This page originates from:

The articles collected by: Mr. Benjamin Crocker Works, Director
SIRIUS: The Strategic Issues Research Institute
www.siri-us.com
E-mail: BenWorks@aol.Com
The original page is at: Sirius Kosovo Archive ***
Archive: The KLA -- A Leadership Who's Who
April 10, 1999
Note: This archive, intended for research purposes, contains copyrighted
material included "for fair use only."
"Albanians don't care how many people we
lose."
Dr Pleurat Sejdiu, UCK representative based in London
[Why is it that civilians living far away from the battle zone always loudly
proclaim fighting to the last drop of someone else's blood ?]
Introduction: (written on 10. April 1999 by APV)
Here is the briefest introduction to various commanders in the UCK/KLA. It is
culled from wire service reports and then organized by name. This report focuses
exclusively on military leaders, with an eventual eye to linking individual
leaders with specific UCK/KLA actions.
Some preliminary observations are:
Through systematic torture and murder, the UCK seems to have been sending a
stark message to all civilians who oppose them: Abandon Kosovo or die.
The names of some UCK death camps have been found at Klecka, Izbica,
Lipovica, Glodjane, Junik. Eventually, research will show which UCK commanders
were responsible for which specific camps.
A special place on this list should be reserved for the commander of Klecka
as yet unknown, where the UCK parodied the macabre methods of Dachau, Mathuasen
and other Nazi death camps. Twenty-two (22) civilians were tortured, killed and
then burned in a crematorium there. Among the dead were at least two children
under the age of 10.
In death camps, bombing attacks, assassinations, and extrajudicial killings
the UCK has attempted to silence moderate voices in Kosovo. The UCK has tried to
divide Kosovo along racial lines by killing Albanians who associate with
non-Albanians.
For example, Aida Zejnulahu and her father were machine gunned last November
19th by the UCK as she walked home. Aida's offense was that she
attended a Yugoslav school. The UCK requires that Albanians attend segregated
Albanian only schools. It is believed that UCK Commander Remi ordered the
shooting of Aida Zejnulahu.
Roman Catholic Albanians seem to be a particular target of the UCK. The
Keljmendi family of Kacanik has had 7 members attacked since October
12th. The most vicious attack was the February 15th
planting of a Chinese made land mine at the front door of the Keljmendi family
home. Agim (12), Valdet (12), and Valdrin (6) were grievously wounded as they
stepped out to play. It is believed that UCK Commander Bardhi ordered this
attack.
Finally, evidence of the UCK's desire to divide society into two racist camps
is the frequent bombing of restaurants and cafes where Serbs, Albanians, Roma,
and Gorani mix socially. The 'Panda Cafe' incident last December is typical of
such UCK attacks. Six innocent teenagers were killed while they waited for their
ice cream. UCK commander In another attack on the 'Slavica' cafe on March
5th, seven people were wounded. UCK Commander Ramush Hajredinaj is
believed to have ordered both of these attacks.
Who's Who in the UCK:
Overall Military Commander:
Suleiman Selmi
22 Feb (Reuters) Pristina: Suleiman Selimi, 29, has been
named overall KLA commander, an Albanian-language newspaper reported. However,
the structure of the KLA is still shrouded in mystery. [ sounds like the
young UCK radicals won out and seasoned FARK professionals lost the leadership
struggle]
Guerrilla Force Near Collapse, Kosovo Rebels Appeal to NATO for Airborne
Supplies
By Peter Finn, Washington Post Foreign Service, Thursday, April 1, 1999; Page
A01
KUKES, Albania, March 31-The ethnic Albanian rebel group whose year long
battle to win independence for Kosovo brought world attention to the fate of the
province is facing imminent military defeat unless NATO airdrops heavy weaponry
to help the guerrillas survive a relentless assault by Serb-led Yugoslav forces,
a leading figure in the group said today.
