Content deleted Content added
fixed identity of actors |
No it is FRY, Belarus and Finland subdivide into regions too but we list the country the personnel represented. |
||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
* September 26, 1998, '''Golubovac Massacre''' - Serb Paramilitaries summarily killed thirteen men who were under the suspicion of being [[KLA]] insurgents. The men were detained at a compound in the village of Golubovac.<ref>[http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/country,,HRW,,SRB,,3ae6a837c,0.html A Week of Terror in Drenica: Humanitarian Law Violations in Kosovo]</ref> |
* September 26, 1998, '''Golubovac Massacre''' - Serb Paramilitaries summarily killed thirteen men who were under the suspicion of being [[KLA]] insurgents. The men were detained at a compound in the village of Golubovac.<ref>[http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/country,,HRW,,SRB,,3ae6a837c,0.html A Week of Terror in Drenica: Humanitarian Law Violations in Kosovo]</ref> |
||
* September 28, 1999, [[Gornje Obrinje massacre|Gornje Obrinje Massacre]] - After 15 Serb Soldiers were killed the previous day by sniper-fire coming from the village of Gornje Obrinje, Special Forces entered the village and executed all the men of fighting age (21 in total). |
* September 28, 1999, [[Gornje Obrinje massacre|Gornje Obrinje Massacre]] - After 15 Serb Soldiers were killed the previous day by sniper-fire coming from the village of Gornje Obrinje, Special Forces entered the village and executed all the men of fighting age (21 in total). |
||
* January 15, 1999 [[Račak massacre|Račak Massacre]] - A Serb Special Anti-Terrorism Unit killed 40-45 people in [[Račak]]. Three investigations carried out by [[Belarus]]ian, [[Finland|Finnish]] and [[ |
* January 15, 1999 [[Račak massacre|Račak Massacre]] - A Serb Special Anti-Terrorism Unit killed 40-45 people in [[Račak]]. Three investigations carried out by [[Belarus]]ian, [[Finland|Finnish]] and [[Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|Yugoslavian]]. The Belarus and Yugoslavian investigators found that those killed were not civilians. However, the Finnish investigators representing EU found that these killings were committed on civilians.<ref name="news.bbc.co.uk">{{cite news| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/298131.stm | work=BBC News | title=Racak killings 'crime against humanity' | date=March 17, 1999}}</ref> Most sources defined it as a massacre.<ref name="news.bbc.co.uk"/> |
||
* January 29, 1999, '''Rogovo Massacre''' — Serb police-officers executed 24 Albanians, supposedly [[Kosovo Liberation Army|KLA]] members.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/1999/01/30/world/serb-police-kill-24-albanians-in-kosovo.html?pagewanted=1 Serb Police Kill 24 Albanians in Kosovo]</ref><ref>[http://www.osce.org/item/17755.html?ch=513 Kosovo/Kosova: As Seen, As Told], "Part V: The Municipalities - Rogovo", OSCE, 1999</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/265410.stm New killings in Kosovo]</ref> |
* January 29, 1999, '''Rogovo Massacre''' — Serb police-officers executed 24 Albanians, supposedly [[Kosovo Liberation Army|KLA]] members.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/1999/01/30/world/serb-police-kill-24-albanians-in-kosovo.html?pagewanted=1 Serb Police Kill 24 Albanians in Kosovo]</ref><ref>[http://www.osce.org/item/17755.html?ch=513 Kosovo/Kosova: As Seen, As Told], "Part V: The Municipalities - Rogovo", OSCE, 1999</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/265410.stm New killings in Kosovo]</ref> |
||
* March 5, 1999, [[Attack on Prekaz]] - |
* March 5, 1999, [[Attack on Prekaz]] - Yugoslav soldiers raided the home of [[KLA]] leader [[Adem Jashari]] and assassinated him and his brother and killed around sixty members of his family after a gunfight that lasted 12 hours. |
||
* 25 March 1999, [[Massacre at Velika Kruša]] - 90 men were executed in the village of Velika Kruša. Massacres such as this were typical throughout 1999, as the Serb Special Forces attempted to decrease the number of recruits joining the Kosovo Liberation Army. |
* 25 March 1999, [[Massacre at Velika Kruša]] - 90 men were executed in the village of Velika Kruša. Massacres such as this were typical throughout 1999, as the Serb Special Forces attempted to decrease the number of recruits joining the Kosovo Liberation Army. |
