No proof of mass grave near Raška
8 June 2007 | 14:21 | Source: Beta
*MAJDAN -- A judge has told journalists there were no traces of a 
suspected mass grave on the administrative boundary with Kosovo.

* Belgrade’s War Crimes Court judge, Milan Dilparić, said Friday 
forensic examination of the Rudnica-Majdan site near Raška, had not 
yielded any evidence that it may contain human remains.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) also confirmed that 
no proof that the site was a mass grave was found. However, the 
committee’s representative, Krasimir Naumov, said this “did not mean the 
procedure would not be started again.”

Chairman of the Government’s Missing Persons Commission told the media 
Belgrade and Priština cooperated well during the several days of 
excavation at the site.

The probe into the suspected mass grave that allegedly contained up to 
500 bodies of Albanian victims from the 1999 conflict started on Tuesday.  

Several witnesses claimed that at the beginning of June 1999, during the 
NATO bombing campaign, as many as 350 bodies were transported in four 
trucks from unknown locations in Kosovo and buried in the Raška region 
in southern Serbia.

The War Crimes Prosecution filed a request with the District Court to 
launch an investigation into the allegations in order to determine 
whether the site in question contained the bodies.

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