From: "David Crockett Williams" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

From: Tom O'Connell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Check_Subject
Date: Wednesday, May 05, 1999 7:29 AM

Source: San Francisco Chronicle
PubDate: Wednesday, May 5, 1999
Page: A1 (Lead Story)
URL: http://www.sfgate.com/
LTE: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

KLA Linked To Enormous Heroin Trade
Police suspect drugs helped finance revolt
Frank Viviano, Chronicle Staff Writer

(Newshawk note: Frank Viviano is a Chronicle Staff Writer who seems to be
on permanent assignment in Eastern Europe, since long before the Kosovo
eruption. He has been the author of several probing "insider" type articles
and a few seris from the region over the pas couple of years. I did a quick
search of a few other papers and none have picked up this story yet;
certainly none seem to have given it the featured position it enjoys in
this mornings Chronicle)

Officers of the Kosovo Liberation Army and their backers,
according to law enforcement authorities in Western Europe and the
United States, are a major force in international organized crime, moving
staggering amounts of narcotics through an underworld network that
reaches into the heart of Europe.

In the words of a November 1997 statement issued by Interpol, the
international police agency, ``Kosovo Albanians hold the largest
share of the heroin market in Switzerland, in Austria, in Belgium,
in Germany, in Hungary, in the Czech Republic, in Norway and in
Sweden.''

That the Albanians of Kosovo are victims of a conscious, ethnic-
cleansing campaign set in motion by Yugoslav President Slobodan
Milosevic is clear. But the credentials of some who claim to
represent them are profoundly disturbing, say highly placed
sources on both sides of the Atlantic.

On March 25 -- the day after NATO's bombardment of Serb forces
began -- drug enforcement experts from the Hague-based European
Office of Police (EUROPOL), met in an emergency closed session
devoted to ``Kosovar Narcotics Trafficking Networks.''

EUROPOL is preparing an extensive report for European justice and
interior ministers on the KLA's role in heroin smuggling.
Independent investigations of the charges are also under way in
Sweden, Germany and Switzerland.

``We have intelligence leading us to believe that there could be a
connection between drug money and the Kosovo Liberation Army,''
Walter Kege, head of the drug enforcement unit in the Swedish
police intelligence service, told the London Times in late March.

As long as four years ago, U.S. officials were concerned about
alleged ties between narcotics syndicates and the People's
Movement of Kosovo, a dissident political organization founded in
1982 that is now the KLA's political wing.

A 1995 advisory by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration
warned of the possibility ``that certain members of the ethnic
Albanian community in the Serbian region of Kosovo have turned to
drug trafficking in order to finance their separatist
activities.''

If the drug-running allegations against the KLA are accurate, the
group could join a rogues' gallery of former U.S. allies whose
interests outside the battlefield brought deep embarrassment and
domestic political turmoil to Washington.

In 1944, the invading U.S. Army handed the reins of power in
Sicily to local ``anti-fascists'' who were in fact Mafia leaders.
During the next half century, American governments also turned a
blind eye to, or collaborated with, the narcotics operations of
Southeast Asian drug lords and Nicaraguan Contras who were allied
with the United States in Indochina and Central America.

In each case, the legacy of these partnerships ranged from global
expansion of the power wielded by criminal syndicates, to divisive
congressional inquiries at home and lasting suspicion of American
intentions overseas.

The involvement of ethnic Albanians in the drug trade is not
exclusively Kosovar. It includes members of Albanian communities
in Europe's three poorest countries or regions -- Kosovo,
Macedonia and Albania -- where the appeal of narcotics trafficking
is self-explanatory, even without a separatist war to fund.

The average 1997 monthly salary in all three communities was less
than $200. In Albania, it was less than $50.

According to the Paris-based Geopolitical Drug Watch, which
advises the governments of Britain and France on illegal narcotics
operations, one kilogram (2.2 pounds) of heroin costs $8,300 in
Albania, which lies at the western terminus of a ``Balkan Route''
that today accounts for up to 90 percent of the drug's exports to
Europe from Southeast Asia and Turkey.

Across the border from Albania in Greece, the same kilo of heroin
can be sold for $30,000, yielding an instant profit equal to nine
years' normal income in Macedonia and more than a third of a
century in Albania or prebombardment Kosovo.

The Balkan Route is a principal thoroughfare for an illicit drug
traffic worth $400 billion annually, according to Interpol.

Although only a small number of ethnic Albanian clans profit
directly from the trade, their activities have cast a dark shadow
on the entire Albanian world.

There is a growing tendency among foreign observers, says former
Albanian President Sali Berisha, ``to identify the criminal with
the honest, the vandal with the civilized, the mafiosi with the
nation.''

Those ethnic Albanians who have embraced the narcotics trade are
extraordinarily aggressive.

Albanian speakers comprise roughly 1 percent of Europe's 510
million people. In 1997, according to Interpol, they made up 14
percent of all European arrests for heroin trafficking.

The average quantity of heroin confiscated per arrest, among all
offenders, was less than two grams. Among Albanian-speakers, the
figure was 120 grams (4.2 ounces).

Until the war intervened, Kosovars were the acknowledged masters
of the trade, credited with shoving aside the Turkish gangs that
had long dominated narcotics trafficking along the Balkan Route,
and effectively directing the ethnic Albanian network.

