahmetaj Ymer / Ahmeti Afrim / Ahmeti Ahmet / Ahmeti Ahmet / Ahmeti Bajram / Ahmeti Besim / Ahmeti Blerim / Ahmeti Demir / Ahmeti Enver / Ahmeti Enver / Ahmeti Esad / Ahmeti Hamite / Ahmeti Hasan / Ahmeti Hysen / Ahmeti Male / Ahmeti Rexhep / Ahmeti Sadri / Ahmeti Sali / Ahmeti Valbon / Ahmeti Vesel / Ahmetovski Xheladin / Ajdini Ajdin / Ajdini Hajriz / Ajdini Muhamet / Ajdini Naim / Ajdini Shaqir / Ajdini Xhemile / Ajdini Zyle / Ajeti Ahmetali / Ajeti Sherafedin / Ajroni Shkelzen / Aleksandrovic Radomir / Aliaj Adem / Aliaj Agron / Aliaj Ali / Aliaj Arben / Aliaj Hatmane / Aliaj Mehmet / Aliaj Nushe / Aliaj Ruzhdi / Aliaj Sali / Aliaj Zenun / Alibeu Emine / Alibeu Sami / Alickaj Bekim / Alickaj Rame / Alickaj Zija / Alidemaj Muhamet / Alija Ali / Alija Arben / Alija Nasret / Alili Jasmina / Alimehaj Fadil / Alimehaj Fatmir / Alimehaj Hata / Alimehaj Hatmane / Alimehaj Haxhi / Alimehaj Hazir / Alimehaj Leonard / Alimehaj Osman / Alimehaj Rustem / Alimehaj Shaban / Alimehaj Shaban / Aliu Burim / Aliu Fahri / Aliu Ferat / Aliu Gezim / Aliu Ilmi / Aliu Mete / Aliu Rustem / Aliu Shaban / Allaqi Beadin / Andjelkovic Ivan / Andjelkovic Stajko / Andjelkovic Zivojin / Andjelkovic Zoran / Andrejevic Dusko / Antic Cedomir / Antic Marija / Antic Milisav / Antic Radovan / Antic Slobodan / Antic Svetislav / Antic Zlatko / Antonijevic Zoran / Antovic Vojislav / Arifaj Kujtim / Arifaj Mirë / Arifaj Qazim / Arifi Jakup / Aritonovic Miodrag / Arsic Dragan / Arsic Dragoljub / Aruqi Hysen / Aruqi Isuf / Aruqi Jahe / Asani Daka / Asllani Abaz / Asllani Adem / Asllani Fehmi / Asllani Hasim / Asllani Muharem / Asllani Naim / Asllani Nexhat / Asllani Nusret / Asllani Perparim / Asllani Rame / Asllani Sejdi / Asovic Vojin / Atashi Deme / Avdiaj Bali / Avdiaj Musa / Avdiu Besim / Avdiu Halil / Avdiu Osman / Avdo Istref / Avdullahaj Gezim / Avdullahaj Rame / Avdullahu Ymer / Avdyli Afrim / Avdyli Arben / Avdyli Avdyl / Avdyli Bajrush / Avdyli Bali / Avdyli Enver / Avdyli Fadil / Avdyli Hysen / Avdyli Ilaz / Avdyli Mehmet / Avdyli Muhedin / Avdyli Pajazit / Avdyli Vesel / Avramovic Milorad / Axhemi Halil / Aza Syl / Azari Fadilj / Azemi Abedin / Azemi Emrullah / Azemi Faton / Azemi Gani / Azemi Mynir / Azemi Safet / Azemi Shaip / Azemi Tahir / Azemi Xhevat / Bacaj Haki / Badallaj Sylejman / Bademovic Mujo / Bajgora Bekim / Bajgora Hazir / Bajgora Nazmi / Bajraj Shureta / Bajraktari Bajram / Bajraktari Halil / Bajraktari Lavdim / Bajraktari Rame / Bajramaj Rexhep / Bajrami Afrim / Bajrami Ali / Bajrami Bafti / Bajrami Bahri / Bajrami Hysni / Bajrami Lulzim / Bajrami Muharem / Bajrami Muharem / Bajrami Naim / Bajrami Qazim / Bajrami Ramiz / Bajrami Sali / Bajrami Sefer / Bajrami Shaban / Bajrami Shaban / Bajrami Syle / Bajrami Xhafer / Bajrami Xhavit / Bajrami Ymri / Bajrami Zaim / Bajselmani Besart / Bakalli Elez / Bala Ali / Bala Bajram / Bala Luan / Bala Mehmet / Bala Perparim / Balaj Bashkim / Balaj Isa / Balaj Naser / Baleci Gani / Balija Lam / Balija Sof / Baliu Qamil / Baliu Rakip / Baliu Raze / Baljosevic Budimir / Baljosevic Djordje / Baljosevic Sasa / Baljosevic Tomislav / Ballabani Shyqerie / Banzic Spasa / Barac Djuro / Barac Tomislav / Baraliu Jonuz / Baraliu Ylli / Barani Sahit / Bardheci Demush / Bardheci Idriz / Bardhi Burim / Bardhiqi Avdi / Basha Reshat / Basha Shaban / Bashota Bedri / Bashota Shaban / Batusha Ahmet / Batusha Asllan / Batusha Avdi / Batusha Bekim / Batusha Beqir / Batusha Burim / Batusha Emrush / Batusha Enver / Batusha Fehim / Batusha Haki / Batusha Haxhi / Batusha Islam / Batusha Lirim / Batusha Mergim / Batusha Milaim / Batusha Muharem / Batusha Nijazi / Batusha Osman / Batusha Sejdi / Batusha Skifer / Batusha Syle / Batusha Visar / Batusha Zaim / Beca Halit / Begu Fitim / Begu Jashar / Behrami Burim / Behrami Demush / Behrami Rafet / Behrami Sabri / Bejta Burim / Bejtullahu Remzie / Bejtushi Sinan / Beka Bajram / Bekteshi Fatmir / Bekteshi Rexhep / Bekteshi Selver / Bekteshi Xhemail / Bekteshi Xhemile / Beluli Avdyl / Beluli Besim / Beluli Fadil / Beluli Hana / Beluli Huma / Beluli Hysen / Beluli Idriz / Beluli Lulzim / Beluli Mihane / Beluli Muhamet / Beluli Shemsi / Beqa Reshat / Beqa Vedat / Beqaj Armend / Beqaj Bajram / Beqaj Bedri / Beqaj Brahim / Beqaj Dritan / Beqaj Emin / Beqaj Kujtim / Beqaj Mentor / Beqaj Milazim / Beqaj Ramadan / Beqaj Rasim / Beqaj Ruzhdi / Beqaj Tafe / Beqaj Ymer / Beqiraj Albert / Beqiraj Arsim / Beqiraj Muharem / Beqiraj Syle / Beqiraj Tahir / Beqiri Adem / Beqiri Arben / Beqiri Arsim / Beqiri Azem / Beqiri Beqir / Beqiri Halit / Beqiri Hamdi / Beqiri Ilir / Beqiri Kujtim / Beqiri Mahir / Beqiri Petrit / Beqiri Ramiz / Beqiri Ramiz / Beqiri Skender / Beqiri Zahide / Beqrama Ali / Berani Fuat / Berbati Arben / Berbati Ymer / Berbatovci Ismail / Berbatovci Rahim / Berbatovci Sali / Berbatovci Sejdi / Berisa Agnesa / Berisa Baby / Berisa Banus / Berisa Haki / Berisa Maksut / Berisha Afrim / Berisha Afrim / Berisha Agim / Berisha Agim / Berisha Agim / Berisha Agron / Berisha Ahmet / Berisha Ahmet / Berisha Ahmet / Berisha Albert / Berisha Arif / Berisha Asllan / Berisha Avdi / Berisha Avdi / Berisha Avdyl / Berisha Bashkim / Berisha Bedri / Berisha Bedri / Berisha Behxhet / Berisha Bekim / Berisha Besim / Berisha Besim / Berisha Besnik / Berisha Destan / Berisha Fadil / Berisha Faruk / Berisha Femi / Berisha Fidai / Berisha Flamur / Berisha Florim / Berisha Ganimete / Berisha Genc / Berisha Gezim / Berisha Gezim / Berisha Granit / Berisha Halil / Berisha Hamit / Berisha Hazir / Berisha Ilir / Berisha Isma / Berisha Ismet / Berisha Izet / Berisha Jak / Berisha Jonuz / Berisha Kadri / Berisha Kreshnik / Berisha Lavdie / Berisha Lirie / Berisha Mehmet / Berisha Milaim / Berisha Milazim / Berisha Muhamet / Berisha Muharem / Berisha Muje / Berisha Naim / Berisha Nebi / Berisha Qamil / Berisha Ramadan / Berisha Ramadan / Berisha Rexhep / Berisha Rexhep / Berisha Rexhep / Berisha Rifat / Berisha Sadik / Berisha Samir / Berisha Selim / Berisha Selim / Berisha Skender / Berisha Sofe / Berisha Sokol / Berisha Sokol / Berisha Valdet / Berisha Xhafer / Berisha Xhavit / Berisha Zenel / Berisha Zylfie / Berisha Zymer / Berishaj Misin / Berishaj Sali / Berishaj Xhevat / Berjani Selim / Besevic Milan / Bezera Muhamet / Bezeraj Hazir / Bezeraj Jonuz / Biberdzic Dragica / Bibic Izet / Bicurri Esad / Bicurri Ferat / Bicurri Nexhdet / Bilalli Bilall / Bilalli Etem / Bilalli Milaim / Binaj Shefki / Binakaj Lush / Binakaj Musa / Binakaj Neke / Binakaj Sadri / Binakaj Sali / Binakaj Shaqe / Binakaj Zymer / Binaku Avni / Binaku Binak / Binaku Ismail / Binishi Shkelzen / Biovcanin Ljubisav / Bistrica Xhevdet / Blagojevic Sinisa / Blagojevic Srecko / Blagojevic Srecko / Bllaca Ardit / Bobi Bajram / Bobi Beke / Bobi Ismet / Bobi Muharem / Bobi Shpetim / Bogdanovic Krunislav / Bogicevic Dusan / Bogicevic Milic / Bojaj Fadil / Bojaj Mursel / Boletini Fadil / Borinca Hajriz / Borinca Valon / Borojevic Rade / Bozanic Bozidar / Bozanic Mladen / Bozanic Nemanja / Bozanic Novica / Brahimaj Murat / Brahimaj Selim / Brahimaj Xhevdet / Brahimi Cane / Brakus Dusan / Bricori Deli / Brindic Arsenije / Brojaj Gani / Brojaj Mehmet / Brovina Xhelal / Bucaj Afrim / Bucani Valdet / Bucinca Nuhi / Bucinca Shaban / Budimir Rade / Buduri Rexhep / Buha Mirko / Bujupaj Zyrafeta / Bujupi Ajdin / Bujupi Lulzim / Bulatovic Ivan / Bulic Budimir / Buljevic Mile / Bungu Bafti / Bunjaku Agim / Bunjaku Bekim / Bunjaku Bislim / Bunjaku Lutfi / Bunjaku Zejina / Buqa Nebi / Burdjic Miodrag / Burdjic Peda / Burdjic Spasa / Busaku Selmon / Busaku Shaban / Busatovic Ljubica / Bushati Adem / Bushati Bajram / Bushati Jahe / Bushati Smajl / Bushati Uke / Bushi Adem / Bushi Menduh / Buzhala Ndue / Bytyqi Agron / Bytyqi Altion / Bytyqi Bahrie / Bytyqi Bajram / Bytyqi Emrush / Bytyqi Fadil / Bytyqi Fahrie / Bytyqi Fatmir / Bytyqi Gjyzide / Bytyqi Hamdi / Bytyqi Hasan / Bytyqi Hysen / Bytyqi Isak / Bytyqi Isuf / Bytyqi Lavdim / Bytyqi Mehmet / Bytyqi Muhamet / Bytyqi Naser / Bytyqi Osman / Bytyqi Qerim / Bytyqi Rrahman / Bytyqi Shaqir / Bytyqi Shaqir / Bytyqi Shqipe / Bytyqi Ylli / Bytyqi Ymer / Cabarkapa Cedo / Caca Abdullah / Caca Abedin / Cacaj Haxhi / Cacaj Nagip / Cacaj Tafe / Cacaj Zize / Caka Rasim / Cakiqi Shpend / Callakaj Fana / Callakaj Shqipe / Callakaj Xyfe / Canovic Sefket / Carkani Elisa / Carkani Shkelqim / Carri Adem / Caushi Bardhyl / Cecunjanin Bajram / Cecunjanin Razija / Ceku Ibish / Celaj Agim / Celaj Deme / Celaj Luan / Celaj Mehmet / Celic Avdija / Celic Ivan / Celina Feta / Cenaj Din / Cenaj Xyfe / Cernabregu Erduan / Cigani Elmija / Cimili Asllan / Cimili Ilmi / Colaj Bardhec / Colaj Nike / Corovic Muhamed / Crevar Dusan / Cubanovic Djoko / Cufaj Nezir / Cufaj Xhevdet / Cuk Djordje / Cukaj Gezim / Cunaj Mehmet / Cuni Fiqiri / Cuni Muharem / Cuni Sutki / Cupi Nue / Cupic Branko / Curri Istref / Curri Izet / Curri Nuhi / Curri Xhevdet / Cvetkovic Bozidar / Cvetkovic Mirko / Cvijanovic Djordje / Dajci Kudbi / Dajic Radovan / Dakaj Haki / Dallaveraj Sahit / Dallaveri Burim / Dallku Agim / Dallku Bashkim / Dallku Hamdi / Damjani Muharem / Dana Afrim / Dana Agron / Dana Albert / Dana Gezim / Dana Kastriot / Dana Labinot / Dana Luan / Dana Osman / Dancic Milorad / Dasic Dragan / Dautaj Bajram / Dautaj Fidan / Dautaj Hamdi / Dautaj Miftar / Dautaj Murat / Dautaj Osman / Decani Rexhep / Deda Kadri / Deda Nisa / Dedaj Dede / Dedaj Frok / Dedaj Gjon / Dedaj Linton / Dedaj Marjan / Dedaj Mark / Dedaj Martin / Dedaj Mikel / Dedaj Pashk / Dedaj Petrit / Dedaj Pjeter / Dedgjoni Preng / Dedic Boban / Dedic Marjan / Dedic Negovan / Dedinca Shefki / Dedinca Shefqet / Dedushaj Hajrie / Dejanovic Jelena / Dejanovic Milorad / Deliu Adem / Deliu Adem / Deliu Ahmet / Deliu Aziz / Deliu Bekim / Deliu Deli / Deliu Demir / Deliu Etem / Deliu Irena / Deliu Nebi / Deliu Nezir / Deliu Selim / Deliu Shpresa / Deliu Syle / Deliu Vesel / Deliu Xhelil / Dema Neki / Dema Shefkie / Dema Sylejman / Demaj Ali / Demaku Esma / Demaku Haxhe / Demiqi Fehmi / Demiraj Fehmi / Demiri Dritan / Demiri Sadri / Denic Cvetko / Derdallaj Keqe / Derguti Arben / Dermalla Luan / Dervari Hasan / Dervishaj Beqir / Dervishaj Blerim / Dervishaj Brahim / Dervishaj Enver / Dervishaj Esad / Dervishaj Gezim / Dervishaj Ilir / Dervishaj Qemal / Dervishaj Selami / Dervishaj Veprim / Dervishi Bahtir / Dervishi Jonuz / Dervishi Nebi / Deskaj Azem / Deskaj Sadri / Desku Arif / Desku Emin / Deva Gezim / Deverdzic Rados / Devolli Nuredin / Dibrani Dibran / Dibrani Fadil / Dimic Svetomir / Dimitrijevic Dragan / Dimitrijevic Milutin / Dina Fahredin / Dina Fatmir / Dina Flurim / Dina Haki / Dina Hashim / Dina Hysen / Dina Ibrahim / Dina Naim / Dina Sahit / Dina Selajdin / Dina Sokol / Dina Xhemile / Dinaj Asllan / Dinaj Haki / Dinaj Tafe / Djekic Draga / Djekic Srecko / Djinovic Dusko / Djokic Cedomir / Djokic Ivan / Djokic Vladimir / Djordjevic Dragan / Djordjevic Milos / Djordjevic Perica / Djordjevic Ratko / Djoric Djordje / Djosic Zoran / Djukanovic Dragomir / Djukanovic Jovica / Djukic Branko / Djukic Miodrag / Djulderen Maksut / Djuricic Milivoje / Djuricic Nebojsa / Djuricic Vuceta / Dobra Halil / Dobra Liridon / Dobra Selami / Dobra Shkelzen / Dobra Shyqyri / Dobraj Bajram / Dobraj Fazli / Dobraj Ganimete / Dobraj Halit / Dobraj Muhamet / Dobric Milorad / Dobrosavlevic Ljubisa / Dobruna Blerim / Dodaj Shaban / Dogandzic Dragan / Dolasevic Dusko / Domi Bashkim / Domi Vesel / Domi Yllka / Doncic Ilija / Doncic Milena / Doqi Fatmir / Doqi Lum / Dragovic Predrag / Dreshaj Binak / Dreshaj Hatman / Dugolli Naif / Duka Hevrez / Duka Sejfulla / Duraj Lulzim / Duraku Agim / Duraku Ahmet / Duraku Ali / Duraku Berat / Duraku Besim / Duraku Durak / Duraku Gani / Duraku Haki / Duraku Hamze / Duraku Ibish / Duraku Ilaz / Duraku Isak / Duraku Islam / Duraku Ismet / Duraku Isret / Duraku Jakup / Duraku Malush / Duraku Muharem / Duraku Musli / Duraku Nasip / Duraku Ridvan / Duraku Sami / Duraku Shaban / Duraku Tahir / Duraku Xhemail / Duraku Xhemail / Duraku Xhevat / Dushi Abedin / Dushi Jakup / Dushi Masar / Dushi Nazmi / Dushi Shefqet / Dushi Xhevdet / Dushku Qazim / Dusi Bahri / Duzhmani Agron / Duzhmani Frane / Duzhmani Gezim / Duzhmani Gostin / Duzhmani Manuel / Duzhmani Marjan / Duzhmani Mikel / Duzhmani Pale / Duzhmani Pashk / Dvorani Avni / Dvorani Ferat / Dvorani Haki / Dvorani Hazir / Dvorani Hysni / Dvorani Lumni / Dvorani Mehmet / Dvorani Nuhi / Dvorani Nuredin / Dvorani Veli / Dvorani Ymer / Dyla Muhamet / Dylhasi Murtezan / Dylhasi Skender / Dzebo Borislav / Efendiu Agim / Efendiu Artan / Efendiu Samile / Elezi Fadil / Elezi Genc / Elezi Qamil / Elezi Rahim / Elmazi Fehmi / Elmazi Mensur / Elshani Agim / Elshani Arben / Elshani Avdulla / Elshani Besim / Elshani Elmi / Elshani Fahrie / Elshani Faik / Elshani Hysni / Elshani Islam / Elshani Milaim / Elshani Naim / Elshani Nehat / Elshani Osman / Elshani Rahim / Elshani Rame / Elshani Raze / Elshani Rexhep / Elshani Zenel / Emini Emin / Emini Feta / Emini Hazbie / Emini Samedin / Etemi Haki / Etemi Zeqir / Fan Sladjana / Fazli Fatmir / Fazlia Gafur / Fazliaj Male / Fazliaj Shani / Fazliu Artan / Fazliu Fadil / Fazliu Fatmir / Fazliu Muhamet / Fazliu Musli / Fazliu Naser / Fazliu Ramadan / Fazliu Sokol / Fejza Brahim / Fejza Osman / Feka Ekrem / Feka Miradie / Feka Shahin / Feraj Ali / Feraj Binak / Feraj Hysen / Feraj Neshat / Feraj Rame / Feraj Shaban / Ferataj Gani / Ferati Besnik / Ferati Dritan / Ferati Lulzim / Ferati Masar / Ferati Nazmi / Ferati Rrahman / Feratovic Raza / Ferizaj Bashkim / Ferizaj Bylbyl / Ferizaj Halit / Ferizaj Ismet / Ferizaj Perparim / Ferizaj Ramadan / Ferizaj Skender / Ferizaj Valiant / Fetahu Daut / Fetahu Remzi / Fetaj Haxhi / Filjdjokic Milorad / Folic Veljko / Gagovic Rade / Gajtani Hamit / Gallopeni Burim / Gallopeni Nuhi / Gashi Abaz / Gashi Abedin / Gashi Adem / Gashi Adem / Gashi Adonis / Gashi Agim / Gashi Agron / Gashi Agron / Gashi Ali / Gashi Ali / Gashi Anel / Gashi Arber / Gashi Arif / Gashi Artan / Gashi Azem / Gashi Azem / Gashi Bali / Gashi Bekim / Gashi Binak / Gashi Blerta / Gashi Burim / Gashi Din / Gashi Emine / Gashi Emir / Gashi Enver / Gashi Fadil / Gashi Fisnik / Gashi Habibe / Gashi Haki / Gashi Haki / Gashi Haki / Gashi Halil / Gashi Halit / Gashi Hamit / Gashi Hasan / Gashi Hazir / Gashi Hyre / Gashi Ibush / Gashi Ilaz / Gashi Ilmi / Gashi Isa / Gashi Ismet / Gashi Ismet / Gashi Ismet / Gashi Isuf / Gashi Isuf / Gashi Jakup / Gashi Kapllan / Gashi Kujtim / Gashi Luljeta / Gashi Lulzim / Gashi Lumturie / Gashi Malush / Gashi Maxhun / Gashi Mehmet / Gashi Muhamet / Gashi Muharem / Gashi Murat / Gashi Musa / Gashi Musli / Gashi Musli / Gashi Natyra / Gashi Nazmi / Gashi Nehat / Gashi Nekibe / Gashi Nexhat / Gashi Nexhmedin / Gashi Nurie / Gashi Qerim / Gashi Ramadan / Gashi Riza / Gashi Robert / Gashi Safet / Gashi Sahit / Gashi Sami / Gashi Sedat / Gashi Selvete / Gashi Shaban / Gashi Shaban / Gashi Shaqir / Gashi Sheadin / Gashi Shefkinaze / Gashi Sherif / Gashi Shkurte / Gashi Shyqyri / Gashi Shyqyri / Gashi Smajl / Gashi Uke / Gashi Vehbi / Gashi Xhafer / Gashi Xhavit / Gashi Xhemile / Gashi Xhevahir / Gashi Xhevat / Gashi Ymer / Gashi Zenun / Gashi Zhuke / Gashi Zylfie / Gaxheri Brahim / Gaxheri Fadil / Gaxheri Hasan / Gaxheri Xhafer / Geci Mustafe / Geci Sami / Gega Arbnor / Gega Besnik / Gega Xhelal / Gegaj Sokol / Gegollaj Xheme / Genov Stamen / Gerbeshi Balik / Gerbeshi Bejtush / Gerbeshi Faik / Gerbeshi Halime / Gerbeshi Shaip / Gerdovci Veton / Gerguri Mensur / Gervalla Hamza / Gervalla Nuredin / Gexha Arben / Gigolli Besim / Gigolli Qazim / Gjaka Fatime / Gjaka Fatos / Gjaka Musli / Gjeloshi Besnik / Gjergjaj Pashk / Gjeta Besmira / Gjevelekaj Kole / Gjini Age / Gjini Pjeter / Gjinovci Artan / Gjinovci Dinore / Gjinovci Emerlla / Gjinovci Enver / Gjinovci Fadil / Gjinovci Jetulla / Gjinovci Rashit / Gjinovci Rrahman / Gjinovci Xhavit / Gjocaj Agim / Gjocaj Agron / Gjocaj Arben / Gjocaj Deme / Gjocaj Lulzim / Gjocaj Masar / Gjocaj Milaim / Gjocaj Nazmi / Gjocaj Qenan / Gjocaj Selim / Gjocaj Servete / Gjocaj Syle / Gjoka Dila / Gjokaj Ardian / Gjokaj Fehmi / Gjokaj Hysen / Gjokaj Pashke / Gjokaj Tome / Gjoni Bashkim / Gllasoviku Binak / Gllasoviku Haxhi / Glogjani Sabahudin / Gocaj Bibe / Gocaj Gjyle / Gocaj Hazir / Gocaj Sabri / Goci Muhamet / Gogic Djordje / Gojkovic Filip / Gojkovic Radota / Golaj Asllan / Golaj Avdi / Golaj Idriz / Golaj Muse / Golaj Rame / Golaj Rexhe / Golluba Syle / Golubovic Zoran / Gorani Aliriza / Gorani Hazbie / Gorani Shaqir / Gosturanaj Jonuz / Govedari Demlush / Grabanica Shefki / Grabovci Jakup / Gradina Nazmi / Grajqevci Habib / Grajqevci Izet / Grajqevci Nebi / Grajqevci Xhevat / Grkovic Jovan / Grkovic Ljubisa / Grkovic Svetislav / Grujic Branislav / Grujic Milorad / Gucati Halim / Guga Musa / Guri Agron / Guri Arben / Guri Besim / Guri Mahmude / Gutic Izet / Hadergjonaj Afrim / Hadergjonaj Bashkim / Hadergjonaj Muhamet / Hadergjonaj Skender / Hadergjonaj Xhevdet / Hadza Nesad / Hadza Suad / Hajda Bashkim / Hajdaraj Cene / Hajdaraj Fejzulla / Hajdaraj Xhemile / Hajdari Abaz / Hajdari Abedin / Hajdari Bahri / Hajdari Beqir / Hajdari Hajdar / Hajdari Halil / Hajdari Halim / Hajdari Hysni / Hajdari Hysni / Hajdari Mursel / Hajdari Nazim / Hajdari Qamil / Hajdari Rasim / Hajdari Rifat / Hajdari Sahit / Hajdari Selajdin / Hajdari Shani / Hajdari Sheme / Hajdari Shkelzen / Hajdari Vesel / Hajdari Zenun / Hajdarpasic Nexhat / Hajra Qerim / Hajredini Faik / Hajredini Hysni / Hajredini Qamil / Hajrizaj Hasan / Hajrizi Gani / Hajrizi Hajrie / Hajrizi Hyzri / Hajrullahu Fahrush / Hajzeri Hajzer / Hakaj Hazir / Halilaj Ajet / Halilaj Din / Halilaj Naim / Halilaj Vehbi / Halili Hamit / Halili Ilmi / Halili Ramadan / Halimi Tasim / Halimi Zenel / Haliti Ali / Haliti Nuha / Haliti Selman / Hamza Agron / Hamza Ibush / Hamza Jusuf / Hamza Murat / Hamza Shkelzen / Hamzaj Jashar / Hamzaj Ramiz / Hamzaj Selim / Hamzaj Xhavit / Haracia Genc / Haracia Mehdi / Haradinaj