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Nicholas Camerota spotted this on the Guardian Unlimited site and thought you should 
see it.

To see this story with its related links on the Guardian Unlimited site, go to 
http://www.guardian.co.uk

Nato gave us this ethnic cleansing
The Macedonian war is a fight about borders, not human rights
Special report: Macedonia
Milcho Manchevski in Skopje
Tuesday August 14 2001
The Guardian


The good guys of yesteryear have become the bad guys in Macedonia. Reports from the 
Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe, US state department and UN last 
week all point to the Albanian separatists fighting here as perpetrators of ethnic 
cleansing directed at the Macedonian population. 

This comes as no surprise to Balkan-watchers who have been following the evolving 
tragedy in the country. During the 10 years of fighting in what was once Yugoslavia, 
Macedonia managed to remain unscathed, without help from the international community. 
After tense negotiations, the Yugoslav army left peacefully, an admirable effort 
credited mainly to the first Macedonian president, Kiro Gligorov. There was tension - 
Gligorov himself survived an assassination attempt - but no fighting.  

The government and the people were repeatedly applauded by the international community 
for their efforts in creating and maintaining a multi-ethnic society. Parties 
representing ethnic minorities sat in parliament. Albanian parties were coalition 
partners in all governments. Today six out of 17 government ministers are ethnic 
Albanians, the parliamentary vice-president is Albanian and so are several 
ambassadors. There are primary and secondary schools and colleges teaching in 
Albanian; an Albanian university is about to open. There are Albanian TV stations, 
theatres, newspapers. Why then the recent ethnic violence?  

Albanian militants claim that they are fighting for human rights. This is a mantra 
which has proved to be a winning argument in the past. However, this time it is a 
front for an armed redrawing of the borders. The occupation of territory; abduction 
and murder of civilians; threats to bomb the parliament building in Skopje; cutting 
off water supplies to Prilep; and the ethnic cleansing perpetrated on the majority 
Macedonians (a minority in the area of the conflict) all raise the question: does one 
fight for language recognition with mortar fire and snipers?  

The "ethnic cleansers", the NLA, are mainly old KLA soldiers who fought in Kosovo 
alongside Nato. Most of their arms and fighters come across the border from 
Nato-administered Kosovo. The UN security council last week requested that KFor and 
UNMIK (the UN's Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo) patrol the porous border 
more vigilantly.  

American, EU and Nato diplomats have brokered a peace agreement, which centres on a 
better guarantee of the Albanians' minority rights, as a pre-requisite for 
disarmament. This misses the point: the radical Albanians are fighting for territory.  
They are doing precisely what many observers have been warning against for years - 
escalating the violence until the average citizen is radicalised.  

Even though diplomats insist they will not negotiate with the NLA, the west is, de 
facto, legitimising killing in the name of a language dispute. Meanwhile, this fragile 
and impoverished country - the same country whichwas the primary base for Nato's 
operation against Milosevic's Yugoslavia, continues to perform that role for 
peacekeeping in Kosovo (much at its own peril) and which took 350,000 Kosovan refugees 
- is being ripped apart under the onslaught of gunmen armed and trained by Nato.  

Macedonia is collateral damage of Nato's involvement in the Balkans. The US and its 
allies consider it too risky to try to disarm the KLA (or NLA), even though this was 
an explicit responsibility of their Kosovo mandate. Last year's disarmament of the KLA 
was largely symbolic. Body bags are not sexy, so Nato chose to let the militants keep 
their weapons.   

Nato's Kosovo escapade did much more than arm and train the militants. It escalated 
the conflict. The psychological effect of the entire world siding with the Great Cause 
(as Albanian extremists see it) has given a boost to their armed secessionist 
struggle. Ethnic cleansing and occupying territories is an advanced step in redrawing 
borders. The last 10 years in Yugoslavia have taught us what this leads to.  

The international community cannot stop the bloodshed by hypocritical appeals to "both 
sides". Nato, EU and the US applied immense pressure on democratic Macedonia not to 
defend itself. Now, the aggression and insurrection have got out of hand. As a result 
of the "peace process," Macedonia is on its way to federalisation and disintegration.  

The NLA must abandon its armed aggression and insurrection before there are more 
political talks. The US has a moral obligation to stop them from turning Macedonia 
into another Afghanistan or Cambodia. As we learned in Bosnia, leaving the 
ethnic-cleansers unchecked causes more trouble down the line.  

Milcho Manchevski wrote and directed the award-winning film, Before the Rain. His next 
film, Dust, will open at the Venice film festival in September  

Copyright Guardian Newspapers Limited

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