[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Pulizie etnike in Kosovo - Re: Vaso Cubrilovic e i conflitti nei Balcani
* On: 27 Feb 01, at 15:56
* Subject: Vaso Cubrilovic e i conflitti nei Balcani
* giovanni <pck-yugoslavia@peacelink.it> wrote:
> Sono passati 63 anni dalle fobie
> xenofobe del professore Vaso Cubrilovic il quale può essere
> considerato padre della pulizia etnica posta in atto da Milosevic
> in Kossovo nel "99. Sempre sul memoriale al governo di Belgrado
> Vaso Cubrilovic scrive : "Per arrivare alla deportazione di una
> popolazione intera il primo prerequisito è la creazione di una
> psicosi adeguata.
Appunto la psicosi adeguata che serve per far digerire al popolino la guerra
umanitaria necessaria per far giustizia e pulizia etnica (meglio dire politica)
delle minoranze kosovare, disarmate, non filo-UCK-Nato di ogni etnia.
Confrontare prego la conta di questi morti (oltre ai 240000 profughi) post-
primavera 1999 (oltre un migliaio di accertati e altrettanti scomparsi, tutti
civili) aggiunti alle vittime delle bombe Nato (alcune migliaia tra Kosovo e
Serbia, stragrande maggioranza di civili) con il numero delle vittime degli
scontri tra Uck e forze jugoslave in kosovo (2000 ca., fonte OCSE, divisi tra
Uck e forze federali, stragrande maggioranza militari armati, compresa la
presunta e smascherata strage di Rakac) per capire da che parte sta e
cos'è realmente, in Kosovo, la "pulizia etnica".
Per la "pulizia etnica" precedente all'aggressione Nato della primavera 1999
ecco un passo di un documento di fonte ineccepibile: il Ministero degli esteri
tedesco, 11 marzo 1999:
"The Foreign Office's status reports of May 6, June 8 and July
13, 1998, given to the plaintiffs in the summons to a verbal
deliberation, do not allow the conclusion that there is group
persecution of ethnic Albanians from Kosovo. Not even regional
group persecution, applied to all ethnic Albanians from a
specific part of Kosovo, can be observed with sufficient
certainty. The violent actions of the Yugoslav military and
police since February 1998 were aimed at separatist activities
and are no proof of a persecution of the whole Albanian ethnic
group in Kosovo or in a part of it. What was involved in the
Yugoslav violent actions and excesses since February 1998 was a
selective forcible action against the military underground
movement (especially the KLA) and people in immediate contact
with it in its areas of operation. ...A state program or
persecution aimed at the whole ethnic group of Albanians exists
neither now nor earlier."
------
Il documento integrale:
INTERNAL DOCUMENTS FROM GERMANY'S FOREIGN OFFICE REGARDING
PRE-BOMBARDMENT GENOCIDE IN KOSOVO
Collected by International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear
Arms
1: Opinion of the Upper Administrative Court at Mnster, March 11,
1999 (Az: 13A 3894/94.A):
"Ethnic Albanians in Kosovo have neither been nor are now exposed
to regional or countrywide group persecution in the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia." (Thesis 1)
2: Opinion of the Bavarian Administrative Court, October 29, 1998
(Az: 22 BA 94.34252):
"The Foreign Office's status reports of May 6, June 8 and July
13, 1998, given to the plaintiffs in the summons to a verbal
deliberation, do not allow the conclusion that there is group
persecution of ethnic Albanians from Kosovo. Not even regional
group persecution, applied to all ethnic Albanians from a
specific part of Kosovo, can be observed with sufficient
certainty. The violent actions of the Yugoslav military and
police since February 1998 were aimed at separatist activities
and are no proof of a persecution of the whole Albanian ethnic
group in Kosovo or in a part of it. What was involved in the
Yugoslav violent actions and excesses since February 1998 was a
selective forcible action against the military underground
movement (especially the KLA) and people in immediate contact
with it in its areas of operation. ...A state program or
persecution aimed at the whole ethnic group of Albanians exists
neither now nor earlier."
3: Intelligence report from the Foreign Office, January 12, 1999
to the Administrative Court of Trier (Az: 514-516.80/32 426):
"Even in Kosovo an explicit political persecution linked to
Albanian ethnicity is not verifiable. The East of Kosovo is still
not involved in armed conflict. Public life in cities like
Pristina, Urosevac, Gnjilan, etc. has, in the entire conflict
period, continued on a relatively normal basis." The "actions of
the security forces (were) not directed against the Kosovo-
Albanians as an ethnically defined group, but against the
military opponent and its actual or alleged supporters."
4: Intelligence report from the Foreign Office January 6, 1999 to
the Bavarian Administrative Court, Ansbach:
"At this time, an increasing tendency is observable inside the
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia of refugees returning to their
dwellings. ... Regardless of the desolate economic situation in
the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (according to official
information of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 700,000
refugees from Croatia, Bosnia and Herzogovina have found lodging
since 1991), no cases of chronic malnutrition or insufficient
medical treatment among the refugees are known and significant
homelessness has not been observed. ... According to the Foreign
Office's assessment, individual Kosovo-Albanians (and their
immediate families) still have limited possibilities of settling
in those parts of Yugoslavia in which their countrymen or friends
already live and who are ready to take them in and support them."
5. Report of the Foreign Office March 15, 1999 (Az: 514-
516,80/33841) to the Administrative Court, Mainz:
"As laid out in the status report of November 18, 1998, the KLA
has resumed its positions after the partial withdrawal of the
(Serbian) security forces in October 1998, so it once again
controls broad areas in the zone of conflict. Before the
beginning of spring 1999 there were still clashes between the KLA
and security forces, although these have not until now reached
the intensity of the battles of spring and summer 1998."