||
* March 25, 1999, [[Bela Crkva massacre]] — Serb Police Officers executed more than 60 ethnic Albanians in Bela Crkva, including twenty members of the Popaj family and twenty-five members of the Zhuniqi family, on the grounds that they were suspected [[KLA]] members.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/354561.stm Milosevic Indictment]</ref><ref>[http://www.hrw.org/legacy/campaigns/kosovo98/timeline.shtml Kosovo War Crimes Chronology]</ref> |
* March 25, 1999, [[Bela Crkva massacre]] — Serb Police Officers executed more than 60 ethnic Albanians in Bela Crkva, including twenty members of the Popaj family and twenty-five members of the Zhuniqi family, on the grounds that they were suspected [[KLA]] members.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/354561.stm Milosevic Indictment]</ref><ref>[http://www.hrw.org/legacy/campaigns/kosovo98/timeline.shtml Kosovo War Crimes Chronology]</ref> |
||
* 26 March 1999, [[Suva Reka massacre]] - Members of the Berisha family were forced into their family-owned pizzeria, where two hand grenades were thrown. |
* 26 March 1999, [[Suva Reka massacre]] - Members of the Berisha family were forced into their family-owned pizzeria, where two hand grenades were thrown. Montenegrin police officers allegedly shot anyone who displayed any signs of life. The police officers then took all of the bodies and disposed of them in a mass grave, near an anti-terrorism facility in [[Batajnica]]. |
||
* March 28, 1999, [[Izbica massacre|Izbica Massacre]] - The Yugoslav Army shelled the village of Izbica. After the shelling killed over a hundred people, Serb Special Forces entered, demanded money from the refugees and told the women, the children and the elderly to go to [[Albania]]. After they left, the Special Forces lined about fifty men up against a wall and executed them with automatic weapons. |
* March 28, 1999, [[Izbica massacre|Izbica Massacre]] - The Yugoslav Army shelled the village of Izbica. After the shelling killed over a hundred people, Serb Special Forces entered, demanded money from the refugees and told the women, the children and the elderly to go to [[Albania]]. After they left, the Special Forces lined about fifty men up against a wall and executed them with automatic weapons. |
||
* March 31, 1999, '''Ljubižda Massacre''' — security forces reportedly shot 14 men in the village of Ljubižda, northwest of Prizren.<ref>[http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/EUR70/080/1999/en/67793402-e1a6-11dd-9f8a-a19d21ac1fa4/eur700801999en.html Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Kosovo): After tragedy, justice?]</ref> |
* March 31, 1999, '''Ljubižda Massacre''' — security forces reportedly shot 14 men in the village of Ljubižda, northwest of Prizren.<ref>[http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/EUR70/080/1999/en/67793402-e1a6-11dd-9f8a-a19d21ac1fa4/eur700801999en.html Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Kosovo): After tragedy, justice?]</ref> |
||
* March 31, 1999, '''Pusto Selo Massacre''' — Serb Paramilitaries lined 106 ethnic Albanian men against a wall and executed them in Pusto Selo, near [[Orahovac]]. The men were allegedely [[KLA]] sympathizers.<ref>[http://www.hrw.org/legacy/reports/2001/kosovo/undword-09.htm Human Right Watch: Orahovac (Rrahovec) Municipality]</ref> |
* March 31, 1999, '''Pusto Selo Massacre''' — Serb Paramilitaries lined 106 ethnic Albanian men against a wall and executed them in Pusto Selo, near [[Orahovac]]. The men were allegedely [[KLA]] sympathizers.<ref>[http://www.hrw.org/legacy/reports/2001/kosovo/undword-09.htm Human Right Watch: Orahovac (Rrahovec) Municipality]</ref> |
||
* April 5, 1999, '''Rezala Massacre''' — Serb Police Officers allegedly entered the Albanian village of Rezala and gunned down at least 80 villagers suspected of harbouring [[KLA]] guerillas.<ref name="Drenica Region">[http://www.hrw.org/legacy/reports/2001/kosovo/undword-04.htm Human Right Watch: Drenica Region]</ref> |
* April 5, 1999, '''Rezala Massacre''' — Serb Police Officers allegedly entered the Albanian village of Rezala and gunned down at least 80 villagers suspected of harbouring [[KLA]] guerillas.<ref name="Drenica Region">[http://www.hrw.org/legacy/reports/2001/kosovo/undword-04.htm Human Right Watch: Drenica Region]</ref> |
