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(IWPR) ALBANIAN EXTREMISTS POSE REGIONAL THREAT
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ALBANIAN EXTREMISTS POSE REGIONAL THREAT
Albanian politicians must rally to curb the activities of extreme
nationalists.
By Shkelzen Maliqi in Pristina
Following the uprising in the Presevo valley of southern Serbia, another
Albanian insurgency has broken out, this time in Macedonia.
Unlike the Kosovo Liberation Army of Presevo, Medvedja and Bujanovac, the
new guerrilla movement has a more catchy and ambitious name, the National
Liberation Army.
Its acronym is identical to that of the Kosovo Liberation Army, UCK, whose
liberation war against Serbian forces culminated in last year's NATO
bombardment.
As a result of the emergence of these radical groups, the international
community is now concerned about what it sees as growing Albanian militancy.
The Skopje and Belgrade press, including some Western media, claim Kosovo is
exporting radical movements which not only threaten Serbia and Macedonia but
overall regional stability too.
The Albanians are acquiring the image of a war-mongering nation, taking over
from the Serbs as regional troublemakers.
Violence against Serbs in southern Serbia and Kosovo and other minorities
reinforces this. Some are beginning to ask: did the Kosovo Albanians deserve
the intervention of NATO forces?
With the main political parties in Kosovo and Albania largely inert, the
Albanian militants are coming to the fore, imposing themselves as the
patriotic leaders of the entire nation.
I am familiar with the ideology, mentality and motivation behind the forces
provoking the armed conflict in Macedonia.
I have come to know these fiery Albanian patriots, especially the émigrés in
Europe. And they've tried to persuade me that Macedonia is an artificial
creation, formed to the detriment of the Albanian nation.
They have long maintained that the enforced division of the Albanian nation
was an historical injustice, aimed to prevent it from being equal to its
neighbours in the region.
The injustice would be rectified, they said, by dividing Macedonia into Slav
and Albanians parts and allowing the latter to unite with Kosovo or, even
better, incorporated into a unitary Albanian state.
After the disintegration of the Yugoslav federation, some of these patriots
changed their minds, realising that the division of Macedonia was a risky,
if not unfeasible, business.
Macedonia cannot be divided without precipitating a major crisis. It is no
coincidence that NATO troops are deployed there. They've been present since
the start of the Yugoslav conflict to prevent it spreading across the
Macedonian border and tearing the country apart.
The Albanian radical movements are fighting a war that they cannot win.
They may be right in believing that they could break up Macedonia, but this
would be a bad strategic move as the conflict is likely to spill-over into
other parts of the region and provoke an international backlash.
Those who support an uprising in Macedonia naively believe that the great
powers, in particular the Americans, will side with the Albanians.
Such forecasts are very dangerous, as the Americans will always "side" with
those who support their geo-strategic interests - and the Albanians must
realise that the partition of Macedonia is not on the US agenda.
There's no doubt that Macedonia is neither a stable nor an ideal state. The
Albanians have well-founded objections both to the country's constitution
and to various forms of political, national and economic discrimination
inherited from the Yugoslav era.
But Macedonia must exist. And NATO's warnings that it will not tolerate the
destabilisation of the country should be taken seriously.
The so-called National Liberation Army is active in the Macedonian border
area controlled by NATO, and it would be very unwise for the guerrillas to
clash with Alliance troops.
Albanian political forces in Kosovo and Macedonia seem powerless to prevent
the activities of extreme militant groups.
The former, though, are beginning to realise the international community's
perception that Kosovo is exporting the radicalism could harm the province's
long term prospects.
They are aware that there is no military solution to the Albanian question.
Meanwhile, all the political representatives of Albanians in Macedonia, be
they in government or opposition, have clearly distanced themselves from the
uprising.
And they expect to get backing for this position from their counterparts in
Albania and Kosovo, whose response thus far has been lukewarm and confused,
due to intense ideological conflicts and a lack of strategic coordination.
But they must overcome their problems quickly, since they have an important
role to play in calming passions and preventing the escalation of a new
conflict.
Albanian political forces outside Macedonia should give much stronger
backing to the likes of Arben Xhaferi, the leader of the Party of Democratic
Prosperity of Albanians in Macedonia, who have been unequivocal in their
condemnation of the militants.
What's clear is that whether in government or opposition, they will have to
work harder to stop radical groups from taking the fate of the Albanian
nation into their own hands.
The author is the writer and the head of the Radio Free Europe Office in
Pristina.
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IWPR's network of leading correspondents in the region provides inside
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Editor-in-chief: Anthony Borden. Managing Editor: Yigal Chazan. Associate
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Editorial Assistant: Mirna Jancic. Kosovo Project Manager: Nehat Islami.
Translation: Alban Mitrushi, Dragana Nikolic, Denisa Kostovic and others.
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Copyright (C) 2000 The Institute for War & Peace Reporting
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IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS REPORT, NO. 224
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