Azen Syla, a founder of the Kosovo Liberation Army and a member of
its central council, said in an interview that Yugoslav army
troops and Serbian special police units have cut off the guerrillas' supply
lines from Albania since NATO began its bombing campaign against Yugoslav
military targets on March 24. He said the rebels were retreating across broad
areas of Kosovo. [ it is unclear if Syla is on political or military central
command if he part of central military command then he may report to Slemi or he
may be a heretofor unknown Zone commander]
Northern ( Llap ) Region:
Commander Remi
The Times (London), February 17 1999 EUROPE,
Nothing short of independence will do, a defiant Kosovo guerrilla commander
tells Anthony Loyd in Lapastica , Serbs must go or we fight on, says rebel chief
"............"Zone commanders such as myself are members of the General
Staff," said the fighter, known as Commander Remi, one
of the most senior KLA officers remaining in Kosovo. "We obey our orders, but
the General Staff is fighting for the freedom of Kosovo, so we don't expect
orders to disarm or disband. We'll put our weapons in warehouses only when we
have liberated Kosovo."
Commander Remi is in charge of the most vital of the seven KLA
operational zones which divide Kosovo. Included in his area of responsibility is
the municipality of the provincial capital, Pristina, as well as the vital
highway running north which connects Kosovo to Serbia. Though only 27, the
former law student, who interrupted his studies to fight, has previous combat
experience gained in the Yugoslav Special Forces during the Croatian war in
1991. [ Commander Remi appears to be responsible for the UCK bombing
campaign against Albanian restaurants in Pristina ]
Tuesday March 16 12:31 PM ET ; Yugoslav Army Advances: By Sean Maguire
MIJALIC, Serbia (Reuters) -".......While Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA)
separatist guerrillas were unable to stop the heavy armor and artillery deployed
in strength against them, one commander signaled defiance and opposition to a
peace deal agreed by his seniors at Paris talks.
......a statement from the KLA's Llap operational zone denounced the deal as
a betrayal of the struggle for independence.
``We find it necessary to disassociate ourselves from this wrong
anti-national policy,'' read the statement, which appeared in the Koha Ditore
newspaper. [ Koha Ditore was the most pro-UCK paper published in Pristina
]
``We hope all those who have been devoted to the Kosova issue and actively
taken part in its resolution will disassociate themselves from this (Paris)
bargain.''
Referring to those who made the deal as ``business patriots,'' the statement
criticized the ``fraud'' and ''manipulation'' that went into the accord's
approval.
The commander of the Llap zone, known as ``Remi,'' is
notoriously hard-line.....The Llap region, which lies north of Kosovo, is the
home of Adem Demaci,
Demaci resigned as the KLA's designated political representative three weeks
ago rather than support autonomy. Analysts saw Demaci's influence in the Llap
zone statement.
``Remi is an important commander and his opposition
to the agreement is significant. The important thing to watch now is whether any
other zone commanders sign on with him,'' said an international monitor who
asked not to be named.
``Pessimists will see this as the predictable start of a splintering of the
KLA, with one faction supporting the peace process and another opposing it. Some
will say this is part of the KLA strategy, a planned splintering if you will.''
Vecernji List (Zagreb) 9 March 1999; Some 300 Former HV Members Fighting in
Kosovo ;
by Sonja Hodak
"Last night, the Serbs showered us heavily with shells, but there were no
victims on our side -- there were victims on their side," Kadri
Kastrati told us by cellular phone during a lull in the fighting
early in the morning last weekend from the surroundings of Podujevo.
Kadri is an experienced soldier, he participated in the
Liberation War and has the memorial certificate for the year of 1991 and 1992.
For two and a half years he was a member of the Pula "Vangas" and defended
Croatia along its Adriatic coast, from Zadar to Dubrovnik. From Pula, where he
lived with his family, he arrived in Kosovo in April last year.
"Like most of the people, I arrived in Kosovo through Albania, but when I
returned from my vacation in Pula, I entered Kosovo through Macedonia,"
Kadri Kastrati tells us, derisively commenting on the
amassing of Yugoslav forces along the border with Macedonia. "The roads can
never be closed, because they were opened by the will to help one's own people."