||
* April 17, 1999, '''Poklek Massacre''' — Serb Special Police forced at least 47 people into one room and opened fire. 23 children under the age of fifteen died in the operation.<ref name="Drenica Region"/> |
* April 17, 1999, '''Poklek Massacre''' — A Montenegrin Unit of the Serb Special Police forced at least 47 people into one room and opened fire. 23 children under the age of fifteen died in the operation.<ref name="Drenica Region"/> |
||
* April 17, 1999, '''Ćikatovo massacre''' — Serb Paramilitaries killed twenty-four men from the Morina family that were suspected of being [[KLA]] members.<ref name="Drenica Region"/> |
* April 17, 1999, '''Ćikatovo massacre''' — Serb Paramilitaries killed twenty-four men from the Morina family that were suspected of being [[KLA]] members.<ref name="Drenica Region"/> |
||
* April 27, 1999, [[Meja Massacre]] - Serb Police and Paramilitary forces massacred at least 300 Albanian men in the village of Meja, in Djakovica municipality. On the same day, in the nearby village of Korenica 13 Albanian men were killed and their bodies burned. Another sixty-seven people from Korenica remain missing, as well as fifty-three other villagers from the surrounding area who were seeking refuge in Korenica.<ref>[http://www.hrw.org/legacy/reports/2001/kosovo/undword-06.htm Human Right Watch: Djakovica (Gjakove) Municipality]</ref> |
* April 27, 1999, [[Meja Massacre]] - Serb Police and Paramilitary forces massacred at least 300 Albanian men in the village of Meja, in Djakovica municipality. On the same day, in the nearby village of Korenica 13 Albanian men were killed and their bodies burned. Another sixty-seven people from Korenica remain missing, as well as fifty-three other villagers from the surrounding area who were seeking refuge in Korenica.<ref>[http://www.hrw.org/legacy/reports/2001/kosovo/undword-06.htm Human Right Watch: Djakovica (Gjakove) Municipality]</ref> |
||
Line 39: | Line 39: | ||
*[[Panda Bar incident|Panda Bar Massacre]] in 1998 – 6 Kosovo Serb teenagers were killed in a café in Peć, by unknown gunmen .<ref>[http://www.hrw.org/legacy/reports/2001/kosovo/Po_naredjenju.pdf Po naređenju: ratni zločini na Kosovu] (Human Right Watch)</ref> |
*[[Panda Bar incident|Panda Bar Massacre]] in 1998 – 6 Kosovo Serb teenagers were killed in a café in Peć, by unknown gunmen .<ref>[http://www.hrw.org/legacy/reports/2001/kosovo/Po_naredjenju.pdf Po naređenju: ratni zločini na Kosovu] (Human Right Watch)</ref> |
||
<ref>[http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/holhill2.htm Round-table discussion with representatives of the Serbian independent media, Belgrade, Serbia, December 15, 1998]</ref><ref>[http://web.ukonline.co.uk/pbrooke/p&t/Balkans/dmonkosovo/200010 Kosovo: the road to war]</ref> |
<ref>[http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/holhill2.htm Round-table discussion with representatives of the Serbian independent media, Belgrade, Serbia, December 15, 1998]</ref><ref>[http://web.ukonline.co.uk/pbrooke/p&t/Balkans/dmonkosovo/200010 Kosovo: the road to war]</ref> |
||
* September 1998, [[Lake Radonjić massacre|Massacre at Lake Radonjić]] - |
* September 1998, [[Lake Radonjić massacre|Massacre at Lake Radonjić]] - Yugoslavian authorities found 34 bodies in a mass-grave at Lake Radonjić near Glodjane (Gllogjan). These bodies included ethnic Albanians, Roma and Serbs.<ref name="balkanwitness.glypx.com"/><ref name="Human Rights Watch"/> This massacre is seen as the main cause of the Serb Special Forces' crackdown on the [[Kosovo Liberation Army|KLA]].<ref>[http://www.hrw.org/reports/2001/kosovo/undword.htm Human Rights Watch report]</ref> |
||
* 1999 - 2000, In 2008, Carla Del Ponte published a book in which she alleged that, after the end of the war in 1999, Kosovo Albanians were smuggling organs of between 100 and 300 Serbs and other minorities from the province to Albania.[88] The ICTY and the Serbian War Crimes Tribunal are currently investigating these allegations, as numerous witnesses and new materials have recently emerged.<ref>[http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120812796372611429.html?mod=googlenews_wsj Horrors Alleged in Kosovo]</ref><ref>[http://www.lefigaro.fr/flash-actu/2008/04/16/01011-20080416FILWWW00481-trafic-d-organeskosovo-aucune-trace.php Trafic d'organes/Kosovo: "aucune trace"]</ref> |