Adem / Haradinaj Zeqir / Hasaj Isa / Hasanaj Elson / Hasanaj Gjon / Hasanaj Hamza / Hasanaj Hashim / Hasanaj Isuf / Hasanaj Luan / Hasanaj Miter / Hasanaj Ndue / Hasanaj Shyt / Hasani Aleme / Hasani Armend / Hasani Bekim / Hasani Besim / Hasani Fadil / Hasani Gazmend / Hasani Hamdi / Hasani Haradin / Hasani Hasan / Hasani Hasan / Hasani Haxhi / Hasani Hoxha / Hasani Idriz / Hasani Islam / Hasani Islam / Hasani Muharem / Hasani Ramadan / Hasani Remzi / Hasani Shahin / Hasimi Fehmi / Havolli Bahri / Havolli Gani / Havolli Naim / Havolli Skender / Haxha Mentor / Haxhiaj Isuf / Haxhiaj Sofie / Haxhiaj Tahir / Haxhiaj Ziaudin / Haxhiavdyli Afrim / Haxhiavdyli Agim / Haxhiavdyli Agron / Haxhiavdyli Osman / Haxhibeqiri Bekim / Haxhibeqiri Dukagjin / Haxhibeqiri Edmond / Haxhibeqiri Mediha / Haxhibeqiri Shukri / Haxhidauti Fehmi / Haxhimustafa Fadil / Haxhiu Afrim / Haxhiu Avdi / Haxhiu Din / Haxhiu Florim / Haxhiu Shaqir / Haxhiu Shpand / Haxhiu Tahir / Haziri Afrim / Haziri Nasir / Haziri Xhavit / Hereqi Hyre / Hereqi Sadik / Hereqi Tafil / Hervoviqi Sherif / Heta Aziz / Heta Mehdi / Hetaj Shuhret / Hetaj Valdet / Hoda Hasan / Hodaj Avdi / Hoti Alush / Hoti Avdi / Hoti Avdulla / Hoti Avni / Hoti Azem / Hoti Azem / Hoti Bajram / Hoti Bashkim / Hoti Bekim / Hoti Dritan / Hoti Emrullah / Hoti Enver / Hoti Etem / Hoti Fadil / Hoti Ferat / Hoti Feta / Hoti Florim / Hoti Gafur / Hoti Halil / Hoti Hamze / Hoti Haxhi / Hoti Hida / Hoti Idriz / Hoti Idriz / Hoti Ilir / Hoti Kadri / Hoti Muhamet / Hoti Muhamet / Hoti Nazif / Hoti Nazmie / Hoti Nexhmedin / Hoti Nusret / Hoti Nusret / Hoti Perparim / Hoti Plak / Hoti Ramiz / Hoti Rexhep / Hoti Rrahman / Hoti Samir / Hoti Shaban / Hoti Shaban / Hoti Shani / Hoti Sinan / Hoti Uke / Hoti Ukshin / Hoti Xhavit / Hoti Ymer / Hoti Zyber / Hoti Zyle / Hoxha Adem / Hoxha Ali / Hoxha Alush / Hoxha Ardian / Hoxha Bajram / Hoxha Bajram / Hoxha Blendian / Hoxha Edita / Hoxha Emurllah / Hoxha Fadil / Hoxha Faik / Hoxha Fitim / Hoxha Hajrulla / Hoxha Hasan / Hoxha Haxhi / Hoxha Inxhi / Hoxha Mehmet / Hoxha Milaim / Hoxha Naim / Hoxha Nazife / Hoxha Ramadan / Hoxha Ramiz / Hoxha Rifat / Hoxha Vehbi / Hoxha Veli / Hoxha Veli / Hoxha Ylber / Hoxha Ymer / Hoxhaj Isuf / Hulaj Agron / Hulaj Hazir / Hulaj Musli / Hurma Shaqire / Huskaj Fehim / Huskaj Haradin / Huskaj Metush / Huskaj Naim / Huskaj Neke / Huskaj Osman / Huskaj Rame / Huskaj Smajl / Huskaj Tafil / Hykosmani Gafur / Hymaj Syle / Hysaj Bute / Hysaj Faik / Hysenaj Safet / Hysenaj Zymer / Hyseni Afrim / Hyseni Agim / Hyseni Ahmet / Hyseni Bajrush / Hyseni Binak / Hyseni Ismet / Hyseni Isuf / Hyseni Mehmet / Hyseni Naim / Hyseni Nazife / Hyseni Sabit / Hyseni Shpend / Hyseni Xhavit / Hysi Roseta / Iberhysaj Haxhi / Iberhysaj Tahir / Ibishi Hamdi / Ibrahimaj Gani / Ibrahimaj Sali / Ibrahimi Agim / Ibrahimi Ali / Ibrahimi Bajramshahe / Ibrahimi Fisnik / Ibrahimi Hysni / Ibrahimi Miftar / Ibrahimi Rame / Ibraj Iber / Ibraj Isa / Ibraj Ismet / Ibraj Isuf / Ibraj Jakup / Ibraj Kujtim / Ibraj Muhamet / Ibraj Rustem / Ibraj Valbona / Icevic Milka / Idrizi Haxhi / Idrizi Idriz / Idrizi Masar / Idrizi Mustafe / Idrizi Rame / Idrizi Rrahman / Ikic Hivzo / Ilic Desanka / Ilic Ilija / Ilic Petar / Iljozi Nehadin / Imeraj Avdul / Imeraj Bashkim / Imeraj Kujtim / Isakaj Avdyl / Isaku Azem / Isaku Visar / Iseni Ymer / Islamaj Ali / Islamaj Deme / Islami Avdulla / Islami Bajram / Islami Brahim / Islami Ibrahim / Islami Kemajl / Islami Lah / Islami Liman / Islami Murat / Islami Xhavit / Islami Zakir / Ismaili Avdyl / Ismaili Haki / Ismaili Ismail / Ismaili Naser / Ismaili Nuhi / Ismaili Sheremet / Istogu Florin / Istogu Lulzim / Istogu Musa / Istogu Selman / Istrefi Vesel / Isufaj Selim / Isufi Bajram / Isufi Burbuqe / Isufi Isa / Isufi Kujtim / Isufi Latif / Isufi Mirsade / Ivancevic Maria / Ivanovic Momcilo / Ivanovic Velizar / Ivic Velimir / Jacimovic Dragan / Jahaj Naser / Jahaj Ramiz / Jahaj Shefki / Jahaj Tahir / Jahja Bardhyl / Jahmurataj Kadri / Jahmurataj Musa / Jahmurataj Smajl / Jaka Lulzim / Jaksic Svetislav / Janackovic Cirilo / Janicevic Stanimir / Janjic Slobodan / Jankovic Nebojsa / Jashari Adem / Jashari Arzie / Jashari Kadri / Jashari Musli / Jashari Sylejman / Jashari Zylfie / Jashari Zymer / Jasiqi Faik / Jasnic Milenko / Jasovic Aleksandar / Javori Ali / Jeftic Budimir / Jeftic Milica / Jelaj Ramadan / Jelic Marko / Jerinic Milivoje / Jetishi Fatos / Jetishi Shpend / Jevric Milos / Jocic Dusan / Jocic Srdjan / Joksimovic Djordje / Jolaj Binak / Jolaj Muharem / Jonuzi Muhedin / Jonuzi Sabedin / Jonuzi Zeqir / Josanovic Krunislav / Jovanovic Bozana / Jovanovic Bozidar / Jovanovic Goran / Jovanovic Ilija / Jovanovic Jovan / Jovanovic Ljubica / Jovanovic Marko / Jovanovic Milorad / Jovanovic Nikola / Jovanovic Slavica / Jovanovic Tomislav / Jovanovic Vida / Jovanovic Vladimir / Jovanovic Vojislav / Jovanovic Zoran / Jovic Mirko / Jusufi Ekrem / Jusufi Gazmend / Jusufov Shefka / Jusufov Vesel / Kabashi Andrush / Kabashi Arben / Kabashi Fatmir / Kabashi Mynire / Kabashi Nikolle / Kabashi Rashit / Kabashi Remzie / Kabashi Sefedin / Kabashi Xheladin / Kabashi Xhemail / Kabashi Ymer / Kabashi Zemire / Kabasi Milenko / Kaciu Gazmend / Kacoli Pjeter / Kacoli Tome / Kadolli Riza / Kadriaj Ali / Kadriaj Haxhi / Kadriaj Shaban / Kadriu Ajete / Kadriu Ferki / Kadriu Haki / Kadriu Islam / Kadriu Istref / Kadriu Muhamet / Kadriu Naser / Kadriu Zeqir / Kafixholli Ali / Kahremani Mustafe / Kajdomcaj Muharem / Kajolli Magribe / Kajtazaj Nexhmedin / Kajtazi Rexhe / Kaliqani Rexhep / Kalludra Tahir / Kamberaj Adem / Kamberaj Ramadan / Kamberaj Raze / Kamberaj Rexhe / Kamberi Ali / Kamberi Shkelzen / Kameraj Beqir / Kameri Besim / Kameri Gezim / Kameri Muharem / Kameri Rustem / Kameri Shpend / Kandic Cedo / Kaqandolli Selime / Karac Milutin / Karanovic Dusan / Karanovic Dusko / Karanovic Ilija / Karanovic Snijezana / Karaqica Bajram / Karaqica Gani / Karaqica Hamza / Karaqica Nunje / Karaqica Shefqet / Karaqica Sinan / Kastrati Ahmet / Kastrati Besnik / Kastrati Izet / Kastrati Mehmet / Kastrati Murat / Kastrati Musa / Kastrati Mustafe / Kastrati Nevzat / Kastrati Rexhep / Kastrati Rukie / Kastrati Zymer / Kazic Sinisa / Kecaj Agron / Kelmendi Aferdita / Kelmendi Albulena / Kelmendi Arben / Kelmendi Bledar / Kelmendi Cene / Kelmendi Halim / Kelmendi Ilir / Kelmendi Jusuf / Kelmendi Male / Kelmendi Muharem / Kelmendi Qerim / Kelmendi Rinor / Kelmendi Valon / Kelmendi Xhafer / Kepuska Hazir / Keqolli Fatmir / Kika Ramiz / Kiki Faik / Kiki Riza / Kilaj Rame / Kiqina Bajram / Kiqina Faton / Kiqina Petrit / Knezevic Ljubomir / Koca Fatime / Koca Fetie / Koca Isuf / Koca Lah / Koca Qemal / Koca Sefedin / Kocan Hacim / Koci Islam / Koci Rasim / Koci Skender / Kodra Nehbi / Kokollari Agim / Kokollari Bashkim / Kokollari Bekim / Kokollari Beqir / Kokollari Emrush / Kokollari Mehmet / Kokollari Reshat / Kokollari Sedat / Kola Selim / Kolaj Nikolle / Koliqi Kadri / Kololli Latife / Kololli Mehmet / Kololli Rushe / Komani Frane / Komani Nikolle / Komani Pashk / Konjusha Shaqir / Konstantini Besnik / Kopalla Arjeta / Kopalla Fatime / Kopalla Fetie / Kopalla Florinda / Kopalla Mirjeta / Kopalla Xhavit / Korac Mirka / Kostic Dima / Kostic Jugoslav / Kostic Lazar / Kostic Ljubomir / Kostic Marko / Kostic Milorad / Kostic Milosava / Kostic Miodrag / Kostic Miroljub / Kostic Mladen / Kostic Momir / Kostic Nebojsa / Kostic Sasko / Kostic Srecko / Kostic Svetislav / Kostic Todor / Kostic Vitomir / Kostic Vjekoslav / Kostic Zivko / Kotorcevic Sreta / Kotorri Blerim / Kotorri Shpend / Kovac Nadia / Kovacevic Dragan / Kovacic Zeljko / Kqira Mikel / Kqira Pashk / Kqira Zef / Kqiraj Luz / Kraja Elzo / Kralani Muhamet / Krasnic Abedin / Krasnici Nuradin / Krasniqi Abedin / Krasniqi Adem / Krasniqi Adem / Krasniqi Afrim / Krasniqi Afrim / Krasniqi Agron / Krasniqi Agron / Krasniqi Ahmet / Krasniqi Ajshe / Krasniqi Albert / Krasniqi Arben / Krasniqi Arben / Krasniqi Arben / Krasniqi Ardian / Krasniqi Arlinda / Krasniqi Armand / Krasniqi Arta / Krasniqi Avdush / Krasniqi Avdyl / Krasniqi Avdyl / Krasniqi Avni / Krasniqi Avni / Krasniqi Bajram / Krasniqi Bali / Krasniqi Bashkim / Krasniqi Bejzad / Krasniqi Besalet / Krasniqi Blerta / Krasniqi Blerta / Krasniqi Bujar / Krasniqi Bujar / Krasniqi Dashamir / Krasniqi Destan / Krasniqi Drenushe / Krasniqi Elmi / Krasniqi Emin / Krasniqi Esad / Krasniqi Esmeralda / Krasniqi Fadil / Krasniqi Fadil / Krasniqi Fatmir / Krasniqi Fatmir / Krasniqi Fellenza / Krasniqi Ferat / Krasniqi Feriz / Krasniqi Florim / Krasniqi Gani / Krasniqi Gazmend / Krasniqi Gjoke / Krasniqi Gjylishahe / Krasniqi Hamdi / Krasniqi Hamdi / Krasniqi Hamit / Krasniqi Hamit / Krasniqi Hane / Krasniqi Hasan / Krasniqi Hasan / Krasniqi Hira / Krasniqi Hysen / Krasniqi Hysni / Krasniqi Ismet / Krasniqi Istref / Krasniqi Jamin / Krasniqi Jehona / Krasniqi Jeton / Krasniqi Jonuz / Krasniqi Kole / Krasniqi Kushtrim / Krasniqi Labinot / Krasniqi Lavdim / Krasniqi Liridon / Krasniqi