Before his participation in the Liberation War, this 39-year-old soldier had
spent 11 years in the JNA, and, today, he is the deputy commander of
the region in which he fights.
[ Report between 20.Feb and 27. Feb ] ``The shelling started today
at 7:45 this morning and it's still continuing,'' said Skender
Brahimi, a local KLA commander in the village of Lubovec. [Reports to
Remi]
22 .Feb (Reuters) On a high plateau west of Stitarica, the KLA regrouped from
their clashes under the auspices of their zone commander, Rahman
Rama. [ is this Remi's real name ?]
The Independent 16 March 1999 : Five villages ablaze in new shelling: By Emma
Daly in Ljubovac
Serb security forces poured rocket and mortar fire on to suspected rebel
positions in northern Kosovo yesterday, as the two sides sat down to peace talks
in Paris.
Smoke rose from burning houses in at least five villages in the eastern
foothills of Cicavica mountain, west of the main road between Pristina, Kosovo's
capital, and the town of Mitrovica. Exhausted rebels gathered in the village of
Ljubovac { Skender Brahimin's command area prior to 27. Feb ] to rest
and re-group as the fire boomed around them.
The crash of incoming shells rang out, and puffs of black smoke marked the
impacts - mercifully short of the village, at least until late afternoon, when
one house was hit and began to burn, sending a column of thick smoke wafting
above the ridge line.
"We still have a unit in Osljan, doing shifts," said Enver, the
local KLA brigade commander, who was nursing a bandaged left hand -
a shrapnel wound. "They tried to attack this way, but they took a lot of victims
on their side."
However, the KLA has also suffered losses, including Bislime. As the sun set,
the local hoxha said a few short prayers over the body of Bislime and his
closest friends set the coffin to rest in the thick, cloying earth of Drenica,
the KLA stronghold that could be threatened if the Yugoslav army succeeds in
pushing the KLA off the Cicavica mountains. "I hope this is going to be
the last dead soldier," said Gani, a military policeman standing by the
freshly-dug grave. "All the fighters are our friends, even if we don't know
them," he said. But Ramadan, another soldier, was sceptical. "How can he
be the last one buried when they are shelling over there?"
KOSOVO: A Belief in Guns, Not Words , Newsweek, March 22, 1999
KLA fighters on the rebels' front lines say they don't think a peace deal
with the Serbs is likely to stop the war
By Mark Dennis
Wars just about always heat up when peace talks near, and last week Kosovo
was no exception. Yugoslav army tanks spent Thursday morning fitfully lobbing
shells toward the northern Kosovo village of Oshlan.
Inside the Kosovo Liberation Army's regional headquarters, the
ethnic-Albanian separatists ignored the thunder as best they could. Around noon,
though, the gunners began shaking the village's windows every few seconds. The
KLA's area commander, a 29-year-old with the nom de guerre
Rahman, flinched as small-arms fire broke out nearby.
Bracing for a tank assault, a team of KLA military police sprinted up a nearby
hillside and dived for cover among the trees. Zagi, a lanky 21-year-old rebel,
hoisted his grenade launcher into firing position. He grinned and waited for a
target.
The tanks didn't come. Instead, the Yugoslavs hit a KLA post outside Oshlan.
In a three-hour fire fight, the village fighters rescued their besieged
comrades. It was an exhausting day--and Rahman expected
no rest. He said the fighting probably would continue no matter what peace terms
may be signed in France this week with the Serbs who rule what's left of
Yugoslavia. "We don't believe in their words," he told NEWSWEEK. "We believe in
our guns." His remarks were almost drowned by the boom of an incoming shell.
Badly outgunned, the KLA still can boast at least one advantage: a sense of
total commitment. "That's the difference between the Serbs and us," said
Enver Rusteni, a former construction worker fighting
east of Oshlan. "We're willing to die."
