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The Kosovo Liberation Army Maintained A Network Of Prisons

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  • The Kosovo Liberation Army Maintained A Network Of Prisons

    THE KOSOVO LIBERATION ARMY MAINTAINED A NETWORK OF PRISONS

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    13.04.2009 18:10 GMT+04:00

    The Kosovo Liberation Army maintained a network of prisons in their
    bases in Albania and Kosovo during and after the conflict of 1999,
    eyewitnesses allege. Only now are the details of what occurred there
    emerging.

    In a run-down industrial compound with shattered windows and peeling
    plaster in Kukes, Albania, trucks sit idle in a courtyard surrounded
    by rusted warehouses and a crumbling two-story supply building.

    In the middle of the compound stands a cinderblock shack that was
    once the office of a mechanical plant that produced everything from
    manhole covers to elevator cages.

    But, during the NATO bombing of the former Yugoslavia, from March to
    June 1999, this facility took on another purpose. It was occupied by
    a guerrilla force, the Kosovo Liberation Army, KLA, as a support base
    for their operations across the border in Serbian-ruled Kosovo.

    But the factory was not merely the headquarters for guerrillas fighting
    the regime of Slobodan Milosevic to secure the independence of Kosovo
    from Serbia.

    It assumed more sinister purposes: dozens of civilians, mainly Kosovo
    Albanians suspected of collaboration, but also Serbs and Roma were
    held captive there, beaten and tortured. Some were killed, their
    remains never recovered. The men who allegedly directed the abuses
    were officers of the KLA.

    It appears that Kukes housed one of a number of secret detention
    centers in Albania and Kosovo, and that prisoners were transferred
    from one facility to another.

    Even after the NATO interventions, a camp was maintained in
    Baballoq/Babaloc in Kosovo, holding around 30 Serb and Roma prisoners,
    whose current whereabouts are unknown. Other camps in Albania may
    have held Serbs kidnapped in Kosovo after the war, according to
    four sources.

    The names of several alleged perpetrators have been known to UNMIK
    for some time. One of them is still holding a high position in the
    Kosovo judiciary, Balkan Insight understands.

    Bislim Zyrapi, an official of the Kosovo Interior Ministry, who was
    responsible for KLA operations in Kukes, told Balkan Insight that
    there were no people killed, either at the base or outside of it.

    Two of the KLA's former top leaders rejected the allegations in
    separate interviews with the BBC.

    Kosovo's Prime Minister, Hashim Thaci, who was then the political
    director of the KLA, and Agim Ceku, former Prime Minister and former
    chief of the KLA headquarters, told the BBC they were not aware of any
    KLA prisons where captives were abused or where civilians were held.

    Thaci said he was aware that individuals had "abused KLA uniforms"
    after the war, but said the KLA had distanced itself from such acts. He
    added that such abuse was "minimal". Ceku said that the KLA fought a
    "clean war".

    Karin Limdal, spokeswoman for the EU rule of law mission in Kosovo,
    EULEX, told Balkan Insight that the mission is aware of the allegations
    concerning the Kukes case, and that prosecutors are looking at the
    evidence to see if they can bring indictments.
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