                                                                   

Clinton verurteilt Massaker im Kosovo "aufs schÀrfste"

USA wollen VerbÌndete zu harter Antwort drÀngen


Washington, 16. Januar 1999 (AP) - US-PrÀsident Bill Clinton hat das jÃŒngste Massaker im Kosovo "aufs schÀrfste" verurteilt. In einer am Samstag vom WeiÃŞen Haus in Washington verbreiteten ErklÀrung sprach Clinton von einer "absichtlichen und blindwÃŒtigen Mordtat", die zum Ziel habe, Furcht unter den Menschen in der serbischen Provinz zu sÀhen. Die serbischen Behörden mÌÃŞten die TÀter unverzÃŒglich ausfindig machen. Der PrÀsident nannte die Bluttat eine klare Verletzung der Verpflichtungen, die die serbische Regierung gegenÃŒber der Nato eingegangen sei.  Clinton wurde von seinem Sicherheitsberater Sandy Berger ÃŒber das Massaker unterrichtet, bei dem in der NÀhe der Ortschaft Racak ÃŒber 45 Kosovo-Albaner umgebracht wurden. Die zum Teil verstÃŒmmelten Leichen wurden am Samstag morgen auf einem HÃŒgel bei dem Dorf gefunden. FÃŒr die Bluttat werden serbische Polizeieinheiten verantwortlich gemacht. Das internationale Kriegsverbrechertri bunal in Den Haag hat nach eigenen Angaben eine Untersuchung eingeleitet. Wie aus US-Regierungskreisen in Washington verlautete, wollte sich AuÃŞenministerin Madeleine Albright noch am Abend mit ihren Nato-Kollegen in Verbindung setzen. Die USA wollten ihre VerbÃŒndeten zu einer harten Antwort drÀngen, sagten die GewÀhrsleute. Bereits in der Vergangenheit hat die Nato dem jugoslawischen PrÀsidenten Slobodan Milosevic mit Luftangriffen gedroht.

Rugova fordert Eingreifen der Nato

Der politische FÃŒhrer der Kosovo-Albaner, Ibrahim Rugova, erneuerte nach dem Massaker die Forderung nach einem Eingreifen der Nato. Der grausame Angriff der serbischen Truppen gegen die Zivilbevölkerung sei zu einem Zeitpunkt gekommen, da sich die internationale Gemeinschaft um eine friedliche Lösung fÃŒr das Kosovo bemÃŒhe. Diese BemÃŒhungen wÃŒrden durch das Massaker zunichte gemacht. "Nur ein entschiedenes internationales Eingreifen kann die MilitÀrmaschine der Serben aufhalten", erklÀrte Rugova weiter.  Auch UN-GeneralsekretÀr Kofi Annan zeigte sich schockiert ÃŒber die Bluttat im Kosovo. Er verlangte eine grÃŒndliche Untersuchung des Massakers.


« Ndryshimi i fundit: 03-11-2004, 03:37:41 nga Gjumashi » E identifikuar
Zëri YT!
« më: 03-11-2004, 03:12:14 »
Citojeni

 E identifikuar
Gjumashi
« Përgjigjja #1 më: 03-11-2004, 03:25:27 »
Citojeni

Namenliste der bisher Identifizierten aus Reçak
Stuttgart, 16. Januar 1999 (KIL) - Personen von 1-15 wurden am 15. Januar 1999, als sie sich auf der Flucht vor EinrÌckenden serbische Einheten befanden, getötet.
Die Personen von 16 - 39 wurden am 15. Januar 1999 zuerst in einem Keller, wo sie Schutz gesucht haben, festgenohmen und spÀter exekutiert.
Die Personen von 39 - 46 sind am 15. Januar 1999 getötetë UÇK-KÀmpfer.

1) Bajram Sokol Mehmeti (54) aus Reçak, M
2) Hanëmshahe Mehmeti (22) aus Reçak, W
3) Riza Beqa (54) aus Reçak, M
4) Halim Beqa (12) aus Reçak, M
5) Zenel Beqa (20) aus Reçak, M
6) Ajshe Emini (40) aus Reçak, W
7) Qamile Selmani (80) aus Reçak, W
8 ) Bajrush Shabani (22) aus Reçak, M
9) Nazmi Ymeri (76) aus Reçak, M
10) Ahmet Mustafa (70) aus Reçak, M
11) Bajram Xheladini (35) aus Reçak, M
12) Haki Metushi (67) aus Reçak, M
13) Sabri Metushi (62) aus Reçak, M
14) Hajriz Jakupi (65) aus Reçak, M
15) Hanëmshahe Mujota (20) aus Mullapolc, W
16) Nexhat Faiku aus Reçak, M
17) Salih Faiku aus Reçak, M
18) Xhelë Ahmeti aus Reçak, M
19) Sheremet Syla aus Reçak, M
20) Agim Milaimi aus Reçak, M
21) Bujar Hajrizi aus Reçak, M
22) Shukri Milaimi aus Reçak, M
23) Mufail Hajrizi aus Reçak, M
24) Mehmet Jakupi aus Reçak, M
25) Adem Hafizi aus Reçak, M
26) Fatmir Faiku aus Reçak, M
27) Murtez Ymeri aus Reçak, M
28) Shyqeri Ismaili aus Reçak, M
29) Muhamet Ismaili aus Reçak, M
30) Njazi Zymeri aus Reçak, M
31) Jashar Milaimi aus Reçak, M
32) Sadik Osmani aus Reçak, M
33) Ragip Jahiri aus Reçak, M
34) Lutfi Bilalli aus Reçak, M
35) Eshref Jakupi aus Reçak, M
36) Ahmet Jakupi aus Reçak, M
37) Hakif Bilalli aus Reçak, M
38) Haqif pikepyetje, aus Petrovë, M
39) Sadik Mujota, aus Mullapolc, M
40) Shaqir Berisha aus Reçak, M
41) Mehmet Zenun Mustafa aus Reçak, M
42) Skënder Çarri aus Shtime, M
43) Kadri Syla aus Reçak, M
44) Ismail Luma aus Ribari i Madh bei Lipjan, M
45) Xhemajl (?)Region Kaçanik, M
46) pikepyetje Budakova aus Gjyrkovc bei Lipjan, M

Haager Tribunal wird wegen des Massakers an Albanern ermitteln

Den Haag, 16. Januar 1999 (KIL) - Der Internationale Strafgerichtshof fÃŒr das frÃŒhere Jugoslawien hat am Samstag Ermittlungen ÃŒber das Massaker von Raçak in der Krisenprovinz Kosova eröffnet. Wie ein Sprecher des Tribunals sagte, wird die ChefanklÀgerin des Haager UN-Tribunals, die kanadische Richterin Louise Arbour, die Ermittlungen persönlich leiten und "innerhalb der kommenden 48 Stunden" in Richtung Kosova aufbrechen. Sie verlange, daÃŞ ihr die jugoslawischen Behörden keine Hindernisse in den Weg legten und freien Zugang nach Raçak gewÀhrten. "Die Zeit der juristischen Debatten und Diskussionen" ist vorbei, sagte der Sprecher, Christian Chartier, in Anspielung auf frÃŒhere Versuche Belgrads, Ermittlungen des Tribunals im Kosova zu verhindern.

Solana verurteilt Massaker im Kosovo
Fischer will Verantwortliche von Massaker vor Gericht stellen

BrÃŒssel/Bonn, 16. Januar 1999 (AP) - Nato-GeneralsekretÀr Javier Solana hat am Samstag das Massaker in der serbischen Provinz Kosovo scharf verurteilt, bei dem bis zu 46 Menschen getötet wurden. In einer in BrÃŒssel veröffentlichten ErklÀrung ÀuÃŞerte er die BefÃŒrchtung, daÃŞ dies zu einer weiteren Eskalation und zu weiterem Leid fÃŒhren könnte. Die Allianz werde eine RÃŒckkehr zu KÀmpfen und UnterdrÃŒckung nicht hinnehmen. Bereits in der Vergangenheit hat die Nato dem jugoslawischen StaatsprÀsidenten Slobodan Milosevic mit Luftangriffen gedroht BundesauÃŞenminister Joschka Fischer hat mit Abscheu auf die Nachrichten von einem Massaker in der serbischen Provinz Kosovo reagiert. In einer in Bonn veröffentlichten ErklÀrung hieÃŞ es, die Verantwortlichen mÌÃŞten wissen, daÃŞ die internationale Gemeinschaft nicht bereit sei, die brutale Verfolgung und Ermordung von Zivilisten im Kosovo hinzunehmen. Beide Seiten forderte er zum Verzicht auf Gewalthandlungen auf. «Ich werde mich fÃŒr eine beschleunigte AufklÀrung der Morde, die Identifikation der TÀter und deren Anklage vor dem Internatinolen Gerichtshof fÃŒr das frÃŒhere Jugoslawien in Den Haag einsetzen.» Bei dem Massaker waren bis zu 46 Menschen, darunter auch Frauen, Kinder und alte MÀnner ermordet worden. Fischer verurteilte auch den Angriff auf Beobachter der Organisation fÃŒr Sicherheit und Zusammenarbeit in Europa (OSZE), bei dem am Freitag zwei Mitarbeiter der Organisation verletzt wurden.

