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http://www.newsday.com.ap/international/ap89.htm

"We want to tell the people who dictate the terms of
peace that we need protection from those who started
the war."

[Those who started and who continue to intensify the
war are trained and commanded by U.S. MPRI advisors
and include dozens of 'former' Western military
personnel, veterans of Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo.
Based in NATO-controlled Kosovo, these drug
trade-linked terrorists have driven thousands of
Macedonians out of their towns and villages.
Macedonians don't politically define themselves by
ethnic and religious designations, except for the type
mentioned above;  that dubious job is left to the
Western press operatives who inevitably accompany the
OSCE and NATO occupation forces into each new
conquered territory.
As is the role of excusing the armed expulsion of
innocent civilians under the heading of the doctrine
of 'equivalency': Everyone's doing it.
A lie worthy of its perpetrators.] 

July 16, 2001
Angry Macedonians Protest Concessions
by MISHA SAVIC
Associated Press Writer
SKOPJE, Macedonia (AP) -- Hundreds of angry
Macedonians marched through the capital Monday to
protest expected concessions to minority ethnic
Albanians in peace talks aimed at ending a rebel
insurgency and averting civil war.
Chanting, ''This is Macedonia,'' and other slogans,
demonstrators walked past the local offices of NATO,
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe, and the European Union, which is helping
mediate negotiations for a political solution to the
crisis.
The talks continued Monday for an eighth straight day
between the feuding parties representing majority
Macedonians and ethnic Albanians who are pressing for
broader rights and more political influence in the
former Yugoslav republic.
Protest organizer Tomislav Stojanovski told The
Associated Press that the demonstrators were demanding
meetings with U.S. envoy James Pardew and his EU
counterpart, Francois Leotard, who helped draft the
peace plan.
''We want to tell the people who dictate terms of
peace that we need protection from those who started
the war,'' Stojanovski said.
Macedonia's crisis began in February, when militants
from the ethnic Albanian community took up arms and
clashed with government forces, prompting the
international community to intervene diplomatically in
hopes of heading off the threat of a new war in
southeastern Europe.
Earlier this month, NATO and the EU mediated a
cease-fire, and Pardew and Leotard arrived to try to
broker an agreement. Key provisions would introduce
Albanian as the second official language, change the
country's constitution to upgrade the status of the
minority and guarantee better representation of ethnic
Albanians in the government, police, army and
education.
Ethnic Albanians account for nearly a third of
Macedonia's 2 million people, and they have bitterly
complained of treatment as second-class citizens. Many
Macedonians see their demands as a strategy to divide
the country and ultimately carve out an ethnic
Albanian mini-state.
Monday's protesters mostly came from the northwestern
city of Tetovo, where ethnic Albanians form a local
majority and support the rebels who still control a
string of villages near Macedonia's second-largest
city.
Hundreds of Macedonians -- the majority ethnic group
of Slavic origin -- have been forced out of their
homes in the area. Many participated in the protest,
chanting, ''Macedonia for Macedonians,'' ''No changes
to our constitution'' and ''We want our homes back.''
The OSCE mission chief in Skopje, Carlo Ungaro,
appeared in front of his office near the protest crowd
and spoke briefly to reporters, calling the Macedonian
demands to return to their homes ''a very legitimate
request.''
He said the OSCE was ''very much concerned for places
in which Macedonian people are in the minority ... one
of our aims is to protect minorities.''
Tens of thousands of people on both sides have been
displaced by the fighting. Many ethnic Albanians have
fled over the border into Kosovo, a predominantly
ethnic Albanian province of neighboring Serbia.
If the rival sides agree on a peace plan, some 3,000
NATO troops would deploy to oversee the disarmament of
the rebels, who number between 4,000 and 6,000
according to Macedonian government estimates.
�


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