HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------




  The usual old line. 

  Fact: during Milosevic's reign, state sponsored language 
programs and newspapers catered to the needs of every ethnic 
minority group living in  Serbia ( I'm not sure about the situation 
today under the "leadership" of the DOS and Djinkic thugs). 
Needless to say, there is an apparent contradiction that perhaps 
you enlightented friend might care to explain between his 
statement below and that of said stubborn fact?!

Fact number 2: under NATO's control of Kosovo (nominally, "the 
UN's"), just about every last ethnic group has been purged and/or 
murdered by "former" KLA thugs. Might your enlightened friend 
care to also explain this apparent contradiction with his statement 
below?!




To:                     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From:                   Nancy Hey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:                Re: hate mail [WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK]
Date sent:              Sat, 21 Sep 2002 21:14:29 -0400
Send reply to:          [EMAIL PROTECTED]

> HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
> ---------------------------
> 
> Then, he submitted this response to
> "Kosovo: The Russians Are Coming! The Russians Are Going..."
> on Country Joe MacDonald's crisis messgae board:
> 
> Posted by Indy (139.134.64.153) on September 19, 2002 at 18:02:56:
> 
> In Reply to: Another article about Kosovo posted by Nancy Hey on September 17, 2002 
>at
> 18:52:00:
> 
> Wow, Law and order in Kosovo?? A Serbian Law and Order no doubt. One with; Serb 
>dominated
> schools denying the Kosovars
> their language, a Serb exclusive police force/army keeping it all together. In fact 
>is seems
> everything was Serb dominated, except
> poverty that is,.....which was....and primarily is still Kosovan.
> 
> This was the case....despite the Serbs making up less that 20% of the population
> 
> The Serbs have played very good victims in the last few years.....because, they have 
>always
> believed themselves to be victims.
> Perhaps a bit of forward thinking, which veers from medieval warring is a better 
>option in the
> world today. Otherwise, well,
> NATO peacekeepers will be in their territories for a long time to come.
> 
> Also......if NATO are removed now.......there will be absolute mayhem....you 
>know.....of the
> medieval type......from both sides.
> 
> :
> : HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
> : ---------------------------
> :
> : Rosbalt, 13/09/2002, 10:09
> 
> : Kosovo: The Russians Are Coming! The Russians Are Going...
> 
> : The Russians are Coming! Today, in Kosovo, this is said in a number of ways.
> : The Albanians, for instance, say it with cautious hatred while the Serbs yell it
> delightedly.
> : The northern part of Kosovo is among very few remaining places in the troubled
> : land where Serbs still can have their enclaves. Yet they never cease fearing for 
>their
> future and
> : have no money whatever. Yet they live. Early in the morning, groups of 
>schoolchildren move
> toward schools
> : in an organised manner, a mailman delivers morning papers and infrequent letters 
>on his old
> bicycle,
> : housewives do their laundry in backyards. At noon, people flock to cafes where 
>they stay
> till
> : night, drinking beer. This life continues against the background of tanks and 
>armoured
> personnel carriers,
> : peacemakers armed with submachine guns patrolling the streets and tonnes upon 
>tonnes of
> rubble in
> : place of the houses of Slavic residents that not so long still stood here.
> 
> : No one here talks politics any more. Not since Serbia, busy extraditing
> : Slobodan Milosevic and dividing Yugoslavia, more or less completely gave up 
>controlling the
> situation
> : and upholding law and order in Kosovo. And not since practically all Serbian field
> commanders still
> : opposing the Albanian siege of this long-suffering land were arrested. And not 
>since the
> Slavs lost
> : all hope to ever return to Pristina. The only topic the young and the old, who 
>spend most
> their time in
> : cafes for lack of work, keep discussing is help from Russia. The name Russia has 
>become a
> part of the
> : local dialect as the symbol of hope which was once associated with but betrayed by 
>Serbia.
> To these
> : people, Russian peacemakers are liberators, and there is a lot of truth in this.
> 
> : In Kosovo, the so-called Russian Battalion or 'Rusbat' controls the hardest
> : and the most dangerous spots. Besides fighting skills, that requires a lot of 
>psychological
> : preparedness. One such spot is the administrative border with Serbia near the 
>Preshev
> Valley. Both Russian
> : peacemakers and the Serbs have long since called it the valley of death. This is 
>where up to
> 40
