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                              New Fighting in Macedonia
                              Tuesday, June 26, 2001 10:32 a.m. EDT
http://news.lycos.com/news/story.asp?section=World&pitem=AP-Macedonia&rev=20010626&pub_tag=APONLINE
                                                                                


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                              By KONSTANTIN TESTORIDES Associated Press Writer

                              SKOPJE, Macedonia (AP) - Fresh fighting broke out in 
Macedonia on Tuesday,
                              aftershocks from rioting the day before that was touched 
off after American troops
                              helped NATO evacuate armed ethnic Albanian rebels from a 
besieged town.

                              New clashes were reported near the village of Nikustak, 
about six miles northeast of
                              Aracinovo, a suburb of the capital, Skopje, at the 
center of the conflict the day
                              before.

                              American troops provided Humvees, trucks, buses and 
ambulances on Monday to
                              support a NATO effort to move rebels out of Aracinovo 
and end fighting there.

                              Army spokesman Blagoja Markovski said government forces 
were attacked with
                              mortar, sniper and automatic fire near Nikustak. 

                                                      Also Tuesday, police in Tetovo,
                                                      Macedonia's second-largest city, 
said on
                                                      condition they not be named that 
rebels
                                                      attacked police positions on the 
outskirts
                                                      of the city and that government 
forces
                                                      returned fire. The rebels also 
attacked a
                              police position near the city stadium, a military 
spokesman said. There were no
                              reports of injury.

                              The fighting came despite international efforts to stop 
a full-scale war between
                              ethnic Albanians and majority Slavs.

                              While the evacuation was the first U.S. involvement in 
the Macedonian conflict,
                              American troops have been stationed in Macedonia since 
former President Clinton
                              sent them as part of a U.N. peacekeeping operation in 
1993.

                              U.S. spokesman Maj. Barry Johnson would not specify how 
many Americans
                              participated in the evacuation Monday. He said the 
troops provided 16 Humvees,
                              nine buses, three ambulances and three cargo trucks.

                              Ethnic Albanian militants withdrew from Aracinovo under 
the NATO plan. Alliance
                              peacekeepers used NATO trucks to drive rebel weapons 
past Macedonian
                              government lines. Buses ferried the rebels to safety.

                              The withdrawal outraged thousands of Macedonian Slavs, 
who gathered outside
                              parliament Monday evening demanding harsher action 
against the rebels. Some
                              broke into the legislature and shattered windows.

                              Shots were fired, but there were no reports of injuries. 
Police reservists were called in
                              and the riot broke up after they were ordered to pull 
back. The attack shattered a
                              cease-fire meant to create conditions for peace talks to 
end Macedonia's most
                              severe crisis ever.

                              While journalists did not hear any explicit 
anti-American slogans, demonstrators did
                              burn photographs of Javier Solana, the European Union's 
top foreign policy official,
                              and Anna Lindh, foreign minister of Sweden, which 
currently holds the rotating
                              presidency of the EU.

                              With tensions still on high, British Foreign Secretary 
Jack Straw postponed a visit to
                              Skopje. He was expected to hold talks with political 
leaders from both sides who are
                              increasingly estranged after the peace talks collapsed 
in disarray. Such dialogue is
                              likely to become harder to arrange, with both ethnic 
Albanian and Macedonian Slav
                              leaders facing more pressure from their constituencies.

                              Western intervention of all kinds becoming increasingly 
unpopular among
                              Macedonian Slav hard-liners. Straw said it would have 
been inappropriate to go
                              ahead with his planned visit while Macedonian ministers 
were preoccupied with
                              trying to calm the situation on the ground.

                              The European Union's new envoy for Macedonia, meanwhile, 
consulted with EU
                              ministers Tuesday before beginning his mission to 
Skopje. EU officials said former
                              French Defense Minister Francois Leotard would leave 
``very soon'' for Macedonia
                              after the talks.

                              The violence is likely to place more pressure on 
President Boris Trajkovski, who has
                              been trying to revive peace talks. He scheduled a 
televised nationwide address for
                              later Tuesday.

                              The lack of progress has dismayed EU leaders, who have 
been trying for months to
                              persuade the Macedonian Slav leadership and ethnic 
Albanian political leaders to
                              compromise and avert civil war.

                              To back up that point, EU foreign ministers told 
Macedonian Foreign Minister Ilinka
                              Mitreva on Monday during talks in Luxembourg not to 
count on new financial aid
                              unless the government and ethnic Albanian opponents 
settle their differences.

                              Trajkovski has appealed to all political leaders to 
return to the bargaining table to
                              reconsider his peace plan. The plan calls for amnesty 
for most rebels who disarm
                              voluntarily and greater inclusion of ethnic Albanians in 
state bodies and institutions.

                              Copyright � 2001 Associated Press. All rights reserved. 
This material may
                              not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

                               


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