PRESS RELEASE
TEXT: EXECUTIVE SUMMARY, STATE DEPT. REPORT ON ETHNIC
CLEANSING
(Documents presents chronology of Kosovo atrocities)
Washington --
More than 90 percent of Kosovo's ethnic Albanians have
been driven from their homes and 500 residential areas,
including 300 villages, have been destroyed since
Slobodan Milosevic's ethnic cleansing campaign began in
the province, according to a report released May 10 by
the State Department.
The report,
entitled "Erasing History: Ethnic Cleansing in
Kosovo," is based on information received from
international organizations and non-governmental
organizations (NGOs), as well as from U.S. government
sources.
It says the
human rights and humanitarian law abuses by the Belgrade
government fall into seven broad categories: forced
explusions, looting and burning, detentions, summary
executions, mass rapes, violation of medical neutrality
and identity cleansing.
Following is
the text of the executive summary:
(begin text)
Erasing
History: Ethnic Cleansing in Kosovo
Report
released by the U.S. Department of State,
Washington, DC, May 1999
EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY
This report
is part of a larger international effort to lay out the
contours of the ethnic cleansing in Kosovo, which
dramatically accelerated in mid-March, 1999. In preparing
this report, the United States Government has drawn on
its own resources, as well as reports received from
international organizations and non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) to date. We encourage others to make
their own contributions to record these events, get the
facts out, and ultimately, hold the perpetrators of these
crimes accountable.
This document
provides a chronology of events after the departure of
the OSCE's Kosovo Verification Mission on March 19, 1999,
which prior to its departure had been regularly issuing
human rights reporting. It is compiled from hundreds, if
not thousands, of reported violations of human rights and
humanitarian law since late March 1999. Due to lack of
outside access to Kosovo, this report represents only a
partial account of the ethnic cleansing.
The term
"ethnic cleansing" generally entails the
systematic and forced removal of members of an ethnic
group from their communities to change the ethnic
composition of a region. Although we are still gaining
information on all aspects of Serbian efforts to
ethnically cleanse Kosovo, reports of human rights and
humanitarian law violations we have received fall under
seven broad categories:
1. Forced
expulsions: The regime of Slobodan Milosevic is
conducting a campaign of forced migration on a scale not
seen in Europe since the Second World War. More than 90
percent of all ethnic Albanians have been expelled from
their homes in Kosovo. In contrast to last fall, when
attacks on civilians by Serb security forces generally
occurred in small villages, this spring Yugoslav Army and
Special Police units have joined with recently-armed Serb
civilians to expel their neighbors from almost all towns
and villages in Kosovo:
An estimated
600,000 internally displaced persons are now struggling
to survive in Kosovo. They are scattered throughout the
province, often taking shelter in isolated forests and
mountain valleys. Approximately 700,000 Kosovars have
taken refuge in Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, the Former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and the Republic of
Montenegro since hostilities commenced in March 1998.
Over three-fourths of these people have arrived since
late March.
2. Looting
and Burning: Some 500 residential areas have been at
least partially burned since late March, including over
300 villages burned since April 4, according to overhead
imagery. Besides houses and apartments, mosques,
churches, schools, and medical facilities have also been
targeted and destroyed. Many settlements have been
totally destroyed in an attempt to ensure that the ethnic
Albanian residents do not return.
3.
Detentions: There are consistent refugee reports that
Serbian forces are separating military-aged men from
their families in a systematic pattern. At the time of
writing, the total number of missing men and their fate
is unknown.
4. Summary
Execution: Refugees have provided accounts of summary
executions in at least 70 towns and villages throughout
Kosovo. In addition to random executions, Serbian
authorities are targeting intellectuals, professionals,
and community leaders.
5. Rape:
Ethnic Albanian women are reportedly being raped in
increasing numbers. Refugee accounts indicate systematic
and organized mass rapes in Djakovica and Pec. We believe
that many crimes of gender violence have not been
reported due to the cultural stigma attached to these
offenses in Kosovar society.
6. Violations
of Medical Neutrality: NGOs report that since late March,
violations of medical neutrality in Kosovo have
accelerated dramatically. Serb authorities have looted
and destroyed dozens of medical facilities, murdered
Kosovar Albanian physicians, expelled ethnic Albanian
patients and care providers from hospitals, and have used
large numbers of health facilities as protective cover
for military activities. The apparent goal is to
effectively deny health care to ethnic Albanians and
extinguish the community base that Kosovo's health
professionals provide.
7. Identity
Cleansing: Refugees report that Serbian authorities have
confiscated passports and other identity papers,
systematically destroyed voter registers and other
aspects of Kosovo's civil registry, and even removed
license plates from departing vehicles as part of a
policy to prevent returns to Kosovo. Reports of identity
cleansing are prevalent in refugee camps in Macedonia and
Albania.
(end text)
The full text
of the report is available via the United States
Information Agency's homepage at:
http://www.usia.gov/regional/eur/balkans/kosovo/hrreport/
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