Many of them may have to. As the army moved closer to Oshlan last Saturday,
Rahman's deputy, Enver Orucaj, was reached on his mobile
phone. "We'll fight to the last bullet," he said as shells exploded in the
background. Later, journalists traveling the main road to the north passed
jubilant Serbian troops high-fiving each other by the roadside.
Behind them, smoke rose from Oshlan and two neighboring villages. That
evening another call was made to Orucaj's phone. It was answered by a Serb.
North West ( Mitrovica ) Region: Commander Shala
Gani Koci, spokesman for Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) commander
Shaban Shala in the Decani region [is it possible that
Shaban is related to Enver Shala Pristina shopkeepr murdered by UCK on 7. Feb or
the 3 Shala men executed by UCK for betraying their positions at Rugova ?]
PRISTINA, Serbia, March 17 (Reuters) - The Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) has
lost one of its key zone headquarters to Serbian security forces in fighting
west of Vucitrn in the north of this Serbian province, an international monitor
said on Wednesday.
``The KLA informed us that they had lost their Shala
zone headquarters in the village of Becuk in fighting on Tuesday,'' a monitor
for the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Kosovo
Verification Mission (KVM) told Reuters.
``They told us that they had been forced to withdraw further west onto the
(Cicavica) mountain.''
Shala is one of seven KLA operational zones in Kosovo. It
covers the strategically important north-south highway connecting Pristina with
Mitrovica, and the rail line that runs parallel to it.
Yugoslav army and Serbian police forces, backed by armour and artillery, have
been pounding suspected KLA positions along a front at least 15 km (10 miles)
long in the foothills west of Vucitrn for the past three weeks.
Relatively lightly armed, the KLA is being pushed west onto the heights of
Cicavica mountain by superior Serb firepower.
If Serbian forces reach the Cicavica ridge-line the KLA stronghold of Drenica
to the west will be highly vulnerable to attack, monitors said.
The Times, March 15 1999 EUROPE; Market bombs and Serb artillery set tone for
peace negotiations,
Anthony Loyd writes from Mitrovica
"....... Just west of Mitrovica, villages burnt across a seven-mile front.
Serb tanks, mortars and heavy artillery had pounded suspected KLA positions here
throughout the morning and afternoon in the heaviest day of the past three days'
fighting in the area. On Thursday, as the Serb offensive began there, the KLA
had seemed in confident mood.
"We know exactly what the Serbs are trying to do," said Naim Bardiqi,
a KLA officer with the Fehmi Lladrovci Brigade. "They are attempting to
drive a wedge between two of our operational zones, but we are much better
equipped than we were last year to deal with them." However, by yesterday the
atmosphere had changed. Presented with a smoking vista of lost villages and
advancing Serb tanks, the KLA was tense and nervous. Unable to respond to or
withstand such an onslaught, they had been pushed farther back into the Cicavica
mountains.......'
THE NATIONAL POST, Friday, March 19, 1999, Friday, March 19, 1999, Serbs, KLA
vow fight to last soldier
NATO gives deadline, Juliette Terzieff, National Post, with files from
Stewart Bell in Skopje
[ ]........"The Serbs have a far stronger military than we do, but their
soldiers are fighting under pressure from commanders. Our soldiers fight for
freedom," said Gani Goci, a KLA commander in
the Drenica region.
KLA operatives have laid mines in several northern parts of Kosovo in
anticipation of routes advancing Serbs might use. They claim to have anti-tank
missiles and other unspecified weaponry capable of
immobilizing military machinery.
For the most part, the KLA is an untrained, poorly armed guerrilla force that
has yet to win a battle in Kosovo. During last summer's offensives, they were
run out of every battlefield, often leaving behind countless
civilians.
"We have changed and are stronger now. There are ways to fight them and we
will, until the last soldier is dead if that is what our price must be," said
commander Goci.....[ ]
Western ( Pastrik ) Region:
Commander Drini
4.March Drini, the 38-year old commander of the
Pastrik operational zone in western Kosovo, is respected among the guerrillas
and is considered to be one of the more influential and professional rebel
fighters, an international monitor said.
