HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
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[The joke is below. The quiz question is this: For how
many years has NATO pledged to eliminate ethnic and
religious-based murders, widespread eviction and
cleansing of entire communities, abduction and
exploitation of prostitutes including child victims,
Europe's major heroin and other drug trafficking hub,
gun-running and the export of terrorist attacks on
neighboring civilian populations, the wholesale
destruction of churches, libraries, monasteries and
convents in Kosovo?
A bonus question: For how many more years will it
promise to do the same?]




Voice of America
March 12, 2002 


NATO Pledges Kosovo Crime Crackdown
Roger Wilkison
Brussels
11 Mar 2002 18:22 UTC
  

NATO has pledged to crack down on organized crime in
Kosovo, which the alliance fears is destabilizing the
internationally-run Yugoslav province. NATO says it
plans to work more closely with the United Nations and
local police units to neutralize criminal gangs. 

NATO Secretary General George Robertson says the
alliance wants to respond robustly to the activities
of criminal groups, which have made Kosovo a center
for drug smuggling, arms contraband and the
trafficking of human beings. Mr. Robertson says such
gangs are stealing Kosovo's future from its people and
must be rooted out. 

The Secretary-General met at NATO headquarters Monday
with Michael Steiner, the new U.N. administrator for
Kosovo. Mr. Steiner later briefed European Union
foreign ministers on the situation in Kosovo. He also
tried to drum up international support for the
province at a time when world attention has shifted
away from the Balkans to such places as the Middle
East and Afghanistan. 

A NATO official says the alliance is concerned that
the widespread presence of organized criminal gangs in
Kosovo is undermining progress made in the province
since the U.N. and NATO took charge of the
administration there nearly three years ago. But he
says too tough a crackdown on criminals might cause a
backlash since several ethnic Albanian politicians are
suspected of being linked to the gangs. 

While the international military presence in Kosovo
has been reduced, Mr. Robertson says that there has
been no slackening of NATO's commitment to make the
province safe for its people. 

Mr. Steiner says he approves an eventual troop
reduction but advises against a sudden withdrawal of
forces. 

Last week, Kosovo's parliament elected moderate
ethnic-Albanian leader Ibrahim Rugova as its first
president as part of a power-sharing deal among the
province's three major ethnic Albanian parties. But
NATO officials say the province is still unstable and
tense. 

One source of instability is widespread unemployment,
believed to be as high as 50 percent. 

 


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