* 1999 - 2000, In 2008, Carla Del Ponte published a book in which she alleged that, after the end of the war in 1999, Kosovo Albanians were smuggling organs of between 100 and 300 Serbs and other minorities from the province to Albania.[88] The ICTY and the Serbian War Crimes Tribunal are currently investigating these allegations, as numerous witnesses and new materials have recently emerged.<ref>[http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120812796372611429.html?mod=googlenews_wsj Horrors Alleged in Kosovo]</ref><ref>[http://www.lefigaro.fr/flash-actu/2008/04/16/01011-20080416FILWWW00481-trafic-d-organeskosovo-aucune-trace.php Trafic d'organes/Kosovo: "aucune trace"]</ref> |
||
*Responding to Del Ponte's allegation, the head of the war crimes unit of EULEX (the European Law and Justice Mission in Kosovo), Matti Raatikainen, claimed "The fact is that there is no evidence whatsoever in this case, no bodies. No witnesses. All the reports and media attention to this issue have not been helpful to us. In fact they have not been helpful to anyone."<ref name="bbc.co.uk">{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10166800|title=End of the road for Kosovo Organ Claims?|date=27 May 2010|publisher=BBC|accessdate=1 February 2013}}</ref> He described these allegations as a "distraction" that prevented the war crimes unit from finding the remains of close to 2,000 individuals of Serb, Albanian, and Roma ethnicity still missing in the conflict.<ref name="bbc.co.uk"/> |
*Responding to Del Ponte's allegation, the head of the war crimes unit of EULEX (the European Law and Justice Mission in Kosovo), Matti Raatikainen, claimed "The fact is that there is no evidence whatsoever in this case, no bodies. No witnesses. All the reports and media attention to this issue have not been helpful to us. In fact they have not been helpful to anyone."<ref name="bbc.co.uk">{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10166800|title=End of the road for Kosovo Organ Claims?|date=27 May 2010|publisher=BBC|accessdate=1 February 2013}}</ref> He described these allegations as a "distraction" that prevented the war crimes unit from finding the remains of close to 2,000 individuals of Serb, Albanian, and Roma ethnicity still missing in the conflict.<ref name="bbc.co.uk"/> |
Revision as of 15:07, 1 April 2013
Albanian victims
Incomplete list of massacres by Serb forces in the Kosovo War, listed chronologically:
- February 28, 1998, Likošane Massacre — Serb Special Police murdered 14 members of the Ahmeti family.[1]
- February 28 and March 1, 1998, Cirez Massacre — Serb Paramilitaries executed several members of the Sejdiu family.[2][3]
- April 1, 1999, Ljubenic Massacre — Serb Police Officers killed at least 66 men[4]
- September 26, 1998, Golubovac Massacre - Serb Paramilitaries summarily killed thirteen men who were under the suspicion of being KLA insurgents. The men were detained at a compound in the village of Golubovac.[5]
- September 28, 1999, Gornje Obrinje Massacre - After 15 Serb Soldiers were killed the previous day by sniper-fire coming from the village of Gornje Obrinje, Special Forces entered the village and executed all the men of fighting age (21 in total).
- January 15, 1999 Račak Massacre - A Serb Special Anti-Terrorism Unit killed 40-45 people in Račak. Three investigations carried out by Belarusian, Finnish and Yugoslavian. The Belarus and Yugoslavian investigators found that those killed were not civilians. However, the Finnish investigators representing EU found that these killings were committed on civilians.[6] Most sources defined it as a massacre.[6]
- January 29, 1999, Rogovo Massacre — Serb police-officers executed 24 Albanians, supposedly KLA members.[7][8][9]
- March 5, 1999, Attack on Prekaz - Yugoslav soldiers raided the home of KLA leader Adem Jashari and assassinated him and his brother and killed around sixty members of his family after a gunfight that lasted 12 hours.
- 25 March 1999, Massacre at Velika Kruša - 90 men were executed in the village of Velika Kruša. Massacres such as this were typical throughout 1999, as the Serb Special Forces attempted to decrease the number of recruits joining the Kosovo Liberation Army.