Southern ( Pec ) Region:
Commander Ramush Hajredinaj
Kosovo Rebels Won't Give Up Guns, By ANNE THOMPSON, .c The Associated Press
JABLANICA, Yugoslavia (AP) -- Sitting in his headquarters along the
snow-capped mountains of the Albanian border, hard-line rebel commander
Ramush Hajredinaj remains adamant that the Kosovo Liberation Army will
never give up its guns.
Disarmament is the biggest barrier to getting the KLA to sign a U.S.-backed
peace agreement, and a second day of ethnic Albanian rebel meetings Monday
produced no firm results despite the entreaties of U.S. envoy Christopher
Hill.
The deal envisions the KLA becoming a political party, with some rebels
joining an ethnic Albanian-run police force. But after years of covert planning,
of training in the woods and smuggling guns into Kosovo for the fight for
independence, the KLA is unwilling to forsake the army it worked so hard to
build up.
They also fear not having a defensive force against the Serbs.
``Not to have an army would be a big mistake,'' said
Hajredinaj, one of five KLA commanders invited
to visit Washington in another diplomatic move to persuade rebels to adopt the
deal for Kosovo self-rule.
Without the rebels, Kosovo Albanian politicians will not sign. And without
full cooperation from all Albanian factions, NATO cannot follow through on
military threats aimed at getting Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic to also
agree.
The negotiations come after a year of bitter ethnic war in Kosovo, a southern
province in the Serb republic that dominates Yugoslavia, where ethnic Albanians
outnumber Serbs nine to one.
Hajredinaj (pronounced high-re-DEE-nai) is one of the most
militant commanders in the rebel army, and some observers worry hard-liners
might continue to fight even if politicians and other rebel leaders accept
peace.
His men already are suspected of carrying out the Panda Cafe murders, when
masked rebels opened fire in December on a restaurant the city of Pec, killing
six Serbian youths. His men also are suspected of shooting at U.S. diplomatic
monitors. And Hajredinaj himself is wanted by the Serb regime as a
terrorist.
His territory, along the western flank of Kosovo, hums with a military spark
and efficiency, with a tight chain of command and a fierce loyalty to a leader
almost worshipped for his fighting skill and strategic prowess.
``When I mention his name, I feeling like bowing. That's how much I respect
him,'' said battalion leader Arzen Bytyqi, 23, wearing a red beret and a
greencamouflage uniform with KLA patches emblazoned with their emblem: the
two-headed black eagle.
Now 30, Hajredinaj served one year in the
Yugoslav army, during which he says he was learning to be a soldier to fight for
Kosovo independence. Like many ethnic Albanians, he also lived in Switzerland
and France, earning money for the cause before coming home in the early 1990s to
take up arms.
``I've been thinking of independence since I was a child. It was
my training from my parents,'' said the commander.
His wife also serves in the KLA, as do his sister and five brothers.
``We can accept everything that doesn't destroy the way to independence,''
Hajredinaj said Monday, suggesting that he,
like other commanders, are ready to accept autonony as a first step. ``If NATO
comes, we won't have to be a liberation army anymore. We'll change and become a
regular army,'' the commander said.
``Washington knows what we want,'' he added with a smile. ``We've been clear
from the very beginning.''
AP-NY-03-08-99 1527EST
http://www.kosovapress.com/english/mars/4_3_99_5.htm
Command of the UÇK 162nd Brigade "Agim Bajrami" appeals
Kaçanik, 4th of March 99 (Kosovapress)
Command of the UÇK 162nd Brigade "Agim Bajrami" is appealing to all people of
Kaçanik, who are subject of occupation forces attack in last few days, not to
leave their land and go to Maqedoni and further. There
is no need for fear and panic, as UÇK is the one who will not allow any more
massacres to be repeated by Serb forces in these areas. Command is seeking
responsibility from displaced people, to return to their homes and their land in
the villages they left. Leaving our homes will only help Serb barbarians to
achieve their goal, so we should not allow this to happened. Kosova is ours and
it will remain ours. Our weapons, our determined struggle and blood spilled for
freedom all over Kosovë, are our guarantee, continues in the appeal of the
command, signed by
Commander Bardhi.