OSZE-Chef spricht von schlimmsten Massaker

Belgrad/Pristina, 16. Januar 1999 (dpa) - Der Tod von mindestens 39 Albanern im Dorf Racak in der sÃŒd-jugoslawischen Unruheprovinz Kosovo ist vom regionalen OSZE-Chef William Walker als »höchstwahrscheinliche Hinrichtung« eingestuft worden. »Das Ganze sieht nach einer Hinrichtung aus«, sagte der Leiter der Kosovo-Beobachtergruppe der Organisation fÃŒr Sicherheit und Zusammenarbeit in Europa (OSZE) am Samstag nach Angaben der Nachrichtenagentur Beta in Belgrad. »So etwas tun nur Leute, denen menschliche Leben nichts bedeuten.« Die 39 Albaner, unter ihnen eine Frau und ein Kind, waren nach Erkenntnissen der OSZE offenbar aus nÀchster NÀhe mit KopfschÃŒssen getötet worden. »Nachdem ich die Leichen gesehen habe, mit zertrÃŒmmerten SchÀdeln durch SchÃŒsse aus unmittelbarer NÀhe, war ich eine Weile sprachlos.« Der Anblick der Leichen ÃŒbertreffe »so ziemlich alles, was ich bisher in Kriegsgebieten gesehen habe«. Die Albaner waren am Vortag im Verlauf erbitterter KÀmpfe zwischen serbischen SicherheitskrÀften und der Untergrundarmee UCK der Kosovo-Albaner getötet worden. Nach Angaben der OSZE waren die Opfer sÀmtlich Zivilisten. Die serbischen Behörden in Pristina dagegen erklÀrten am Samstag nachmittag, daÃŞ in der Umgebung von Racak (rund 30 Kilometer sÃŒdlich von Pristina) »mehrere Dutzend uniformierte UCK-Angehörige« getötet worden seien. Das albanische Informationszentrum in Pristina bezifferte die Zahl der Todesopfer der KÀmpfe in der Region inzwischen mit »zwischen 60 und 80 Menschen aller Altersgruppen«. Lediglich acht der Toten seien Angehörige der UCK gewesen.

Neue MassengrÀber im Kosovo entdeckt
Den Haag/Koronica, 15. Juni 1999 (AP) - Im Westen des Kosovos sind nach Aussagen einheimischer Albaner drei weitere MassengrÀber entdeckt worden, die die Leichen von 150 Menschen enthalten sollen. Die GrÀber befinden sich den Berichten zufolge neben einer LandstraÃŞe bei dem Dorf Koronica, zehn Kilometer westlich von Djakovica. In einem nahegelegenen ausgebrannten Haus fanden sich zudem fÃŒnf verkohlte Leichen. Nach Angaben von Bewohnern der Umgebung soll es sich bei den Leichen in den GrÀbern um MÀnner aus Koronica handeln, die von Serben umgebracht worden seien. Am 27. April seien ÃŒber tausend serbische Soldaten in das Dorf gekommen und hÀtten alle MÀnner ÃŒber 16 Jahre mitgenommen, berichtete ein zurÃŒckgekehrter FlÃŒchtling am Dienstag. NiederlÀndische Soldaten der internationalen Kosovo-Friedenstruppe (KFOR) fanden in einem Dorf nahe Prizren in einem Haus die verbrannten ÃÅ“berreste von etwa 20 Leichen. Wie ein Sprecher des niederlÀndischen KFOR-Kontingents am Dienstag mitteilte, soll es sich nach Angaben von Kosovo-Albanern um Opfer einer Massenhinrichtung durch Serben handeln. Die unter deutschem Befehl im SÃŒdkosovo stationierten NiederlÀnder wollten das Haus fÃŒr die Ankunft einer Abordnung des Haager Kriegsverbrechertri bunals sichern. Die Albaner hÀtten die Soldaten zu dem Haus gefÃŒhrt, sagte der Sprecher.

Massaker der serbischen Polizei an albanischen Zivilisten
Vushtrri, 31. Mai 1999 (Kosovapress) - Die serbische Polizei hat gestern um 24 Uhr, in der NÀhe des GefÀngnisses von Smrekovnica, einen Konvoi mit Vertriebenen aus der Kriegsregion Shala, bzw. aus den Dörfern Okrashtice, Pantina, Oshlan, Gurbardh, etc., die zum vierten mal von serbischen StreitkrÀfte bombardiert werden, aus einem Hinterhalt angegriffen. Zeugenaussagen zufolge, wurde dabei ein Massaker mit Ìber 100 toten und zahlreichen verletzten Zivilisten verÌbt. Das Schicksal der Verletzten bleibt weiterhin ungewiss, da das Gebiet, wo dieses Massaker geschah, unter vollstÀndiger Kontrolle der serbischen Armee ist. Deswegen kann man derzeit weder die IdentitÀt der Toten, noch die der Verletzten feststellen. Heute, gegen 8 Uhr, hat die serbische Polizei etwa 1000 BÌrger der Ortschaft Doberlluka gefangengenommen und sie zunÀchst in der Sporthalle von Vushtrri gebracht. Auch das weitere Schicksal dieser Menschen bleibt immer noch im Dunkeln

Auf der Flucht verloren - Kosovo-Kinder suchen ihre Eltern
Genf/Tirana, 03. Juni 1999 (dpa)
- Als die Serben kamen, waren Donjeta (acht), Labinot (elf) und Saranda (14) gerade bei Nachbarn. Innerhalb von Minuten wurden die Eltern unter Todesdrohungen von ihrem Hof im Kosovo vertrieben und auf den FlÃŒchtlingstreck nach Albanien geschickt - mit der schrecklichen UngewiÃŞheit ÃŒber das Schicksal ihrer Kinder. Die Nachbarn ergriffen vor den anrÃŒckenden Serben selbst die Flucht und nahmen die drei Kinder mit - nach Mazedonien. Donjeta, Labinot und Saranda gehörten zu den mehr als 1 000 Kindern, die auf der chaotischen Flucht aus ihrer Heimat die Eltern verloren hatten. Dank eines Suchaufrufs im Rundfunk hörten die Eltern nach endlos bangen Tagen, daÃŞ ihre Kinder in Mazedonien angekommen waren. Das internationale Komitee vom Roten Kreuz organisierte umgehend die FamilienzusammenfÃŒhrung. Der zwei Wochen alte Lendrit lag in einem Krankenhaus in Pristina im Brutkasten, als seine jungen Eltern von Serben auf den Zug nach Mazedonien verfrachtet wurden. Was aus ihrem Baby wurde, erfuhren sie wochenlang nicht - bis das Rote Kreuz in der vergangenen Woche wieder nach Pristina zurÃŒckkehrte. Der inzwischen drei Monate alte Junge ist wohlauf und soll demnÀchst unter Rotkreuz-Vermittlung zu seine Eltern nach Mazedonien gebracht werden. «Oft wurden die Familien auseinandergerissen, wenn sie ihre Kinder auf Traktoren setzten und selbst zu FuÃŞ zur Grenze gingen», berichtet Robert Cohen, der fÃŒr das Kinderhilfswerk Unicef in Albanien ist. «Andere hatten die Kinder bei Verwandten in vermeintliche Sicherheit gebracht.» Vielen, wie den Eltern von Donjeta, Labinot und Saranda, erlaubten die Serben nicht, ihre Kinder im Dorf zusammenzurufen, ehe sie Hals ÃŒber Kopf zur Flucht gezwungen wurden. Das Internationale Komitee vom Roten Kreuz hat in Mazedonien 900 Kinder auf der Liste, die ihre Eltern suchen, in Albanien sind es 165. Darunter sind Zwei- und DreijÀhrige ebenso wie Teenager. Der starke Familienhalt in der albanischen Bevölkerung kommt den verlorenen Kindern zugute. «Dies ist eine Gemeinschaft, in der sich jeder um jeden kÃŒmmert», sagt Daloni Carlisle vom Roten Kreuz in Tirana. Kein einziges Kind muÃŞte bislang in ein Waisenhaus gebracht werden. In vielen FÀllen reichten VermiÃŞtenmeldungen im Rundfunk, um Eltern und Kinder ausfindig zu machen. Mehrere hundert hat das Rote Kreuz inzwischen wieder zusammengefÃŒhrt. Adressen allein ausfindig zu machen, reicht allerdings nicht. «In Durrës gibt es eine StraÃŞe 13, dort wohnen 10 000 Menschen. Es gibt keine Hausnummern. Eine dort gemeldete Familie ausfindig zu machen, ist wie die Suche nach der Nadel im Heuhaufen», sagt Carlisle. Das Rote Kreuz hÀlt an den Grenzen Satellitentelefone bereit, damit FlÃŒchtlinge Verwandte etwa in Europa benachrichtigen können. «Seit Beginn des Massenexodus' im MÀrz haben von unseren Apparaten in Nordalbanien aus mehr als 20 000 Menschen Verwandte angerufen», sagt Carlisle. Manche Familie findet sich in den FlÃŒchtlingslagern wieder, weil Geschwister, die sich verloren hatten, unabhÀngig von einander denselben Onkel in Deutschland benachrichtigt hatten. Inzwischen wittern ruchlose Ganoven ein GeschÀft mit der FamilienzusammenfÃŒhrung. FÃŒr ein paar hundert Dollar könne er ihren Sohn zurÃŒckbringen, versprach ein Mann einer verzweifelten Mutter in der albanischen Hafenstadt Flores. Das Rote Kreuz war rechtzeitig zur Stelle, um den Kleinen kostenlos aus einem FlÃŒchtlingslager in Nordalbanien zu holen.

Ex Geheimdienstchef belastet Milosevic
Der frÌhere serbische Geheimdienstchef hat den ehemaligen jugoslawischen PrÀsidenten Milosevic schwer belastet. Milosevic habe die Beseitigung von Leichen von Zivilisten angeordnet, sagte er.
Belgrad, 07. September 2002 (nz) - Der frÃŒhere serbische Geheimdienstchef Rade Markovic hat ausgesagt, Slobodan Milosevic habe im FrÃŒhjahr 1999 angeordnet, die Leichen im Kosovo getöteter Zivilisten zu beseitigen. Der damalige Innenminister Vlajko Stojiljkovic habe Milosevic darauf aufmerksam gemacht, dass die Leichen in einem Prozess als Beweise herangezogen werden könnten, heiÃŞt es in der schriftlichen Aussage weiter, die am Donnerstag dem internationalen Kriegsverbrechertri bunal in Den Haag vorgelegt wurde. Markovic teilte mit, er sei dabei gewesen als Milosevic auf diese Warnung hin angeordnet habe, die Leichen zu beseitigen. Die Anklage will mit dieser Aussage beweisen, dass Milosevic von den Morden an Kosovo-Albanern und deren Vertreibung gewusst haben muss.
 Milosevic-Prozess: Soldat bekennt sich zu Massaker
Im Prozess gegen den frÌheren jugoslawischen PrÀsidenten Slobodan Milosevic vor dem Kriegsverbrechertri bunal hat erstmals ein Soldat der jugoslawischen Armee seine Beteiligung an einem Massaker an unbewaffneten Zivilisten im Kosovo zugegeben.

Den Haag, 07. September 2002 (sda) - Der nur als «K 41» bezeichnete Zeuge der Anklage machte seine Aussage ÃŒber eine Videoverbindung zum Gerichtssaal in Den Haag. Die Personalien des etwa 23 Jahre alten Mannes wurden nicht bekannt gegeben, sein Gesicht wurde in der ÃÅ“bertragung unkenntlich gemacht.
Vor einem MilitÀr-Einsatz gegen ein Dorf von Kosovo-Albanern kurz nach Beginn der NATO-Bombenangriffe habe er deutlich die Anweisung eines Hauptmanns Gavrilovic an die UnterfÌhrer gehört: «Niemand darf Ìberleben».
Seine Einheit habe das Dorf mit einer Kanone beschossen, HÀuser durchkÀmmt und in Brand gesetzt und 15 unbewaffnete Zivilisten in einem Bauernhof zusammengetrieben, schilderte er. Die Frauen, Kinder und Àlteren MÀnner hÀtten jede Verbindung zur so genannten Kosovo-Befreiungsarmee (UCK) bestritten.
Dennoch habe sein Feldwebel ihm und etwa zehn anderen Soldaten befohlen, die Leute auf der Stelle zu erschiessen. Dies hÀtten sie getan, rÀumte der Zeuge ein. Auf die Frage des AnklÀgers, ob er auch geschossen habe, antwortete der Zeuge: «Ja». Die Getroffenen seien unter den SchÌssen Ìbereinandergefallen.
«Ich erinnere mich noch lebhaft an ein Baby. Es wurde von drei Kugeln getroffen und schrie unglaublich laut», sagte der Zeuge wörtlich. Der Gerichtsvorsitzende hatte den Zeugen zuvor noch darauf hingewiesen, dass er die Aussage verweigern könne, wenn er sich damit selbst belaste.Mit seinen Angaben wurden erstmals Darstellungen von Opfern ÃŒber das blutige Auftreten serbischer StreitkrÀfte gegen unbewaffnete Zivilisten im Kosovokrieg gestÃŒtzt. Bisher haben im Prozess stets ÃÅ“berlebende als Zeugen der Anklage ausgesagt.
« Ndryshimi i fundit: 03-11-2004, 03:42:40 nga Gjumashi » E identifikuar
Gjumashi
« Përgjigjja #2 më: 03-11-2004, 03:27:51 »
Citojeni

The List of the massacred and executed people in the village of Izbica, in Drenica.

