-Caveat Lector-

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2001/dec2001/kos-d17.shtml

Elections confirm popular hostility towards Kosovo
Liberation Army
By Tony Robson
17 December 2001

The most significant feature of November�s elections
for the new assembly in Kosovo is the continued
failure of the political successors of the Kosovo
Liberation Army (KLA) to win any substantial support
at the ballot box.

The Democratic Party of Kosovo (PDK), under former KLA
leader Hashim Thaci, received 25.5 percent of the
vote, similar to its performance in last October�s
municipal elections. The Alliance for the Future of
Kosovo (AAK), headed by Ramush Hajredinaj, another
former KLA leader, won just 7.8 percent of the vote.
Both parties trailed way behind the Democratic League
of Kosovo (LDK) of Ibrahim Rugova, the oldest
established Albanian nationalist party, identified as
leading a non-violent campaign for separation. The LDK
emerged as the outright winner with 46.3 percent of
the vote, but this margin is well short of the
majority it requires within the new government.

The Western media has hailed the result as a victory
for moderation and proof that a maturing democracy is
taking shape in the Yugoslav province, which now
exists as a NATO protectorate. However, the body
responsible for supervising the elections�the
Organisation for Security and Cooperation in
Europe�avoided such bold assertions and instead
downgraded its usual standard for internationally
supervised elections from �free and fair� to
�legitimate and credible�. This is in recognition of
the ethnic hatred that continues to pervade the
province, where Serb and non-Albanian minorities do
not enjoy freedom of movement for fear of violent
attacks.

Any attempt to credit the Western powers for the
extremists poor showing at the ballot box is sheer
hypocrisy, given the fact that they played the primary
role in promoting the KLA in the first place and have
continued to bolster the paramilitaries within the
protectorate since its establishment.

At the Rambouillet talks in February 1999, the US
sidelined Rugova and insisted that KLA
commander-in-chief Thaci head the Kosovar negotiating
team. This was combined with the ultimatum that the
Serbian government of Slobodan Milosevic surrender all
sovereignty to NATO.

America�s aim was to create a provocation that would
provide them with a pretext to go to war. The KLA then
served as a proxy for NATO in its 79-day war against
Yugoslavia. Afterwards, the US set up the KLA as the
dominant force in the province.

There have been three different forms of post-war
government in Kosovo�the KLA provisional government
(PGK), the LDK government based upon the parallel
elections of 1998 and the United Nations interim
administration (UNMIK). The Western powers began to
put together an administration under their control,
which allotted key positions to the KLA. The latter
had taken advantage of its military exploits to impose
its rule in 23 of the province�s 30 municipalities,
taking over state enterprises and the running of
public services including hospitals and schools. The
KLA, along with the five other opposition parties to
Rugova�s LDK, were given international recognition by
the major powers. This was exemplified by the
invitation extended to KLA representatives to attend
the Balkan Stability Pact forum in July 1999, while
the LDK were excluded. The KLA were also given a
controlling voice on the UN-sponsored Kosovo
Transitional Council.

In the municipal elections last October, however, the
LDK became the main beneficiary of the discontent that
had arisen at this attempt to install the KLA into
positions of authority. While independence remained
the overriding sentiment amongst ethnic Albanian
voters, there was growing opposition to the KLA�s
criminal activities and Mafia-style politics.

This was despite the best efforts of the US to
sanitise the political image of the KLA. In the run-up
to the elections, Thaci, in his role as leader of the
newly formed PDK was given a hero�s welcome in
America. He visited the UN Headquarters, met with
officials from the State Department and was an
honoured guest at the Democratic Party Convention.
While the mainstream media paid little attention to
this tour, it was heavily promoted by the Voice of
America radio station, whose principal audience is
Europe, in order to bolster Thaci�s credibility as a
statesmanlike figure.

