http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=41808

INTER PRESS SERVICE

BALKANS:
'Serbs Organs Sold From Albania'

Vesna Peric Zimonjic

BELGRADE, Apr 1 (IPS) - Serbia's War Crimes Prosecution Office has formally
opened an investigation into the case of hundreds of Serbs who disappeared
in Kosovo in 1998-99. The investigations were ordered after excerpts from a
book by former chief international war crimes tribunal prosecutor Carla Del
Ponte were published in local media.

Independent Beta news agency carried excerpts from Del Ponte's book, 'Hunt,
Me and War Criminals', in which she says that in the course of her
investigations she learned that some 300 Serbs were abducted and killed for
organ trafficking in 1999. The abductions were allegedly the work of Kosovo
Albanians.

"We are checking the informal information that two trucks with imprisoned
Serbs from Kosovo went to Albania in 1999," Serbia's War Crimes Prosecutor
Vladimir Vukcevic told reporters at a press conference last week where he
confirmed the opening of an investigation.

"The informal information on that transfer and the possibility that the
imprisoned people were killed so that their organs could be sold to
international traffickers came from The Hague tribunal prosecutors," he
added.

For nine years until this January, Carla Del Ponte was chief prosecutor of
The Hague-based International Criminal Tribunal for former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
founded by the United Nations in the 1990s. In the course of her term she
prosecuted dozens of high profile cases arising from the wars that took more
than 100,000 lives.

One of the most important tasks was the prosecution of war crimes by Serb
security forces against Kosovo Albanians in 1998-99. More than 5,000 ethnic
Albanians and 1,300 Serbs are still missing from that war, which erupted
when ethnic Albanian separatists launched a rebellion against Belgrade's
rule.

The violent response of Serbia to the rebellion triggered attacks by the
North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) in 1999, which forced Belgrade to
end the crackdown and withdraw its troops. Kosovo has been run by the UN and
NATO since 1999. It declared independence from Serbia last month.

According to excerpts from Del Ponte's book, that is to hit the bookshops
Apr. 3, her team of investigators had been informed that some 300 Serbs were
killed for organ trafficking after being transferred from Kosovo to the
small town Burrel, 91 kilometres north of Albanian capital Tirana.

A room in a "yellow house" outside the town was used as the operation
theatre. Organs were extracted from young people there, taken to Tirana
airport, and trafficked abroad. Those people were later killed and secretly
buried, according to information she cites.

Del Ponte says her team found the house in Burrel in 2003, following leads
by "reliable journalists" and by the United Nations Mission in Kosovo
(UNMIK) administration.

But despite finding traces of blood in the house which had been re-painted
white in the meantime, as well as remains of old, used medical material
(gauze, a used syringe, two plastic infusion bags hardened in mud, empty
drug bottles, among them of drugs used for muscle relaxation), "we decided
the evidence was not enough. Without bodies or firm evidence that would link
any suspects with the crimes, all the possibilities for further
investigation for the tribunal's prosecution were closed," Del Ponte wrote.

"It is devastating for us now to read about this," head of the Alliance of
Families of Serbs Disappeared in Kosovo, Simo Spasic, told IPS. The alliance
represents families of the 1,300 Kosovo Serbs whose fate is still unknown
since 1998-99.

"On one side, it kills all our hopes to learn what happened to our dearest;
on the other hand, why did she wait so long to speak about this particular
issue?"

According to Spasic, he met with Del Ponte and her team of investigators in
2001 to plead the Alliance's case. In 2004, he received a call from the
Prosecutor's office with information that "all people you are looking for
are dead".

"It was as simple as that, but we remain in limbo," Spasic says. "We have no
clear proof that all the missing are dead, no bodies or body parts that
would prove it.what causes much pain to families is the fact that only now,
in the book, she (Del Ponte) speaks about learning of torture and killing of
Serbs, and of organ harvesting. Our last hope to learn about the fate of the
missing has been taken from our hands now."

In Kosovo capital Pristina, former ethnic Albanian rebels and their groups
refuse to accept any such suggestions by Carla Del Ponte. The former ICTY
chief prosecutor was not available for comment to Serbian media. She is now
Swiss ambassador to Argentina.

The Serbian war crimes prosecutor's spokesman Bruno Vekaric says the case of
abductions and killings of Serbs has another dimension.

"The issues mentioned in Del Ponte's book do not simply deal with war
crimes," Vekaric told Belgrade B92 Radio. "If her allegations on organ
harvesting and trafficking are true, this is a case of organised crime which
is transnational and knows no borders. This would be a case for major
international action."

In the case of the alleged abduction of Kosovo Serbs, their transfer to
Albania and related crimes, "there is a long road from indications to
evidence," he said. "The research we are to undertake is going to last for
very, very long."

The investigation, he said, should be free of political overtones. Vekaric
was referring to outrage that the publishing of excerpts from Del Ponte's
book caused among Serbs in Kosovo. In one of their protest rallies this
week, they called on Belgrade to cut diplomatic ties with Albania.
(END/2008)

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