http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/article/kosovo-albanian-prisoner-recalls-beating-by-kla-guerrillas

15 Sep 14
Kosovo Albanian Prisoner Recalls Beating by KLA

A witness told the trial of the Kosovo Liberation Army’s ‘Drenica
Group’ cell, accused of assaulting prisoners during the 1998-99 war,
that he was severely beaten by the defendants.
Nektar Zogjani
BIRN
Pristina

The protected witness codenamed ‘Witness A’ told the court on Monday
that he was seriously assaulted in captivity by Pristina’s former
ambassador to Albania and Kosovo Security Force ex-commander Sylejman
Selimi and other members of the Drenica Group.

Witness A said the former KLA fighters beat him “because they said I
had cooperated with Serbia” during Belgrade’s conflict with the
guerrilla force.

He described the men who beat him as “merciless”.

Selimi and six other former KLA fighters are on trial for allegedly
torturing and mistreating prisoners at a detention centre in
Likovc/Likovac in 1998.

According to the indictment raised by EU prosecutors, Selimi “in his
capacity as a KLA member and as a person exercising control over the
Likovc detention centre in co-perpetration with Sami Lushtaku, Avni
Zabeli and Sahit Jashari, violated the bodily integrity and the health
of an undefined number of Albanian civilians” who were being held
there.

In September 1998, he is alleged to have abused ‘Witness A’ by
“beating him with fists and wooden sticks”.

He is also alleged to have “ordered Witness B, another civilian held
in the Likovc detention centre, to repeatedly strike Witness A with a
wooden plank and pinched Witness A’s genitals with an iron tool,
subsequently dragging him on the floor with it”.

Besides ex-ambassador Selimi, another prominent politician and former
KLA member, Sami Lushtaku, is charged with mistreating other prisoners
and killing one man at the KLA detention centre.

Born in Drenica in 1970, Selimi was a KLA commander in the Drenica
area in 1998-99, and commanded the Kosovo Protection Corps from 2006
to 2009 and the Kosovo Security Force from 2009 to 2011, before
becoming ambassador to Tirana.

In May this year, he was cleared of war crimes over the alleged
beating and torture of two women during the war in the former Serbian
province.



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