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After the
"peace": how KFOR is restoring human rights and supervising the cleansing of
ethnic Serbs in Kosovo
7/29/99: As U.N. Organizes, Rebels Are Taking
Charge of Kosovo
The Kosovo Liberation Army has taken sweeping political control in the
province, establishing a network of ministries and appointing local councils, seizing
businesses and apartments, and collecting taxes and customs payments in the absence of a
strong international police presence.
7/24/99: NATO Finds 14 Serb
Bodies in Kosovo
NATO-led peacekeeping force acknowledged that such vengeance killings are beyond their
control, despite the presence of 36,000 peacekeepers in the province.
7/22/99: Nato uranium polluting Yugoslavia
Radioactive air pollution has been detected in some areas of Yugoslavia as a
result of Nato's use of uranium-tipped shells during the Kosovo conflict.
7/21/99: Danko Djunic, head of the board of directors of Belgrade's Economics
Institute, unemployment in Yugoslavia was Europe's highest at 25%,
including 7% as a direct effect of the Nato raids. [Source: Financial Times]
7/20/99: Macedonia is 'on the brink of crisis'
The government says the international community has failed to fulfil
promises made at the height of the Kosovo conflict.
7/9/99: The Current Situation of Roma in Kosovo
Source: European Roma Rights Center
6/18/99: How NATO is restoring peace in Kosovo (2)
6/16/99: How NATO is restoring peace in Kosovo (1)
6/15/99: Thousands of Serb civilians are fleeing Kosovo. The UNHCR
says 24,000 Serbs have left the province for Serbia since last week's peace deal. Another
13,300 are reported to have crossed into Montenegro.
After the "peace":
Daily good news and other collateral damages
6/12/99: Russians peacekeepers enter Kosovo
tooking NATO by surprise.
Few hours later NATO troops cross the Macedonian-Yugoslav border in Blace.
6/11/99: Kosovo Serbs pack up
and leave.
6/10/99: Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic's Address to the Nation - after the
agreement was signed.
6/10/99: NATO's Secretary
General Javier Solana annouces that air attacks against Yusoslavia are suspended.
6/9/99: Yugoslavia sign agreement on withdrawal from
Kosovo ... meanwhile NATO aircrafts continue targeting Kosovo and Metohia."Air
operations continue", said NATO spokesman Jamie Shea. [more]
6/8/99: NATO
said:"Thousands of Serb troops killed" NATO's B-52 bomb Yugoslav Units on
Mt. Pastrik killing 500 soldiers.
Are the good guys so proud of this?
6/6/99: Anti-war rally in
Aviano, in front of main US military airport in Italy. Air strikes starting from
there were suspended only for few hours.
6/5/99: NATO replaces
Serbian media with its own propaganda
6/3/99: Serbian Parliament approves the Peace Plan for Kosovo
Before the
"peace": Daily good news and other collateral damages
5/31/99: NATO missiles hit the sanitarium and neighboring retirement
home in Surdulica. At least 11 civilians killed. [more]
5/30/99: NATO missiles hit a bridge crowded with market-goers and cars in
central Serbia, killing at least nine people and wounding 28. In southern Kosovo, a NATO
missile falls near a convoy of journalists, killing a local driver and wounding three
people. [more]
5/27/99: Serbian
television loses satellite link. Eutelsat stopped broadcasting the programs of
Radio-Television Serbia (RTS) throughout Europe on 26 May. Members
of the Eutelsat consortium voted to stop broadcasting RTS' programming.
5/24/99: Serb water and
power hit. About 70% of Serbia is without power, and people are urged to save water.
5/22/99:
Nato bombs Kosovo prison, killing 19 people. It was the second time in three days that
Nato had attacked the prison.
5/21/99: More civilian targets attacked,
more dead.
5/20/99: 5/16/99: Rally for peace in Assisi, central Italy: 80,000 people attended.
5/14/99: NATO commits another massacre of civilians in Korisa, near Prizren,
killing at least 50 people. NATO says it was a legitimate target.
5/13/99: A letter from Nis:"Dear friends, last few days, after Bulgaria
permit for Air space to NATO, my town NIS in the southeast part of Serbia is bombarded
day-night ..."
5/12/99: Will US shut down Yugoslav Internet? An appeal from Belgrade.
5/12/99: Sound of a missile as it passes and then explodes [recorded in Belgrade 4/30/99]. Click here to
listen.
5/9/99: Anti-war rally in front of the NATO base in
Vicenza, Italy.
5/7/99: NATO bombs destroy the Hotel Jugoslavija in Beograd, in an attempt
to harm Serbian paramilitary forces. However, they are all still alive and well.
5/7/99:
5/7/99: NATO
bombs hit the hospital in Nis, killing at least 15 people.
5/7/99: Greek Relief Convoy Hit in Kosovo.
5/3/99: At least 280 people reportedly massacred by Serbs in Kosovo. After 38 days of
heavy bombing and widespread destruction, NATO was totally unable to prevent this
from happening.
5/3/99: NATO bombs another bus. At least 10 civilians killed.
5/2/99: NATO
loses two planes
5/1/99: Assessment of bombing effects on FRY infrastructure (FRY
source)
5/1/99: NATO massacre of civilians in Luzani, near Pristina
4/29/99: NATO massacre of civilians in Surdulica
4/23/99: NATO bombs the headquarters of Serbian state television.
4/14/99: An F-16 bombards a refugee column near Djakovica: 75 people killed and 100
injured.
4/12/99: NATO planes hit the railroad bridge in Grdelika when the Beograd -
Thessaloniki train is crossing: 55 passengers killed.
4/9/99: NATO hit "Zastava" car factory in Kragujevac: 136
workers wounded.
4/5/99: A building block hit by NATO missiles in Aleksinac: 12 civilian
killed.
3/27/99: A US F-117 Nighthawk Stealth fighter is downed near
Belgrade.
3/24/99: NATO launches air strikes on Yugoslavia
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