While the PDK has failed to increase its standing via
the ballot box, one of the main ways in which it has
perpetuated its influence has been through its
dominance of the Kosovo Protection Corps (KPC).
Described as a reserve National Guard, the KPC was
set-up under the auspices of UNMIK. Giving the KLA
cadre a central role in the KPC was described as the
�demilitarisation� of the guerrilla outfit. However,
while the deadline for handing over weapons were
continually deferred and new caches of arms continued
to be discovered�leading to conflicts between NATO�s
K-FOR �peace keeping� troops and the KLA�5,000 of the
paramilitary organisation�s estimated 30,000
membership have been absorbed into the KPC reserve
force.

UNMIK appointed former KLA commander Agim Ceku to be
the KPC�s Chief of Staff. Ceku is implicated in the
ethnic cleansing of Serbs whilst serving with the
Croatian forces during the military offensives in
Medak in 1993 and the Krajina in 1995. Evidence to
this effect was leaked from an internal report
submitted to The Hague tribunal prior to NATO�s
military intervention in Kosovo.

A report submitted to the UN Secretary General last
year said that the KPC was responsible for �criminal
activities�killings, ill-treatment/torture, illegal
policing, abuse of authority, intimidation, breaches
of neutrality and hate-speech.� This is backed up by a
number of sources. The Economist noted last November:
�Foreigners and locals alike complain that UNMIK and
KFOR have gone soft on the local gangsters to avoid a
backlash against their presence. Certainly, members of
the local police and Kosovo Protection Corps (KPC), a
civil-defence force, both staffed in large part by the
former KLA fighters, have been implicated in all sorts
of shady dealing, as have many well-known ex-KLA
politicians. Late last year, for example, UNMIK police
arrested Idriz Brahimi, a KPC leader, on five counts
of murder and torture. Another prominent former
guerrilla was arrested on weapons charges, but later
released without explanation. In private, UN officials
argue that it is better to keep such thugs uniformed,
organised and busy than underground, disenfranchised
and bitter.�

Last August the military journal Jane�s stated: �UNMIK
is not handling matters particularly well. The
decision to create the Kosovo Defence Force (TMK),
which employs a number of former KLA guerrillas, as a
supposedly �civilian� emergency task force merely
perpetuated the core of the KLA under cover of a
legitimate body.�

The KLA, therefore, remains a force in the land thanks
to Western sponsorship and despite the evident
hostility of the majority of ethnic Albanians and the
hatred of ethnic Serbs and other minorities.
Two-thirds of the Serb population were driven out of
the province by the KLA, under the noses of K-FOR
troops. Most of the 100,000 Serbs that remain live in
enclaves guarded by NATO forces, with over half of
these residing north of the river Ibar in the divided
town of Metrovica. According to one source, although
Serbs and other minorities represent only 10 percent
of the population, they account for 50 percent of
murder victims. More than five Serbs are shot,
blown-up or beaten to death every month.

In the November elections, both the PDK and the AAK
failed to break out of the confines of what have
become their rural fiefdoms. The parties and their
leaders are associated with the bulk of criminal
activity that has flourished in the protectorate. An
estimated four to eight tonnes of heroin are thought
to pass through Kosovo and neighbouring Serbia and
Albania every month. The province is also the transit
route for the smuggling of guns, cigarettes, petrol,
stolen cars and forged documents. The split between
Hajredinaj and Thaci is originally believed to be over
the control of petrol stations.

While these gangster elements clash over who controls
the booty, the vast majority of the population is
slipping further into poverty. Nationalism is promoted
to the exclusion of all social issues in a province
where unemployment runs at between 50 to 60 percent.

While Rugova�s LDK won the election, their slender
majority means that they will have to look to either
the PDK or AAK to form a coalition. During the
elections, all three Kosovar-Albanian parties tried to
outdo each other by presenting themselves as the most
determined champions of independence. Although the
political scene continues to be dominated by
nationalist demagogues, there are signs that a
significant section of voters feel disenfranchised as
a result. The proportion of registered voters taking
part in November�s elections as compared with those
last October declined from 78 percent to 63 percent.


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