U.N. fires its Kosovo police chief after deaths
14 Feb 2007 12:10:47 GMT
Source: Reuters


By Matt Robinson

PRISTINA, Serbia, Feb 14 (Reuters) - The United Nations administrator of 
Serbia's breakaway Kosovo province fired the U.N. police chief on 
Wednesday following the deaths of two Albanian demonstrators in a 
weekend protest rally.

"I have asked the police commissioner, Stephen Curtis, to resign from 
his post with immediate effect," U.N. overseer Joachim Ruecker told 
reporters.

Curtis, a Briton, heads the 1,800-strong international police force in 
Kosovo. Ruecker said he called for the resignation "on the principle of 
political accountability".

He appointed a special prosecutor to investigate the deaths which 
resulted from head wounds caused by police rubber bullets.

At the time Curtis said U.N. and Kosovo police had been compelled to 
take "defensive measures" when protesters tried to force their way 
through barricades around parliament in the capital Pristina.

Kosovo Prime Minister Agim Ceku said police had used "excessive force" 
and Kosovo Interior Minister Fatmir Rexhepi resigned on Monday, 
accepting "moral responsibility" for the deaths of the two men, aged 30 
and 34.

They were among 3,000 people protesting against a U.N. plan for the 
province which many Albanians said falls short of full independence. A 
third man, aged 26, is in a coma at the U.S. Army's Camp Bondsteel base 
in Kosovo.

Deputy U.N. police chief Trygve Kalleberg, who took up his post on the 
day of the demonstration, said a police investigation would focus on the 
decision to use rubber bullets.

"EXCESSIVE FORCE"

The violence was the worst since March 2004 when 19 people died in 
Albanian mob riots against Serbs. It underscored Western fears of 
widespread civil unrest if a decision on the Albanian majority's demand 
for independence does not come soon.

Before his arrival in Kosovo last July, Curtis held a variety of senior 
police positions in Britain and also served as a lecturer at the UK 
National Police Staff College on the management of disaster and civil 
emergency.

About 90 percent of Kosovo's 2 million people are ethnic Albanians. The 
province has been run by the United Nations since 1999 when NATO bombs 
drove out Serb forces accused of atrocities in a two-year war with 
guerrillas.

A U.N. plan unveiled this month, if adopted by the U.N. Security 
Council, would set the province on the path to independence supervised 
by the European Union.

Kosovo Albanian leaders have accepted the blueprint, drafted by former 
Finnish president Martti Ahtisaari after months of fruitless 
Serb-Albanian talks in Vienna.

Some Albanians say its provisions for further international supervision 
and self-government for Serbs will only prolong Kosovo's limbo status. A 
final round of Serb-Albanian talks is due to begin on Feb 21.

+++


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