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"Despite the cease-fire, heavy shelling was reported
in the north and two American peacekeepers were
wounded in a separate incident in Nikustak after their
battalion came under fire, apparently by Macedonian
troops."
[See also this prize specimen of irreproachable
Western reporting: "...the rebels - who make up a
third of Macedonia's two million people...." The
government of Macedonia is in serious trouble if there
are 670,000 KLA rebels under arms.]


Macedonian president flees rioters

                            SKOPJE, Macedonia (CNN) --
Macedonian
President Boris Trajkovski was evacuated from
parliament late on Monday after about 5,000
demonstrators stormed the building.

A government adviser told CNN the president was moved
to a "more secure location somewhere else in the city"
as a "precautionary move."

Protesters were angry at the government's handling of
a cease-fire with ethnic Albanian rebels and demanded
Trajkovski's resignation for appearing lenient to the
gunmen.

The demonstrators claimed Trajkovski had bowed to
international pressure by allowing the rebels to take
their weapons with them as they pulled back from the
town of Aracinovo -- a strategically important suburb
of Skopje.

The government adviser said he believed protesters
were reacting to seeing NATO and KFOR move "a group of
terrorists from one area to another" and that the
crowds were lashing out at Trajkovski because "they
feel he was the one who brokered the deal."

Many ran for cover after gunshots rang out from
several directions. It is not clear who was doing the
shooting or who, if anyone, was targeted. The rioters
smashed
windows and furniture and looted the parliament
building.

The violent protests came during a day that started
with progress following the EU-backed cease-fire, but
quickly degenerated into virtual chaos in the capital.

Despite the cease-fire, heavy shelling was reported in
the north and two American peacekeepers were wounded
in a separate incident in Nikustak after their
battalion
came under fire, apparently by Macedonian troops.

At the Skopje parliament, the demonstrators broke
through a cordon of police, hurled stones through
windows and entered the building.

Once inside, protesters tossed office contents through
the glass windows in the three-storey, concrete
Stalinist-era building, which occupies an entire block
in the centre of the city. Several people planted
Macedonian flags on balconies.

Police did not use force in attempting to calm the
crowd. At one point, about 30 police were amid the
crowd, chanting and waving the Macedonian flag.

A few police and journalists were wounded amid the
chaos, including some who were transported to
hospitals after being badly beaten by the crowd, which
grew
steadily in size throughout the day.

The president has made no statement since the
demonstrations began.

In Aracinovo, the rebels said they agreed to the
pullback on the condition that Macedonian forces did
not enter the village, and that the Macedonian side
observed the ceasefire.

A NATO spokesman said 15 buses were being used to
transport ethnic Albanian rebels from Aracinovo to the
village of Nikustak, about two kilometres away.

The buses were provided by France, Italy and the U.S.,
the nations taking part in KFOR -- the NATO-led
international force responsible for establishing a
security presence in neighbouring Kosovo.

The KFOR soldiers do not have a mandate in Macedonia
but were called into the area for logistical support.
Several thousands of the troops are stationed in
Macedonia to assist with the rebel pullout.

Locals were hired to drive the buses, said the NATO
spokesman, and KFOR soldiers were not involved in the
rebel pullback.

Ceasefire monitors from the European Union and the
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
(OSCE) are unarmed and the convoy was not provided
with
an armed escort, according to the NATO spokesman. He
said Macedonian government forces were being trusted
not to attack the convoy.

EU and OSCE diplomats negotiated Monday's ceasefire at
Aracinovo. It came after shelling there destroyed a
brief truce in the village brokered by European Union
foreign policy chief Javier Solana.

The rebels had said they would pull out of Aracinovo
if international monitors were put in place in the
region, which was part of the agreement brokered on
Sunday by
Solana. But after Solana left the region on Sunday,
Macedonia reneged on this stipulation.

U.S. State Department spokesman Philip Reeker said:
"We are monitoring the situation in Macedonia very
closely." He said U.S. Ambassador Michael Einik had
been in regular contact with officials in the Balkan
nation.

"We urge all citizens of Macedonia to remain calm and
to use the opportunity of the cease-fire to pursue a
political process," Reeker said, adding that
Washington
continued to support Macedonian President Boris
Trajkovski and the country's broad coalition
government.

The ethnic Albanians say they are fighting for more
rights from Macedonia's government. The government
accuses the rebels -- who make up a third of
Macedonia's two million people -- of trying to split
ethnic Albanian-populated areas from the rest of the
country.

-- CNN's Juliette Terzieff and Brussels Bureau Chief
Patricia Kelly and journalist
Vladimir Juzelov contributed to this report.

 
http://www.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/europe/06/26/macedonia.storm/index.html

 

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