6. Opinion of the Administrative Court of Baden-Wrttemberg,
February 4, 1999 (Az: A 14 S 22276/98):
"The various reports presented to the senate all agree that the
often feared humanitarian catastrophe threatening the Albanian
civil population has been averted. ... This appears to be the
case since the winding down of combat in connection with an
agreement made with the Serbian leadership at the end of 1998
(Status Report of the Foreign Office, November 18, 1998). Since
that time both the security situation and the conditions of life
of the Albanian-derived population have noticeably improved. ...
Specifically in the larger cities public life has since returned
to relative normality (cf. on this Foreign Office, January 12,
1999 to the Administrative Court of Trier; December 28, 1998 to
the Upper Administrative Court of Lneberg and December 23, 1998
to the Administrative Court at Kassel), even though tensions
between the population groups have meanwhile increased due to
individual acts of violence... Single instances of excessive acts
of violence against the civil population, e.g. in Racak, have, in
world opinion, been laid at the feet of the Serbian side and have
aroused great indignation. But the number and frequency of such
excesses do not warrant the conclusion that every Albanian living
in Kosovo is exposed to extreme danger to life and limb nor is
everyone who returns there threatened with death and severe
injury."
7: Opinion of the Upper Administrative Court at Mnster, February
24, 1999 (Az: 14 A 3840/94,A):
"There is no sufficient actual proof of a secret program, or an
unspoken consensus on the Serbian side, to liquidate the Albanian
people, to drive it out or otherwise to persecute it in the
extreme manner presently described. ... If Serbian state power
carries out its laws and in so doing necessarily puts pressure on
an Albanian ethnic group which turns its back on the state and is
for supporting a boycott, then the objective direction of these
measures is not that of a programmatic persecution of this
population group ...Even if the Serbian state were benevolently
to accept or even to intend that a part of the citizenry which
sees itself in a hopeless situation or opposes compulsory
measures, should emigrate, this still does not represent a
program of persecution aimed at the whole of the Albanian
majority (in Kosovo)."
"If moreover the (Yugoslav) state reacts to separatist strivings
with consistent and harsh execution of its laws and with anti-
separatist measures, and if some of those involved decide to go
abroad as a result, this is still not a deliberate policy of the
(Yugoslav) state aiming at ostracizing and expelling the
minority; on the contrary it is directed toward keeping this
people within the state federation."
"Events since February and March 1998 do not evidence a
persecution program based on Albanian ethnicity. The measures
taken by the armed Serbian forces are in the first instance
directed toward combatting the KLA and its supposed adherents and
supporters."
------ Translator's Notes ------
As in the case of the Clinton Administration, the present regime
in Germany, specifically Joschka Fischer's Foreign Office, has
justified its intervention in Kosovo by pointing to a
"humanitarian catastrophe," "genocide" and "ethnic cleansing"
occurring there, especially in the months immediately preceding
the NATO attack. The following internal documents from Fischer's
ministry and from various regional Administrative Courts in
Germany spanning the year before the start of NATO's air attacks,
attest that criteria of ethnic cleansing and genocide were not
met. The Foreign Office documents were responses to the courts'
needs in deciding the status of Kosovo-Albanian refugees in
Germany. Although one might in these cases suppose a bias in
favor of downplaying a humanitarian catastrophe in order to limit
refugees, it nevertheless remains highly significant that the
Foreign Office, in contrast to its public assertion of ethnic
cleansing and genocide in justifying NATO intervention, privately
continued to deny their existence as Yugoslav policy in this
crucial period. And this continued to be their assessment even in
March of this year. Thus these documents tend to show that
stopping genocide was not the reason the German government, and
by implication NATO, intervened in Kosovo, and that genocide (as
understood in German and international law) in Kosovo did not
precede NATO bombardment, at least not from early 1998 through
March, 1999, but is a product of it.
Excerpts from the these official documents were obtained by
IALANA (International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear
Arms) which sent them to various media. The texts used here were
published in the German daily junge welt on April 24, 1999. (See
<http://www.jungewelt.de/1999/04-24/011.shtml> as well as the
commentary at http://www.jungewelt.de/1999/04-24/001.shtml
<http://www.jungewelt.de/1999/04-24/011.shtml>). According to my
sources, this is as complete a reproduction of the documents as
exists in the German media at the time of this writing.
Fonte: http://www.counterpunch.org/germanmemo.html
Fonte: http://www.pasti.org
----------------------
Le tappe dello squartamento della Jugoslavia , cronologia:
http://www.pasti.org/cronol.htm
Le fosse comuni della propaganda NATO su:
http://www.srpska-mreza.com/Mass_Graves_Hoax/
Quando le idee sono più chiare: comunicato del PC greco sui fatti jugoslavi
(Aginform):
http://www.pasti.org/ideechia.htm
Sintesi e bilancio della guerra, di Michel Chossudovski (in inglese):
http://www.pasti.org/chossudo.htm
http://www.pasti.org/truppe.htm
Bombe e democrazia, lettera aperta al Manifesto e Liberazione:
http://www.pasti.org/bombedem.htm
Un invito al dibattito, il 18 e 19 novembre a Torino
http://www.pasti.org/invito.htm
Questo e molto altro sul sito della Fondazione Pasti:
http://www.pasti.org
-----------------------------------------------------------end
-----
Giorgio Ellero
<glr_y@iol.it>
http://digilander.iol.it/glry
-----