Drenica, April 6th (Kosovapress) Name Age Village Executed
* Idriz Xhemajli, (72), Izbic; * Halit Rama, Izbic; * Brahim Bajra, (79), Trnov; * Hetem Osmani, (67), Izbic; * Muharrem Osmani, Izbic; * Kajtaz Kajtazi, Trnov; * Muhamet Behrami, (61), Izbic; * Nuredin Behrami, (79); * Ilaz Bajra, (70) Trnov; * Avdullah Duraku, Buroj; * Fazli Bajraj, (62), Trnov; * Hajzer Gashi, Vojnik; * Dibran Duraku, Buroj; * Mustaf Sejdiu, Vojnik; * Beqir Dragaj, Vojnik; * Mustaf Muja, Vojnik; * Tahir Zeka, Buroj; * Milazim Zeka, Buroj; * Rifat Hoti (65), Jashanic; * Qerim Hoti (52), Jashanic; * Zeqir Shpati (60), Jashanic; * Rrustem Hoti (72), Jashanic; * Ilaz Dervishi (76), Leqin; * Muhamet Kadriu, Izbic; * Rexh Qelaj (73), Leqin; * Hazir Hoti (67), Jashanic; * Ismet Draga (30), Leqin; * Bajram Dervishi (53), Kastriot; * Salih Shala, Leqin; * Hamdi Doqi (40), Krnik; * Metush Qeli (69), Leqin; * Haxhi Beka, Kllodernic; * Sala Beka, Kllodernic; * Qerime Hajra, Rakinic; * Demush Behrami (66), Izbic; * Isuf Shala (64), Buroj; * Zenel Hoti, Plluzhin; * Halil Morina , Gllarev; * Rrahim Krasniqi, Vojnik; * Jetullah Kelmendi, Vojnik; * Lah Fetahu, Turiec; * Bajram Neziri, Vojnik; * Hamdi Demaj, Vojnik; * Smajl Qelaj (62), Leqin; * Zymer Shala (60), * Jetullah Thai, Ozdrim; * Shaban Rexhepi (85), Izbic; his cadaver is carbonized * Halit Muslija (62), Klina; executed * Ilaz Muslija (57), Klina; * Beqir Muslija (59), Klina; * Muhamet Muslija (61), Klina; * Naim Muslija (20), Klina; * Tahir Hoti (55), Jashanic; * Florim Krasniqi (30), Vojnik; he was handicapped person, now being executed * Sokol Duraku (36), Buroj; executed * Zeqir Kelmendi (85), massacred and carbonized * Mehmet Aliu (64), Izbic; executed * Halit Begani (52), Buroj; * Ajet Thai (71), * Sheremet Thai (49), handicapped person * Hajdar Bajraktari (54), Jashanic; executed * Azem Shabani (74), Buroj, * Sabit Qollopeku (55) , Shtupel; * Rexh Duraku (87), Buroj; * Sali Dervishi (67), Leqin; * Selman Loshi (78), Padalisht; * Jashar Loshi (48), Padalisht; * Sami Loshi (25), Padalisht; * Shefqet Hoti, Morina; * Vehbi Hoti, Morina; * Rabishe Osmani, Izbic;, carbonized * Osman Dajaku, Rakinice; * Bel Duraku Buroje; * Sahit Duka, Ozrim; executed * Pajazit Ceka, Krnic; * Zaim Bajrami (36), Izbic; medical technic, executed * Ajet Beqiri (39), Padalisht; executed * Enver Bajraj (32), Izbic; * Muj Shala (63), Leqin; * Ali Draga, Leqin; * Murat Dragaj, Leqin; * Rrustem Dragaj, Leqin; * Bajram Bajra, (72) Izbic; * Sami Bajra, (19) Izbic; * Islam Haliti, Izbic; handicapped * Besart Hajra, Izbic; * Sofie Dragaj, Leqin; * Halim Shala, (62) * Isuf Shala, (55) * Rrahim Tahiri (83), Vojnik; * Gani Demaj, Vojnik; * Muj Rexhepi (49), Izbic; * Hajriz Dragaj (42), Leqin; * Deli Krasniqi (58), Vojnik; * Ram Kotori (58), Vojnik; * Ram Thaqi (67), Buroj; * Fejz Hoxha (83), Vojnik; * Sadik Hoti (65), Jashanic; * Azem Osmani (71), Izbic; * Asllan Bajra (61), Trnov; * Asllani Açareva, * Hamit Ibrahimi, Buroj; * Muhamet Hoti (63), Vojnik; * Ramadan Raci, Jelloc; * Qazim Bajrami (67), Izbic; * Musli Doqi (36), Grapc; * Ram Syla, Shtupelit, * Zenel Veliqi, Polac; * Hamz Qupeva, Jashanic; * Dibran Thaqi, Buroj; * Hysen Shala (63), Buroj; * Rrahim Kotori (76), Vojnik; * Cen Dragaj (77), Leqin; * Murat Dragaj (67), Leqin; * Hamit Thaqi (77), Buroj, * Bajram Caku, Buroj; * Isuf Shala, Buroj; * Halit Hajdari, Plluzhin; * Hajriz Shala, Buroj; * Hasan Mustafa, Obri; * Bislim Bajraktari, Resnik; * Qazim Xhemajli, Likoc; * Rabishe Osmani, Izbic; * Qerime Mula, Jashanic; * Zade Dragaj (90) Leqin;

There is another unidentified executed person who has been with other massacred people. This is the list of massacred people in Izbica but fortunately there are 6 persons who have survived from this massacre.Before they were buried they have been filmed and we have also testimonies of three witnesses who were among the lucky one to survive. The execution has been executed by dividing the people in four groups of 30-40 people for each group in, while this has been executed by six soldiers for each group selected by their superiors. According to the confirmed informations this list is not a final one.

The list of the killed massacred in the villages of Runik, Kllodernic and Turiqec.
Drenica, April 6th (Kosovapress)The list of the persons executed and massacred from the Balkan criminals that are found killed in the villages of Runik, Kllodernic and Turiqevc. (according to the confirmed informations, these lists are not final ones).
Name Age VillageIslam Miftari (69), Runik Mexhit Miftari,(27), Runik Nuhi Miftari (14), Runik Rifat Miftari (49), Runik
Rrahman Miftari (48), Runik Mustaf Hyseni (50), Kastriot Rrustem Miftari ( 65), Runik Emine Latifi (62), Runik Bajram Hasani (85), Kllodernic Kadri Hasani (65), Kllodernic Kamer Spahiu (48), Kastriot Hivzi Çitaku (25), Runik Hatmane Osmani(25), Kllodernic Ahmet Osmani (40), Kllodernic Naim Kajtazi (22), Kllodernic Jahir Hajrizi (55), Runik Bashkim Imeri (22), Kllodernic Isuf Mula (45), Vitak Osman Spahiu (55), Vitak Zeqir Mula (50), Vitak His daughter-in-law (27), Vitak Rexhep Osmani (35), Kllodernic Xhevdet Osmani (30), Kllodernic Idriz Sejdiu (50), Runik Sadri Abazi (60), Kllodernic Shaban Osmani (70), Kllodernic Ramadan Beka (65), Kllodernic Shyqyri Mula (42), Vitak Murat Topalli (67), Vitak Hysni Musa (33), Prekaz i Epërm Ismet Spahiu (40), Vitak Osman Mula (60), Vitak (burnt in his tractor) Fetah Spahiu (35), Vitak Mehmet Aliu, Rezall Valdete Spahiu (12), Vitak Zekiri Fetah Mula (17), Kllodernic Driton Gani Mula (17), Kllodernic Abedin Gani Mula , Kllodernic Fegjri (Zen) Gashi (22) Nazmi Osmani (24), Kllodernic Sheremet Mula (41) Ismet Smakaj (64) Halime Smakaj (71) Miradie Mulaj Shaban Mulaj (84) Haxhi Beka with two daughters and his wife Xhemail Beka Gjevat Osmani. Man Mulaj, found burnt.

According to confirmed informations, this is not the final list.

The serbian forces are continuing their attacks against the villages with displaced population
Podujevë, April 6th (Kosovapress) Today, since the early hours of the day, the barbaric serbs have started an offensive of broadly destructive dimensions against the villages: Sfeqël, Balloc, Lladoc, Shajkoc, Batllavë, Miroc, Livadicë, Shtedim, villages where have been placed over 70 000 inhabitants displaced from the other villages of Llapi. The population is again expelled, obliged to get into the mountains, while the units of KLA have placed themselves in defense of this population, fighting face to face with serbian forces and doing an extraordinary resistance. The general situation in the Operative Zone of Llap, is very grave. The displaced population of this side is passing through its most difficult and painful days, being confronted with life or death. Only in the environ of Podujeva, there are over 90 000 displaced people, which have remained without shelters and a largë amount of them are sheltered in mountains, without food, clothes, medicines for the wounded and sick persons.

Consensus Grows to Send Ground Troops
By Dan Balz Washington Post Staff Writer Tuesday, April 6, 1999; Page A1

With remarkable speed, a consensus supporting the deployment of U.S. ground forces in Kosovo has formed in Washington, and a Washington Post-ABC News Poll shows a similarly dramatic shift in public opinion, with 55 percent of the public saying they would support such a change in policy.
Even as the Clinton administration continues to rule out ground forces until "a permissive environment" exists in Kosovo, a chorus of foreign policy experts and key members of Congress have been making the case that deployment may be inevitable. They argue that, with the air war failing to achieve its immediate objectives of stopping Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, it may take such a risky commitment to deal with the mushrooming humanitarian disaster unfolding on the ground there and to salvage the credibility of the NATO alliance. Foreign policy analysts say some of the old notions of left and right have gone out the window in the post-Cold War environment. Instead, the consensus for what could be a wider war in Europe fuses humanitarian instincts of many on the left who are outraged by the scenes of refugees flooding into Macedonia with realpolitik advocates who argue that U.S. power and prestige must be protected in a conflict with a leader like Milosevic."Very early on, there was among the foreign policy establishment a realization that this was real, that this was not just a bit of bombing, but that it basically was a declaration of war," said Ivo Daalder of the Brookings Institution and a former National Security Council adviser to President Clinton. "People realized what we were engaged in was war and that the stakes were far grander and far larger than the administration painted them." Dissenters have been few and far between, despite a post-Vietnam reluctance to commit ground forces in combat and a perception that the American public won't tolerate casualties on the battlefield. Some Republicans strongly oppose the use of ground forces, but with Congress in recess until next week, it isn't clear how divided the legislative branch is about what the administration should do next.
The drumbeat in favor of ground forces by the foreign policy establishment, coupled with the grim images of the flood of refugees leaving Kosovo, has had an immediate-and significant -- impact on public opinion. Last week, a CBS News poll found that 41 percent of those surveyed supported ground forces to help end the conflict, with 52 percent opposed. The Post-ABC News poll, conducted yesterday, shows 55 percent in favor and 41 percent against. The margin of error is plus or minus 5 percentage points. The poll, based on interviews with 509 randomly sampled Americans, found that support for the NATO airstrikes had risen from 55 percent last week to 68 percent. About two out of three Americans -- 68 percent -- said the airstrikes would not be sufficient to achieve NATO's goals and that ground troops would be necessary to finish the job. Public opinion analysts cautioned, however, that the public still has reservations about the use of force under messy conditions. "There's very little appetite for casualties," said Andrew Kohut of the Pew Research Center. "Support there now would evaporate if the specter of a quagmire were to be evoked by Kosovo." For now, the events in Yugoslavia have brought together disparate elements along the political spectrum in support of a more robust U.S. response to the evidence that Serbian forces have used the bombing campaign as an excuse to drive ethnic Albanians out of Kosovo.
"With the Cold War over, one of the things that happened on the liberal wing of politics is an increasing desire to do humanitarian things with foreign policy," said Robert Borosage, co-director of the Campaign for America's Future. The arguments in favor of preserving U.S. and NATO credibility have, if anything, been made even more strongly by the foreign policy elite. On almost any day, the editorial pages of major newspapers and television talk shows have been filled with such commentary from former secretaries of state and members of the Senate Foreign Relations and Armed Services committees. The policy debate has grave implications for Clinton and Vice President Gore but also may affect attitudes toward Republican candidates seeking the 2000 presidential nomination. Republican candidates remain divided on the deployment of ground forces.
Analysts said yesterday the war in Yugoslavia has given a short-term boost to Arizona Sen. John McCain (R), who was an early and outspoken advocate of using whatever means necessary to win the war and explicitly put the issue of ground troops on the table when others were not talking about it. "He's taken amazing strides in making himself a credible candidate," said Robert Kagan of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Texas Gov. George W. Bush (R), who leads the GOP field in the polls, was judged more harshly for having been more tentative in his statements, although he attempted to clarify his position yesterday during a telephone interview from Texas. He wouldn't say definitively whether he judged the administration's policy a failure but said a stable Europe and the refugee crisis meant that it is in the U.S. interest "to win" the war. "All options ought to be on the table," he said. "If the mission is to win, then I think all options ought to be available to the military planners."