> : well-organised groups of Albanian terrorists from the Kosovo Liberation Army are 
>active.
> There is evidence that
> : the training camps in the Preshev Valley attract scores of extremists, including 
>Arabs.
> :
> : 'I do not know the exact numbers', Radomir Dragoslavic, formerly a major in
> : the Yugoslavian army, now the head of the Slavic Association of Kosovo, said, 'but 
>there are
> enough
> : extremists there to take on not just Russian peacemakers but the whole KFOR 
>contingent'.
> Nevertheless,
> : Russian peacemakers from the 13th tactical group headed by lieutenant colonel Oleg 
>Redkin
> have
> : been successfully opposing all attempts of the militants to break through into 
>Serbia.
> Having
> : found a common language with the locals, the Russians have so far been able to 
>learn the
> militants'
> : plans ahead of time.
> 
> : The military experience of ex-major Dragoslavic is extensive. More than once
> : he stole into the Preshev Valley and photographed the militants' stations. His 
>wife and two
> grown
> : children died in 1999 when those Albanian militants killed everyone who had 
>anything at all
> to do with
> : the Yugoslavian army. His elderly mother-in-law was hidden by neighbours in their 
>basement
> and was the
> : solo survivor. Under the pressure from international community, the remains of the
> Yugoslavian army
> : were forced to leave Kosovo. Dragoslavic had left the service, put together a 
>group of
> volunteers
> : and defended their village until Russian peacemakers came. Now he says, 'Indeed, 
>the 13th
> tactical group
> : brought peace here'.
> 
> : The locals think he is either the last Serb or the first Russian among them.
> : 'First', he continues, 'the regular patrolling of the border was resumed. Then 
>Russian
> peacemakers cleaned
> : several vital roads of mines, opening the way for assistance from Serbia'.
> : Yet the greatest of everything that the Russian Battalion did was escorting
> : children to school without incidents. 'When the Americans did this', 27-year-old 
>Anna
> Jordanic, the
> : mother of four, says, 'we lived in constant fear for our schoolchildren. Albanian
> provocateurs often would
> : throw rocks and empty bottles or even shoot at them. The Americans had the latest
> technologies and
> : weapons and could not do anything. Only the Russians managed to stop that'.
> 
> : The commanders of the American peacemaking contingent in Kosovo note certain
> : animosity toward their soldiers on the part of the Serbs. And Americans believe 
>that their
> job
> : in Kosovo would have been much harder without their Russian colleagues. Speaking 
>at a press
> : conference in Pristina, General Marcel Valentine, the commander of the KFOR 
>contingent in
> Kosovo, said,
> : 'Russian peacemakers most definitely are highly respected by their Western 
>colleagues. They
> are
> : real soldiers with a lot of spirit and can stand toll in any situation without 
>compromising
> the principles
> : of democracy'.
> 
> : At this time, there are a little more than 1,500 Russian peacemakers in
> : Kosovo. Of this number, 500 are supposed to be withdrawn according to the 
>agreement between
> Moscow and the
> : European Union. One of them, sergeant Vladimir Romanov said, 'I'd like to believe 
>that our
> : service here has not been in vain and peace in Kosovo will not be compromised by 
>new
> provocations'.
> 
> : Back in March this year, Nikolai Mirny, the deputy commander of the Russian
> : peacemaking contingent, said that after the number of Russia's peacemakers in the 
>region
> : is cut, the way they perform their service would inevitably change. Because there 
>will be
> fewer
> : stations, the role of mobile patrolling would grow. And of course, as usual, the 
>Albanians
> and Serbs
> : reacted differently to the news. The Albanians rejoiced because Russian 
>peacemakers do not
> allow them to
> : blow up Christian Orthodox Churches and throw fragmentation grenades into Slavs' 
>backyards
> and
> : cafes. Serbs see the withdrawal of even a part of the Russians as the next tragedy.
> 
> : In the few remaining Serbian enclaves, graffiti on walls and fences reads,
> : 'Russians, please do not go or we will die.' No one here believes that American, 
>French or
> German peacemakers
> : can protect the Serbs.
> 
> : Dimitry Babic, Rosbalt news agency,
> : Pristina - Belgrade
> 
> ---------------------------
> ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST
> 
> 

---------------------------
ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST

==^================================================================
This email was sent to: [email protected]

EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?a84x2u.bacIlu
Or send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register
==^================================================================


Reply via email to