http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2010/02/23/world/international-us-albania-serbia-investigation.html

Reuters
February 23, 2010

U.N. Sleuth Calls on Albania to Allow Organ Inquiry 

TIRANA: A United Nations expert accused Albania on Tuesday of stalling an 
international investigation into allegations of torture, killing and organ 
trading during the 1999 Kosovo conflict.

"None of the efforts to investigate have received meaningful cooperation on the 
side of the government of Albania," Philip Alston told a news conference.

Explanations offered to him by officials "amounted in practice to a game of 
bureaucratic and diplomatic ping pong in which the responsibility for not 
responding to requests was moved from one office to the next."

"Each insisted that if requested by the right authorities and under proper 
conditions they would not hesitate to cooperate. But the bottom line is that 
the issue is definitely stalled."

Former U.N. War Crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte said in a book published in 
2008 her team had investigated reports that around 300 Serbs held in Albania 
had had organs removed, apparently for trafficking.

Alston, a U.N. Special Rapporteur mandated by the Human Rights Council to 
monitor extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, said Albanian 
authorities had told him the allegations were politically motivated and 
baseless.

He said there were investigations in progress by the Council of Europe, 
Serbia's war crimes prosecutor, and EULEX, the European Union police and 
justice mission in Kosovo.

"The (Albanian) government should do everything it can to facilitate an 
independent and objective investigation by the international entities 
investigating abuses," he added.

Albanian Prime Minister Sali Berisha has dismissed Del Ponte's charges as 
fiction. However, claims persist that either Serbs or Kosovo Albanians seen as 
spies were tortured or killed in Albania in the camps of the guerrilla Kosovo 
Liberation Army.

Serbia welcomed Alston's comments. Bruno Vekaric, a spokesman for Serbia's war 
crimes prosecutor, said Serbia would support an independent international 
investigation. "That would be the right path to find out the truth and achieve 
full regional cooperation," he said by telephone from The Hague.

In 2004, U.N. investigators searched a house belonging to an Albanian family 
after allegations ethnic Albanian guerrillas in Kosovo had removed body organs 
from Serbs seized during NATO's 1999 air campaign against Serbia to stop ethnic 
killings.

Investigators said they found bloodstains, gauze in the garbage area and 
syringes but not enough evidence for a case.

(Additional reporting by Ivana Sekularac in Belgrade; editing by Adam Tanner 
and Andrew Roche)



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