How the City of Peja was Destroyed by Serbian Barbarians in 1999 AD

Centuries to Create, Days to Despoil
By Karl Vick Washington Post Foreign Service Monday, April 5, 1999; Page A20

ROZAJE, Yugoslavia â€" It began with a throaty rumble, as the tanks lurched out the front gate of their compound and onto the darkened street. Moving into position, they pointed their barrels into the heart of Pec, Kosovo's second-largest city, and opened fire. It takes centuries to build a city like Pec, but Serb-led military forces would provë it can take just days to destroy it.
Not since World War II has Europe seen entire cities purged of the people within them. But beginning within hours of the first NATO airstrikes on Yugoslavia on March 24, Yugoslav troops, Serbian police units and paramilitary groups forced 80,000 ethnic Albanians â€" Pec's entire non-Serb population â€" to flee, all the while looting, shelling and burning their shops and homes.
The assault on Pec foreshadowed the emptying days later of Pristina, the capital of Kosovo and its largest city. And it provided the first signal to the region of the scale of the refugee crisis that would soon engulf it. It also adds to mounting evidence, gathered from the testimony of refugees and the analysis of Western officials, that the mass expulsion of Kosovo's majority ethnic Albanian population was a premeditated act, systematically carried out and timed to begin as the first NATO bombs fell.

By March 28, four days after the expulsions began, refugees from Pec began arriving here at the border of Montenegro, Serbia's much smaller sister republic in the Yugoslav federation. Their individual accounts of survival and flight from Pec blend into a common story of the destruction of their city. It begins with the tanks. "Ba-Boom, the whole night. This was the music," said Jauna Higiena, who cowered in the basement of her family home day and night in the Kapishnisca, an ethnic Albanian neighborhood. To venture into the street during a lull was to risk being shot. The shelling continued for several days, terrorizing the population. People kept the curtains drawn and their children quiet and awaited the armed men.The roundup itself followed, and it was by turns methodical and anarchic. Troops wearing green went door to door ordering the occupants into the street. Police wearing blue directed the throng into the city center. The paramilitary groups who moved between them but answered to no one wore gray camouflage, ski masks and fingerless gloves. They kicked in doors and demanded money and gold, and sometimes they took custody of men of fighting age, who were led away and have not been seen since. "We were not allowed to look around, or to look back," said Isa Rame, 49, of the stunned human column he joined with only the clothes on his back. "My daughter is 18 years old. She looked back and said, 'It seems our houses are on fire.'" 'In Town It Was Quiet'
Pec â€" in Serbian it is pronounced "Pesch" â€" straddles the Bistrica River in western Kosovo. Its old city is a maze of cobblestone streets lined with the shops of goldsmiths who fashioned the jewelry that Kosovo Albanians collect partly for beauty, mostly as life savings. The Albanians, who call the city where they have lived for centuries "Peje," were an overwhelming majority there, as they were throughout Kosovo, a Serbian province. Although most residents of Pec are Muslims, they speak admiringly of the Orthodox Christian monastery on the edge of town, with its gorgeous view of the plain and the mountains rising at the border with Montenegro, barely 30 miles away.
Until 12 days ago, Pec had largely been immune from the ethnic conflict that has torn at Kosovo for the past 13 months. The countryside was a stronghold of the Kosovo Liberation Army, the secessionist ethnic Albanian rebel movement whose roots in the city were not deep. "In the town it was quiet," Lumtunje Arifaj said. "In the villages it was something else, but in the town it was okay." 'The Houses Were Burning' All through the night of Wednesday, March 24, the tanks fired from just 300 yards away, sending shells over Jauna Higiena's house into town. The rounds left phosphorescent trails in the sky. On the other side of the house, police in a nearby station fired on a mosque, shattering its windows. When morning çame, Higiena tried to go to work. A soldier on the street told her to go back inside. That night, shots peppered the house. Higiena, her mother, two brothers and sister crawled out the back door and made their way on their hands and knees to a garden shed. In the morning, she was allowed to go to work, on streets empty except for her. Her boss sent her home. The shelling resumed at 3:30 p.m."You couldn't see anything but fire and smoke," Higiena said. "All the houses were burning."Across town, in a subdivision he built, Beke Zekaj was gathering his family. A successful businessman with a cable television company in Pristina, he was also a member of the Democratic League of Kosovo, an ethnic Albanian political organization that supports independence for Kosovo through peaceful means. When the shelling began, he said, he called "my members." All agreed they were not armed for a fight.The homes of ethnic Albanian political activists would be the first torched, along with the shops of the old city, the center of ethnic Albanian commercial life. 'To Save Our Heads' By the weekend, the expulsion was proceeding in full force. The soldiers çame to Higiena's street on Sunday morning. She had seen people rushing by the previous day. "We don't know where we are going," someone told her. "We are just going. We just wanted to save our heads." When the soldiers arrived at 10:30 a.m., Higiena's family tumbled into the throng. It was moving toward the center of town. Across the river, Drilon Zeka, 14, was still asleep when his uncle saw the troops outside and announced it was time to flee. He slipped on sneakers still wet from being washed and hurried downstairs, terrified. There was a forest near their house, but when Zeka heard shots coming from that direction he ducked into a garage. So did his 9-year-old brother, Qendrim, and two neighbors, both age 20. They hid Qendrim first, giving him the best place, between stacks of wood, because, Zeka recalled, "we had heard that in Drenica [site of a September massacre of ethnic Albanians] they had killed children." Then they tried to hide themselves.The soldiers found them all. The boys were ordered to join the column of people in the street. 'We Are Arkan's Men'"We are Arkan's men," said the man standing in Zoje Kastrati's house.He wore civilian clothes, not the uniform associated with the paramilitary forces of Zeljko Raznatovic, a Bosnian Serb whose indictment for alleged war crimes in the Bosnian war was announced by the international tribunal in The Hague last week. The man said he wanted money. The Kastratis gave him 3,000 German marks, the equivalent of $1,600. Then the man took all the gold jewelry he could find. He also tried to drag Zoje's husband, Mahmet, down the staircase of the four-story house, insisting he was a member of the Kosovo Liberation Army. The same thing was happening across town, at the house of Fatima Kelmendi, 80, the sister of Kastrati's stepfather. Soldiers led away her 45-year-old son, Isuf Kelmendi, along with another man. Moments later, Fatima Kelmendi heard a shot. Her relatives say the old woman is alone in believing her son is alive. In the Kastrati home, the intruders relented when her husband showed them the address on his identity card. The paper named not a village known as a guerrilla stronghold, but a city street. Satisfied, they told the family members they could stay another three days, which â€" to their own amazement â€" they did. On their way out, their terrorizers joked that the men of the house should join them for a drink. "We've got money!" one said. 'Give Me Deutschemarks'
At Zekaj's subdivision, the first grenade çame over the compound wall at 4:20 a.m. Sunday. It exploded on the front steps of an empty house. A second grenade landed between two houses. No one was hurt, but Zekaj knew it was time to leave. By midmorning, the men had created an opening in the home's 12-foot concrete wall. "The first block was hard to get out," Zekaj said. "After that, it was easy." The escape convoy, led by the family patriarch's Mercedes, headed straight to Montenegro. They were just a mile from the border when they stopped at a familiar building; once Zekaj's summer home, it was now a police checkpoint. A masked man there had a Mercedes of his own. "Give me 2,000 deutschemarks," he said. Zekaj pleaded that 1,000 marks was all he had. The masked man took the money and tossed it into his car. Currency covered the floor of the vehicle. Its glove compartment was so stuffed with bills it would not shut. 'Where's Your NATO?' Drilon Zeka had never seen so many people in the city center. Thousands teemed in the streets leading to the Metohija Hotel, where buses, cars and trucks waited, policemen at the wheels. He stayed close to his family, looking for familiar faces. Men in uniform smiled cynically and called out, "Where's NATO? Where's your Clinton?" "We had to choose the bus to Montenegro or to Albania," Higiena said. But she kept looking around, trying to find her brother. The people in the street had warned that men were being separated from women and children, a process she understood as a prelude to mass execution.
"I am very much attached to my brother," she said, and yet somehow they had become separated. She was on the bus to Montenegro, thinking she would rather die with him than live without him, when she heard his voice. "I couldn't believe it," Higiena said. The journey to Rozaje, normally a half-hour by car, took eight hours. The road through the mountain pass was a glut of humanity.



« Ndryshimi i fundit: 03-11-2004, 03:53:20 nga Gjumashi » E identifikuar
Gjumashi
« Përgjigjja #3 më: 03-11-2004, 03:29:15 »
Citojeni

Prishtina, once an epitome of a bustling city is now a ghost town! (NY Times)
Ordeal for Albanians Still in Kosovo
By DAVID W. CHEN