Kosovar bosses ``orchestrated the traffic, regulated the rate and
set the prices,'' according to journalist Leonardo Coen, who
covers racketeering and organized crime in the Balkans for the
Italian daily La Repubblica.

``The Kosovars had a 10-year head start on their cousins across
the border, simply because their Yugoslav passports allowed them
to travel earlier and much more widely than someone from communist
Albania,'' said Michel Koutouzis, a senior researcher at
Geopolitical Drug Watch who is regarded as Europe's leading expert
on the Balkan Route.

``That allowed them to establish very efficient overseas networks
through the worldwide Albanian diaspora -- and in the process, to
forge ties with other underworld groups involved in the heroin
trade, such as Chinese triads in Vancouver and Vietnamese in
Australia,'' Koutouzis told The Chronicle.

On assignments in Kosovo and Macedonia between 1992 and 1996, a
Chronicle reporter frequently encountered groups of ethnic
Albanian men -- ostentatiously dressed in designer clothing and
driving luxury cars far beyond the normal means of their community
-- at restaurants in the Macedonian capital of Skopje and near the
Kosovo frontier.

The men were quite willing to speak about politics, confirming
that they were Kosovar, and asserting their determination to bring
down Milosevic. But when asked how they earned their livings, they
uniformly answered ``in business,'' declining to provide any
details.

The rise of Kosovar bosses to the pinnacle of the drug trade --
and the sudden, simultaneous appearance of the KLA -- dates from
1997, when the Berisha government fell in Albania amid nationwide
rioting over a collapsed financial pyramid scheme that destroyed
the savings of millions and wrecked the economy. In the unchecked
looting that followed, the nation's armories were emptied of
weapons, explosives and ammunition.

In June 1997, Berisha was succeeded as president by Rexhep
Mejdani, who unlike Berisha was openly sympathetic to a separatist
rebellion in Kosovo.

Last year, a NATO official in Brussels quoted by Radio Free Europe
cited intelligence findings of ``the wholesale transfer of weapons
to Kosovo'' in 1997, destabilizing the precarious balance between
ethnic Albanians and Serbs in the province and undercutting the
position of pacifist Kosovo leader Ibrahim Rugova in autonomy
negotiations with Belgrade.

A U.N. study found that at least 200,000 Kalashnikov automatic
assault weapons stolen from Albanian military armories wound up in
the KLA arsenal. So many, according to reliable sources, that KLA
operatives were themselves exporting guns to overseas black
markets at the start of 1999.

In effect, the KLA's armed insurgency, escalating at a time when
U.S. and Western European diplomats were seeking a peaceful
solution to the crisis, provided a pretext for Milosevic to press
for a nationalist solution to the Kosovo problem.

Then came the failed Rambouillet talks, the NATO bombing decision,
and with it what Koutouzis calls ``the militarization'' of the
Kosovar drug trade.

``Narcotics trafficking has been a permanent part of the Kosovo
picture for a long time. The question is where the profits go,''
Koutouzis said.

``When Rugova held sway and the object was a peaceful settlement,
the drug proceeds of Kosovo clans were at least invested in
growth, in things like better housing and health care. It was a
form of social taxation in a sense, and the more illegal the
activities, the more that their `businessmen' were expected to
pay.''

But with the outbreak of war, Koutouzis adds, ``the investment is
only in destruction -- and the KLA's first effort was to destroy
the influence of Rugova, and no one in the West did much to help
him.''

Nonetheless, NATO military officers and diplomats have always been
troubled by the murky origins and financing of the KLA, which
materialized for the first time in Kosovo on Nov. 28, 1997,
outfitted in expensive Swiss-manufactured uniforms and equipped
with the purloined Albanian Kalashnikovs.

The mistrust is reciprocated. According to Veton Surroi, the
widely respected editor of Kosovo's Albanian-language daily
newspaper Koha Ditore, U.S. negotiator Richard Holbrooke had a
Kalashnikov held to his head when he arrived for a meeting with
KLA officers during one of his shuttle missions to Kosovo.

As recently as February 25, U.S. Ambassador Chris Hill, another of
the negotiators, said, ``The KLA must understand that its members
have a future as members of political parties or local police
forces, but not in the continuation of armed struggle.''

The eruption of war changed almost everything. Since the bombing
campaign opened, NATO has had little alternative but to rely on
the KLA for intelligence. Its guerrilla units inside Kosovo are
the only eyewitness sources of information on Serb troop
movements.

Solid intelligence about the KLA itself is nearly impossible to
nail down. NATO estimates put its forces at 15,000. Avdija
Ramadom, the organization's official spokesman, claims that the
KLA has more than 50,000 men.

In addition to alleged drug receipts, the group is said to be
funded by a war tax of 3 percent imposed by the People's Movement
of Kosovo on the earnings of 500,000 ethnic Albanian emigrants in
Western Europe, a population that is soaring with the immense
exodus of refugees. Half of the prewar immigrants have settled in
Germany, according to the International Migration Organization,
and a third in Switzerland.

A single fund-raising evening in Switzerland earlier this year is
believed to have raised $7 million from ethnic Albanian
immigrants, much of it earmarked for the KLA struggle against
Serbia.

©1999 San Francisco Chronicle  Page A1

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