- March 25, 1999, Bela Crkva massacre — Serb Police Officers executed more than 60 ethnic Albanians in Bela Crkva, including twenty members of the Popaj family and twenty-five members of the Zhuniqi family, on the grounds that they were suspected KLA members.[10][11]
- 26 March 1999, Suva Reka massacre - Members of the Berisha family were forced into their family-owned pizzeria, where two hand grenades were thrown. Montenegrin police officers allegedly shot anyone who displayed any signs of life. The police officers then took all of the bodies and disposed of them in a mass grave, near an anti-terrorism facility in Batajnica.
- March 28, 1999, Izbica Massacre - The Yugoslav Army shelled the village of Izbica. After the shelling killed over a hundred people, Serb Special Forces entered, demanded money from the refugees and told the women, the children and the elderly to go to Albania. After they left, the Special Forces lined about fifty men up against a wall and executed them with automatic weapons.
- March 31, 1999, Ljubižda Massacre — security forces reportedly shot 14 men in the village of Ljubižda, northwest of Prizren.[12]
- March 31, 1999, Pusto Selo Massacre — Serb Paramilitaries lined 106 ethnic Albanian men against a wall and executed them in Pusto Selo, near Orahovac. The men were allegedely KLA sympathizers.[13]
- April 5, 1999, Rezala Massacre — Serb Police Officers allegedly entered the Albanian village of Rezala and gunned down at least 80 villagers suspected of harbouring KLA guerillas.[14]
- April 17, 1999, Poklek Massacre — A Montenegrin Unit of the Serb Special Police forced at least 47 people into one room and opened fire. 23 children under the age of fifteen died in the operation.[14]
- April 17, 1999, Ćikatovo massacre — Serb Paramilitaries killed twenty-four men from the Morina family that were suspected of being KLA members.[14]
- April 27, 1999, Meja Massacre - Serb Police and Paramilitary forces massacred at least 300 Albanian men in the village of Meja, in Djakovica municipality. On the same day, in the nearby village of Korenica 13 Albanian men were killed and their bodies burned. Another sixty-seven people from Korenica remain missing, as well as fifty-three other villagers from the surrounding area who were seeking refuge in Korenica.[15]
- May 2–3, 1999, Vučitrn Massacre - Albanian refugees fleeing the fighting that was occurring between the Serb Army and the KLA were cornered by the Serb Special Forces (who suspected that some KLA members were fleeing the fighting with the refugees). The Special Forces picked out about 120 men who they suspected of being KLA deserters and sprayed them with bullets and later hid their bodies in a mass-grave near Gornja Sudimlja.
- May 14, 1999, Cuska Massacre — Serb police and Paramilitary Forces gathered villagers into 3 houses, gunned them down with automatic weapons and burned down the houses, killing all 41. .[16]
- May 22, 1999, Dubrava Prison Massacre — Serbian prison guards killed more than 70 Albanian prisoners.[17]
- May 26, 1999, Prizren Massacre - Serb Volunteers killed thirty-four people and burned over 100 homes in the Tusus neighborhood of the city of Prizren, in an attempt to eradicate a dozen KLA insurgents.[18]
Serbian victims
Incomplete list of massacres committed by Albanian Forces in the Kosovo War:
- Gnjilane massacre – 80 Serbs were discovered in mass graves having been killed by a group of Albanian militants.[19]
- Orahovac Massacre - More than 100 Serbian and Roma civilians kidnapped and placed in prison camps, 47 were executed.[20]
- Staro Gračko massacre – 14 Serbian farmers were murdered by the KLA.[21]
- Glodjane massacre – 37 bodies were found in mass graves having been massacred by the KLA.[22][23][24][25] In March 2005 the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia charged three Kosovar Albanians with 30 murders relating to bodies found near Glodjane.[26] Of the bodies recovered from Lake Radonjic, the Court found that KLA fighters were responsible for seven murders; all of whom were ethnic Albanians.[27]
- Klećka massacre – Serbian government reported that 22 kidnapped Serbs were killed by the KLA.[21][28]
- Ugljare Massacre – 15 Serbs were murdered by KLA insurgents.[21]
- Panda Bar Massacre in 1998 – 6 Kosovo Serb teenagers were killed in a café in Peć, by unknown gunmen .[29]
- September 1998, Massacre at Lake Radonjić - Yugoslavian authorities found 34 bodies in a mass-grave at Lake Radonjić near Glodjane (Gllogjan). These bodies included ethnic Albanians, Roma and Serbs.[23][24] This massacre is seen as the main cause of the Serb Special Forces' crackdown on the KLA.[32]
- 1999 - 2000, In 2008, Carla Del Ponte published a book in which she alleged that, after the end of the war in 1999, Kosovo Albanians were smuggling organs of between 100 and 300 Serbs and other minorities from the province to Albania.[88] The ICTY and the Serbian War Crimes Tribunal are currently investigating these allegations, as numerous witnesses and new materials have recently emerged.[33][34]
- Responding to Del Ponte's allegation, the head of the war crimes unit of EULEX (the European Law and Justice Mission in Kosovo), Matti Raatikainen, claimed "The fact is that there is no evidence whatsoever in this case, no bodies. No witnesses. All the reports and media attention to this issue have not been helpful to us. In fact they have not been helpful to anyone."[35] He described these allegations as a "distraction" that prevented the war crimes unit from finding the remains of close to 2,000 individuals of Serb, Albanian, and Roma ethnicity still missing in the conflict.[35]
See also
References
- ^ Natasa Kandic, The disturbing truth
- ^ Drenica Region Massacres (Feb-March 1998)
- ^ Milosevic trial
- ^ KOSOVO / KOSOVA As Seen, As Told
- ^ A Week of Terror in Drenica: Humanitarian Law Violations in Kosovo
- ^ a b "Racak killings 'crime against humanity'". BBC News. March 17, 1999.