Last week, Ismer Mjeku managed to call his uncle in Pristina, the capital of Kosovo, a few times to find out just how much life had deteriorated in his hometown.
Food was perilously low, his uncle said. Dozens of people were huddling in tiny apartments without electricity, afraid to venture outside. And always -- always -- staccato bursts of gunfire reverberated in the distance. But on Sunday, Mjeku, a Bronx businessman, lost that tenuous connection to Kosovo, one of a very few reported with people who are still there. There was no answer at his uncle's house, no hint of where everyone had gone. Did Mjeku's uncle move to another hiding spot in the city? Did he join the exodus of ethnic Albanian refugees streaming out of Kosovo? "I don't know what's going on," said Mjeku, who publishes the Albanian Yellow Pages Business Directory. "I can't sleep. I'm not able to do anything right now. It's like we're in darkness." For days now there has been a torrent of testimonials about the horrors of ethnic cleansing from Kosovo's ethnic Albanians who have reached refugee camps in Albania and Macedonia. But the stories from Mjeku's uncle and a few others are unusual, because there have been so few accounts from people still in Kosovo since the Serbian government expelled foreign journalists and aid agencies. Given their secondhand nature, these stories may well be impossible to confirm independently. And the voices from Kosovo are likely to grow fainter, because much of the province's telecommunications network no longer works. At the least, though, these accounts offer a view on a human scale of the struggles and fears of daily life there. Parts of Pristina resemble a ghost town, according to several accounts. Some neighborhoods still have running water, but several buildings have been charred or destroyed. Many stores owned by Albanians have been looted. Acrid smoke blankets the area. Nonstop gunfire is the soundtrack to life. It is a far cry from the days when Pristina was the epitome of a small, bustling Balkan city of 250,000, with drab high-rise buildings, small houses with red-tiled roofs and vibrant outdoor cafes. Now, during daylight hours, a few brave souls, usually older women, occasionally dart outside, running to the few state-owned stores that remain open. On Friday, cigarettes were available for the first time in a week. And in the neighborhood where Ibrahim Rugova, the moderate ethnic Albanian leader, lives, a few children even played ball outside, according to an Agence Francë-Presse dispatch with information from Pristina. Some families are staying behind because they feel that it is the right thing to do, they have said in their phone calls. Kosovo had two million residents before the war, 90 percent of them ethnic Albanians. It is the poorest and least developed part of Yugoslavia, but it is also a proud place, filled with people who have long embraced the struggle for autonomy. "It is dangerous to stay, but Albanians are making a statement, that this is where they belong," said one Albanian-American who has been touch in the last few days with relatives in Pristina, speaking on condition of anonymity. It is impossible to estimate how many people remain in the city. Over all, about one million people are believed to be within Kosovo's borders, even though many may be en route to Albania or Macedonia, or confined to places other than their own homes, said Kris Janowski, a spokesman for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Geneva. At night now, Pristina is dark and eerily still, say those who have spoken with people there. There is no electricity after 6 or so, and those in hiding usually remain in the dark. A few light small candles while closing the curtains and covering the windows with blankets to avoid detection by the Serbian forces.  "Just imagine that you have a city full of life and lights," said Isuf Hajrizi, the managing editor of Illyria, an Albanian-American newspaper based in the Bronx, who had been in telephone communication with people in Pristina. "Then picture that everything goes dark, with smoke and explosions and flames. It's like Dante's Inferno within 12 hours." Hajrizi last spoke to someone in Pristina on Friday, a family that was hiding in a basement and had a cellular phone. They told him that no one had slept or changed clothes for days. Food was running out. And they did not know what was happening even a block away, or what would happen if they heard the dreaded knock on the door from troops.  By several secondhand accounts, the troops who have stumbled on ethnic Albanian families in Pristina have typically given them as little as five minutes to leave. Some soldiers have demanded money as well, said Fred Abrahams, the Kosovo researcher at Human Rights Watch in New York, and some of those who got through by phone.  So those who are trying to remain have been in hiding or have moved from apartment to apartment, neighborhood to neighborhood. Inevitably, though, more and more people leave. The wait for a train ticket out of town is now two or three days, the reports say, even for those forced to leave by the Serbs. And Serbs are departing, too, on buses or trains destined for Belgrade or other parts of Serbia.  Information about Kosovo's other cities and towns remains even sketchier. Some rural areas appear to be wastelands, with destroyed crops, burning haystacks and unclaimed livestock wandering through the fields, said an Albanian-American, speaking on condition of anonymity, who talked on Saturday with a friend hiding in a rural area. Sulejman Gashi, a New York-based correspondent for a Kosovo newspaper now being published in Switzerland, spoke to relatives in Kline, a small town 32 miles from Pristina. They told him that they had been hiding for a few days last week when they were joined by some unwanted guests: a group of young Serbian soldiers who said they, too, were afraid of the war. So together, these strangers waited, Serbs and ethnic Albanians, united by paralysis, united by fear. That was the last, anyway, that Gashi had heard; he has since been unable to contact his relatives. "The situation is changing from hour to hour, minute to minute," said Elez Biberaj, chief of the Voice of America's Albanian service, in Washington, who after days of failure finally made contact yesterday with someone in Pristina -- someone who was leaving for Macedonia and whom he did not want to name. "She's under the impression that the police have gotten much nastier, and she sees no future there," he said. "People are scared to death."

Countless Refugee Accounts Give Details of Mass Killings (NY Times)
By JOHN KIFNER
KUKES, Albania
-- Refugees pouring into Albania from Kosovo are providing detailed firsthand accounts of mass killings and burned corpses in villages where Serbs were forcing out ethnic Albanians. Refugees at widely scattered places and times have given overlapping accounts to foreign journalists and relief workers of several mass killings, including a massacre on March 26 of about 100 people gathered together in the adjacent villages of Velika Krusa and Mala Krusa, known to Albanians as Kruse-E-Mahde and Kruse-E-Vogel. The refugees said that the victims had been killed with automatic weapons and that some bodies were later burned.  The dead will probably number at least in the "high hundreds," said Eugene O'Sullivan, chief of the observer team from the Organization for Cooperation and Security in Europe that is monitoring the refugee crisis at the border.  The reports of killing have been so frequent, and so repetitive in their detail, he said, that the European organization has brought in 60 specially trained investigators to interview refugees and keep records for possible war-crimes indictments.  The refugee flow continued unabated Monday, with the long miserable lines of sobbing people stretching some 40 miles back into Serbia.
By 7 p.m. Monday, 22,000 people had crossed the border, in addition to the 188,036 who had passed over the Morini crossing as of Sunday. Some had been walking for seven days from the area of Mitrovica, north of Pristina, the depopulated capital.  In the late afternoon, a 10-year-old boy, Dren Caka, who had been shot in the arm, crossed the border and was being treated at the Doctors of the World tent. He said he had been hiding with his family and others in the basement of their home in the city of Djakovica when the Serbs çame in and methodically shot several people in the head, then set the building on fire.  What is striking about the refugees is that they are largely women, children and old men. The young men, they say, are either hiding in the mountains or have been separated out by the Serbs and taken away to some unknown fate. While there is no way to verify independently the accounts of killings -- foreign journalists have been expelled from Kosovo -- their similarity suggested that they were credible. Earlier Serbian efforts to remove Muslims from parts of Bosnia were accompanied by numerous massacres. "When you keep hearing the same story over and over from different sources, you have to lend some credence," said Dorian Vienneau, a member of the observer team. "The sheer volume of reports leaves me to believe this is going on." Mishar Juareka said that in the village of Balenica, "They surrounded us. They killed some and captured some and took them away. They killed four children because their families did not have money to give to the police. We have seen the bodies of the children. They killed them with knives not guns." Two bombs were dropped on the village of Negovac, and it was shelled as well, said Skender Bici, 42. "There were at least 25 people killed from the houses that were destroyed," he said. "They threw gasoline over the bodies and burned them. There were other people killed but we only know what we saw in our district.
« Ndryshimi i fundit: 03-11-2004, 03:55:04 nga Gjumashi » E identifikuar
Zëri YT!
« Përgjigjja #3 më: 03-11-2004, 03:29:15 »
Citojeni

 E identifikuar
Gjumashi
« Përgjigjja #4 më: 03-11-2004, 03:57:54 »
Citojeni

Persons unaccounted for in connection with the crisis in Kosovo: AB to AZ

Name of the sought person    Sex    Date of birth    Place of birth    Father's name
ABAZI AVDI    M    24/04/1978    TICA/TICE    ABAZI HARADIN
ABAZI FLAMUR    M    --/--/1958    PRISTINA/PRISHTINE    ABAZI RAMADAN
ABAZI MARK    M    14/10/1962    RAMOC/RAMOC    ABAZI GJON
ABAZI PASHK    M    01/01/1959    DJAKOVICA/GJAKOVA    ABAZI GJON
ABAZI PJETER    M    26/03/1946    RAMOC/RAMOC    ABAZI MARK
ABDULLAHU SADIK    M    --/--/1972    PODUJEVO/PODUJEVE    ABDULLAHU SAHIT
ADEMAJ BEKIM    M    06/05/1981    SEREMET/SHEREMET    ADEMAJ MUHAREM
ADEMAJ HALIT    M    20/07/1959    RACAJ/RRACAJ    ADEMAJ SADRI
ADEMAJ SHEMSI    M    09/02/1961    RACAJ/RRACAJ    ADEMAJ BINAK
ADEMI ADEM    M    05/02/1948    OSLJANE/OSHLAN    ADEMI FAZLI
ADEMI BESIM    M    --/--/1972    OVCAREVO/ACAREVE    ADEMI RAMADAN
ADEMI BISLIM    M    --/--/1961    CERANJA/CERAJE    ADEMI BAJRAM
ADEMI EJUP    M    --/--/1944    STUTICA/SHTUTICE    ADEMI ZYMER
ADEMI HAMIT    M    04/04/1980    STUTICA/SHTUTICE    ADEMI ILAZ
ADEMI IBRAHIM    M    05/03/1948    STUTICA/SHTUTICE    ADEMI QERIM
ADEMI ISUF    M    03/08/1963    MOLIC/MOLLIQ    ADEMI AVDYL
ADEMI JETULLA    M    02/05/1984    STUTICA/SHTUTICE    ADEMI ILAZ
ADEMI MAZLLAM    M    28/12/1982    KOSARE/KOSHARE    ADEMI BAJRAM
ADEMI XHEVAT    M    --/--/1980    STUTICA/SHTUTICE    ADEMI SELIM
ADJANCIC DUSAN    M    --/--/1942    RASKOVO/RASKOVE    ADJANCIC SPIRO
ADJANCIC PERO    M    11/10/1970    RASKOVO/RASKOVE    ADJANCIC VELIBOR
ADJANCIC ZORAN    M    12/10/1968    PRISTINA/PRISHTINE    ADJANCIC MIROSLAV
ADZIC TOMISLAV    M    28/08/1939    KOLASIN    ADZIC DJIKAN
AGUSHI ARJETA    F    14/05/1973    GNJILANE/GJILAN    AGUSHI IRFAN
AGUSHI CEMALJ    M    15/06/1956    GNJILANE/GJILAN    AGUSHI JUSUF
AHMETAJ ABEDIN    M    13/03/1982    REZALA/RREZALLE    AHMETAJ NEZIR
AHMETAJ ADEM    M    --/--/1967    KORISA/KORISHE    AHMETAJ HAZIR
AHMETAJ EMINE    F    02/12/1968    GELJANCE/GILANC    DEVETAKU BAKI
AHMETAJ ISMET    M    --/--/1964    ZABLACE/ZABLACE    AHMETAJ MUSTAFE
AHMETAJ JETON    M    17/09/1974    ZABLACE/ZABLACE    AHMETAJ TAHIR
AHMETAJ LIRIDON    M    01/05/1982    DJAKOVICA/GJAKOVA    AHMETAJ CAUSH
AHMETAJ RAMADAN    M    --/--/1942    RADAVAC/RADAFC    AHMETAJ FAZLI
AHMETAJ RASIM    M    05/06/1962    RADAVAC/RADAFC    AHMETAJ SHABAN
AHMETAJ SHABAN    M    --/--/1930    RADAVAC/RADAFC    AHMETAJ MURSEL
AHMETAJ YMER    M    --/--/1930    GLODJANE/GLLOGJAN    AHMETAJ MIFTAR
AHMETGJEKAJ HAKI    M    23/03/1975    PEC/PEJA    AHMETGJEKAJ ABAZ
AHMETI AFRIM    M    --/--/1961    ZABELJ/ZABEL    AHMETI SELIM
AHMETI AHMET    M    --/--/1939    MOLIC/MOLLIQ    AHMETI RAMADAN
AHMETI AHMET    M    --/--/1945    BABAJ BOKS/BABAJ I BOKES    AHMETI MUSTAFE
AHMETI BLERIM    M    29/03/1980    BERJAH/BERJAHE    AHMETI HYSEN
AHMETI DEMIR    M    24/03/1961    RADISEVO/RADISHEVE    AHMETI SADRI
AHMETI ENVER    M    --/--/1958    PRISTINA/PRISHTINE    AHMETI REXHEP
AHMETI ENVER    M    --/--/1977    BISTRICA/BISTRICE    AHMETI REXHEP
AHMETI ESAD    M    13/02/1945    BENCUK/BEQUK    AHMET
AHMETI HASAN    M    --/--/1935    DOSEVAC/DASHEFC    AHMETI OSMAN
AHMETI HYSEN    M    25/06/1931    BERJAH/BERJAHE    AHMETI SADIK
AHMETI MALE    M    --/--/1936    NOVOKAZ/NIVOKAZ    AHMETI AVDYL
AHMETI SADRI    M    --/--/1965    KRALJANE/KRALANE    AHMETI AZEM
AHMETI SAFET    M    --/--/1985    REZALA/RREZALLE    AHMETI XHAFER
AHMETI SALI    M    --/--/----    PODUJEVO/PODUJEVE    AHMETI AJDIN
AHMETI TAFIL    M    --/--/1981    MAKRMALJ/MAKERMAL    AHMETI ISLAM
AHMETI VALBON    M    --/--/1970    ZABELJ/ZABEL    AHMETI QAZIM
AHMETI VESEL    M    --/--/1963    GODANCE/GODANC    AHMETI ISAK
AHMETOVSKI XHELADIN    M    05/03/1952    KUMANOVO    AHMETOVSKI FERAT
AJDINI HAJRIZ    M    20/07/1950    DOSEVAC/DASHEFC    AJDINI EJUP
AJDINI MUHAMET    M    --/--/1953    DOSEVAC/DASHEFC    AJDINI EJUP
AJDINI SHAQIR    M