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UN, NATO permitted Kosovo rampage.


In Serbia's Kosovo province last March, 19 people were killed, 4,100 were left homeless, and at least 550 homes and 27 Orthodox Christian churches were set to the torch as a result of riots stoked by the terrorist Kosovo Liberation Army The Kosovo Liberation Army or KLA (Albanian: Ushtria Çlirimtare e Kosovës or UÇK) was an ethnic Albanian paramilitary extremist group which sought independence for the province of Kosovo from Yugoslavia and Serbia in the late 1990s.  (KLA KLA Kosovo Liberation Army
KLA Key Learning Area (NSW Department of Education)
KLA Kansas Livestock Association (Topeka, KS)
KLA Kentucky Library Association
KLA Kansas Library Association
). A report issued in late July by Human Rights Watch accused UN and NATO NATO: see North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
NATO
 in full North Atlantic Treaty Organization

International military alliance created to defend western Europe against a possible Soviet invasion.
 peacekeepers, stationed in Kosovo for the supposed purpose of maintaining order, of passively abetting a·bet  
tr.v. a·bet·ted, a·bet·ting, a·bets
1. To approve, encourage, and support (an action or a plan of action); urge and help on.

2.
 the murderous rampage.

"The report, based on interviews with officials and victims, describes how, time after time, heavily armed soldiers of the NATO-led K-For [the UN's Kosovo Force] stayed in their barracks bar·rack 1  
tr.v. bar·racked, bar·rack·ing, bar·racks
To house (soldiers, for example) in quarters.

n.
1. A building or group of buildings used to house military personnel.
 as Serb homes were burnt and looted," summarized the July 27 London Independent. "Relief, when it did arrive, was often too little too late, leading to a new status quo [Latin, The existing state of things at any given date.] Status quo ante bellum means the state of things before the war. The status quo to be preserved by a preliminary injunction is the last actual, peaceable, uncontested status which preceded the pending controversy.  in which displaced communities found it impossible to return home."

"In the village of Svinjare, a mob of armed Albanians marched past the main French K-For base before burning all of the 137 Serb homes," continued the press account. "The NATO troops stayed in their barracks watching buildings just a few hundred meters from their base go up in flames. In nearby Vicitrn, French K-For soldiers failed to intervene while Albanian gangs set fire to 69 Ashkali [Albanian-speaking Gypsies] homes, just 10 minutes' drive from the military base. At Prizren, in the southeast, German K-For troops failed to protect the Serb population and the historic Orthodox churches and monasteries despite repeated and frantic calls for assistance from German UN police in the town. The entire village of Belo Polje was burnt to the ground by the mob. This time it was Italian K-For troops who locked the gates of an adjacent base." When Serb civilians came under sniper fire from Albanian thugs in Pristina, Kosovo's capital, "it took K-For and UN police more than six hours to come to their aid."

The riots were fueled by rumors--demonstrated to be utterly false--that a gang of Serbs with dogs had driven three Albanian boys into a river, where they drowned. But the actual precipitating event, notes the Independent, was "a march by veterans of the disbanded Kosovo Liberation Army protesting at the arrest of former KLA leaders on war crimes charges."

The KLA, as previously documented in these pages (see "Diving into the Kosovo Quagmire" in our March 15, 1999 issue), was a heroin-peddling terrorist group organized by Maoist Albanian radicals and supported by Osama bin Laden Osama bin Laden: see bin Laden, Osama. . Following NATO's 78-day bombing of Serbia in 1999, the UN occupied Kosovo and appointed numerous KLA veterans to its government. While the KLA was "disbanded," its cadres formed the nucleus of the Kosovo Protection Corps The Kosovo Protection Corps (Albanian: Trupat e Mbrojtjes së Kosovës) is a civilian emergency services organization in Kosovo, a province of Serbia under administration by the United Nations. , the UN-appointed police force.
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Title Annotation:united nations; North Atlantic Treaty Organization
Publication:The New American
Date:Aug 23, 2004
Words:447
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