- ^ Serb Police Kill 24 Albanians in Kosovo
- ^ Kosovo/Kosova: As Seen, As Told, "Part V: The Municipalities - Rogovo", OSCE, 1999
- ^ New killings in Kosovo
- ^ Milosevic Indictment
- ^ Kosovo War Crimes Chronology
- ^ Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Kosovo): After tragedy, justice?
- ^ Human Right Watch: Orahovac (Rrahovec) Municipality
- ^ a b c Human Right Watch: Drenica Region
- ^ Human Right Watch: Djakovica (Gjakove) Municipality
- ^ Qyshk victims
- ^ Under orders: war crimes in Kosovo
- ^ Human Right Watch: Prizren Municipality
- ^ News – Ex-KLAs sent to prison for 101 years. B92. Retrieved on 2011-04-30.
- ^ http://www.b92.net/eng/news/crimes-article.php?yyyy=2011&mm=07&dd=18&nav_id=75498
- ^ a b c United Nations (22 February 2002). Yearbook of the United Nations 1999. United Nations Publications. pp. 367–. ISBN 978-92-1-100856-2. Retrieved 30 April 2011.
- ^ Heike Krieger (2001). The Kosovo conflict and international law: an analytical documentation 1974–1999. Cambridge University Press. pp. 38–. ISBN 978-0-521-80071-6. Retrieved 30 April 2011.
- ^ a b http://balkanwitness.glypx.com/Racak-FET-summary2.htm
- ^ a b Human Rights Watch. World Events 1999. Retrieved 5 February 2013.
- ^ "Fourth Revised Public Indictment Against Ramush Haradinaj et al para: 47-48". U.N. 16 October 2008. Retrieved 5 February 2013.
- ^ "Trial Chamber Judgment Summary pages 3-4". United Nations. 3 April 2008. Retrieved 1 February 2013.
- ^ "Trial Chamber Judgment Summary page 4". United Nations. 3 April 2008. Retrieved 1 February 2013.
- ^ KLECKA MASSACRE – kosovo and metohija. Members.fortunecity.com (1998-08-27). Retrieved on 2011-04-30.
- ^ Po naređenju: ratni zločini na Kosovu (Human Right Watch)
- ^ Round-table discussion with representatives of the Serbian independent media, Belgrade, Serbia, December 15, 1998
- ^ Kosovo: the road to war
- ^ Human Rights Watch report
- ^ Horrors Alleged in Kosovo
- ^ Trafic d'organes/Kosovo: "aucune trace"
- ^ a b "End of the road for Kosovo Organ Claims?". BBC. 27 May 2010. Retrieved 1 February 2013.
External links
- OSCE: Kosovo/Kosova - As Seen, As Told, 1999
- Under Orders: War Crimes in Kosovo (Human Right Watch)
- ICTY: Indictment of Milutinović et al., "Kosovo", September 5 2002
- Report of the UN Secretary-General, January 31, 1999
- Photographic Evidence of Kosovo Genocide and Conflict
- SERBIAN MASSACRES BEFORE NATO AIRSTRIKES
- Kosovo Genocide: Massacres
- The Kosovo Cover-Up
- Kosovo massacre trial
- Judgment in the Vlastimir Djorjevic case, February 23, 2011