-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Feb. 14, 2002
issue of Workers World newspaper
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GERMANY SUED OVER NATO BOMBING OF YUGOSLAVIA

By John Catalinotto

Sometimes it is possible for a small, determined group of 
people to keep an important issue alive, creating a forum 
that can pave the way for a future struggle.

Attorney Ulrich Dost, working with only a small committee of 
supporters in Berlin and Hamburg, Germany, and the 
cooperation of the people of Varvarin in Serbia, has brought 
a suit against the German government on behalf of those 
wounded and the surviving family members of those killed in 
a NATO bombing attack on the village on May 30, 1999. The 
suit is asking for about $90,000 in damages for each person.

After over a year of painstaking work gathering evidence and 
doing the necessary legal submissions, Dost has been able to 
file the Varvarin victims' claim for damages.

Dost argues that whatever nation's planes carried out the 
assault on Varvarin, Germany is guilty of illegally causing 
damages to the population by virtue of its membership in 
NATO and its go-ahead for all the bombing raids.

For the first time since the work was begun, the 
establishment media in Germany and also CNN and the BBC have 
begun to publicize the Varvarin case.

This publicity comes as the International Criminal Tribunal 
for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) meeting in The Hague is 
about to open a war-crimes trial against former Yugoslav 
President Slobodan Milosevic on Feb. 12. Stories have begun 
to come out that the ICTY prosecutors fear they have 
insufficient evidence to prove their charges.

Dost, on the other hand, believes more than enough evidence 
exists to prove the civil case against the German regime. On 
Jan. 13 Workers World asked Dost, who had just returned from 
an exhausting weeklong tour of Yugoslavia, to explain the 
facts of the case for a U.S. audience.

"Varvarin, with its 4,000 inhabitants," said Dost, "lies 
about 125 miles south of Belgrade and another 125 miles from 
the border of Kosovo. It is in a mostly agricultural region 
with no significant industry, no military bases, and in 1999 
military transports were never sent through the center of 
the town. People there did not think of their town as a war 
target.

"Even on Whitsunday, May 30, 1999, the Sunday market where 
farmers sold their goods was open. At 1:25 p.m. three NATO 
warplanes appeared over Varvarin. One separated from the 
formation, flew toward the bridge and fired its rocket, 
which hit the bridge's central support column. Its collapse 
dumped the bridge and all the people and vehicles on it into 
the small Morava River.

"Panic broke out among the hundreds of people in the market. 
Some of them ran to the bridge's wreckage and began to reach 
toward the victims.

"After they fired the first round of rockets, the warplanes 
turned around. The rescue work had just begun," Dost said 
angrily. "One of the planes attacked from the other side, 
firing two additional rockets at the already destroyed 
bridge.

"There were further dead and wounded. Altogether from this 
air attack 10 people lost their lives and another 16 people 
were gravely wounded. The youngest fatal casualty of this 
attack was a 15-year-old student, Sanja Milenkovic.

"There was no military excuse for the attack. It was 
directed at civilians. This is a crime," argued Dost.

Asked why there were not more cases of such suits around 
Yugoslavia, which was bombed so heavily, Dost apologized for 
not having the human and material resources to handle more 
cases.

"It would be easy--if attorneys and funds were available--to 
bring similar cases from all different regions of 
Yugoslavia, including Kosovo, and with victims of all ethnic 
origins. Right now, though, I and some other volunteer 
workers have our hands full with the Varvarin case.

"We have to raise another 150,000 Euros [$135,000] to pay 
the legal costs of finishing this case," he said. "There is 
no support from the new Yugoslav regime, which is trying to 
stay on good terms with Germany."

CONDITIONS INSIDE YUGOSLAVIA

WW asked Dost, who had just seen much of Yugoslavia while 
traveling and speaking about Varvarin, what conditions were 
like there now.

"The unemployment must be over 50 percent," he said. "In 
some areas there doesn't seem to be a money economy. People 
are only surviving through the help of their families. It 
reminds me of what I heard about conditions in Germany just 
after World War II."

Dost also brought up the time after reunification of Germany 
in 1990. "As many East Germans did during reunification, 
many Yugoslavs had great hopes that removing Milosevic and 
making peace with the NATO powers would bring prosperity 
back. Now even the pro-Western [Serbian Prime Minister 
Zoran] Djindjic is complaining that none of the promised aid 
is coming through.

"In Eastern Germany, too, people soon lost their jobs and 
their whole way of life. The difference is that under the 
ample West German social security guarantees--which have 
decreased in the past years--people were able to maintain at 
least a minimum livelihood. In Yugoslavia they have only 
their family's support.

"There are polls that predict that in an election the 
Socialist Party of Serbia [Milosevic's party] would come in 
first. So the European Union people have advised Belgrade to 
postpone the elections."

For more information or to give support, contact 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

- END -

(Copyright Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to 
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