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----- Original Message -----
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, July 01, 2001 12:40 PM
Subject: Macedonia: Rebels Seize Four Villages, Expel Inhabitants
[WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK]


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"Rebels took control of Otunje, Varvaro, Setloe and
Brezno, ordering villagers to leave...."
"Fighters continue using Kosovo as safe haven...."

July 1, 2001
Macedonia Rebels Take Over 4 Villages
by KONSTANTIN TESTORIDES
Associated Press Writer
SKOPJE, Macedonia (AP) -- Seeking to expand their hold
in northern Macedonia, ethnic Albanian insurgents
moved into four villages close to the city of Tetovo,
state radio reported Sunday.
Rebels took control of Otunje, Varvara, Setloe and
Brezno, ordering villagers to leave, reports said.
Despite the rebel advance, the Tetovo region was
''relatively calm'' overnight, said Col. Blagoja
Markovski, the army spokesman, except for occasional
sniper fire from outlying villages.
Markovski also spoke of sporadic exchanges of small
arms fire that lasted into early Sunday near the city
of Kumanovo after the ''terrorists opened fire from
several cars and our forces returned fire.''
It was the second day of low-level fighting after a
lull that spread over several days. On Saturday,
clashes were reported in the highlands near the
northern border with Kosovo.
The continued skirmishing reflected the difficult
mission ahead for a new U.S. envoy to Macedonia, sent
by President Bush to help jump-start peace
negotiations between the rebels and the Slav-dominated
government.
The State Department's European Bureau special
adviser, James Pardew, was to arrive Sunday in Skopje,
Macedonia's capital. Well-known in the Balkans, Pardew
will be working closely with his European Union
counterpart, Francois Leotard.
EU officials have warned Macedonia that further aid
could be suspended if the country's Slavs and ethnic
Albanians fail to bridge their differences.
Fighters continue using Kosovo as safe haven, despite
stepped-up efforts by NATO-led peacekeepers in the
ethnic Albanian-majority Serbian province to interdict
them.
On Saturday, peacekeepers reported detaining 90
suspected rebels from Macedonia over the past two
days. Among them was a group of 48 ethnic Albanians
detained in one house in eastern Kosovo, close to the
border, on suspicion of being insurgents fighting
Macedonian government forces.
The militants launched their rebellion in February,
demanding that the constitution be changed to
guarantee ethnic Albanians equal status with the
Slavic majority in Macedonia.
The government rejects that demand, saying it
eventually would lead to the division of the country.
Macedonia's leadership says the rebels' real goal is
to carve off parts of the country as part of ultimate
plans to create a ''Greater Albania.''
Ethnic Albanians make up close to a third of
Macedonia's 2 million people.



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