Foreign Mercs fighting in KosMet
Vecernji List (Zagreb) 9 March 1999; Some 300 Former HV Members Fighting in
Kosovo
by Sonja Hodak
Several dozen Croats have been fighting shoulder to shoulder with the members
of the Kosovo Liberation Army [UCK] in Kosovo in the fiercest combats against
the Serbs! Of course, all of them arrived there through private channels and
without the knowledge of the Croatian Government, and all of them, according to
the claims of
our collocutors from the UCK, are well-trained soldiers who have been
fighting there since last year and who are taking part in the hardest clashes
along the border now!
Albanians close to the peace agreement negotiators have also confirmed the
participation of combatants from Croatia, that is, of Croats and Albanians with
Croatian citizenship, and they have also informed us
about the reasons why our people went to Kosovo.
"The Croats who went to fight shoulder to shoulder with the soldiers of the
Kosovo Liberation Army did so for two reasons: either they are
risking their lives because of their friendship and solidarity with the
Albanians who defended Croatia for years in the Liberation War, or they went
there for money. Among the Croats in the UCK there are also
high-ranking officers who have left the HV [Croatian Army], like, for
instance, a colonel from the Split area," our collocutors tell us.
Two Factions With the Same Idea
The most sought after are commandos, who train the new arrivals at centers in
Albania, and the second most-wanted are experts in minesweeping. They earn some
15,000 German marks [DM] a month, while
unspecialized, but experienced soldiers earn about DM10,000.
According to our source, who is well informed about the very beginnings of
the Kosovo conflict, before the UCK there were two factions with the same idea
that Kosovo should be helped with both money and soldiers. Dr. Bujar Bukoshi,
prime minister of the Kosovo government in exile, headed the first faction. In
Croatia, he organized a group of Albanian officers who had previously been
officers of the JNA [Yugoslav People's Army] and then of the HV. Bukoshi
provided for their salaries and appointed Ahmed Krasniqi to the office of the
minister of defense of Kosovo. Ahmed Krasniqi was killed in Tirana last fall
under still-unclear circumstances.
The other faction was the Kosovo National Movement, which was very active in
the West. Through the Albanian community in Croatia, they established a fund
called "Homeland Calls." Even though, at the start, those two factions were
politically opposed to each other, they united within the UCK several months
ago. It is presumed, our source says, that the other faction [as published]
provoked the war in Kosovo, and the majority of soldiers from Croatia arrived in
Kosovo precisely thanks to them.
From Split and Ljubljana to Albania
They generally travelled from Split or Ljubljana to Albania. There, they were
trained at centers, and then they left for Kosovo. The soldiers who already had
combat experience (our source claims that many Albanians fought in the
Liberation War in order to acquire experience for the inevitable conflict in
Kosovo) immediately went to the battlefield across the Prokletije mountain
range. However, it is not so well known that the warriors go to the battlefields
directly through Macedonia, Montenegro, and Sandzak.
"Almost all the soldiers who left for Kosovo are still there, because the
scale of the war is growing. Two months ago, some of them were still visiting
their families in Croatia, but now that is almost impossible to do," our
collocutors claim.
Our source claims that the so-called returnees [preceding word published in
italics] are either deserters or soldiers who were not accepted by the UCK, so
that they were returned from Albania without smelling the smoke of war in
Kosovo. Some of the fighters from Croatia are, unfortunately,no longer among the
living. For instance, Pekim Berisha-Zica, the bugbear of the Chetniks,
was killed in action. A legendary fighter from Croatia,
Fehmi Ladrovci, was also killed. According to some estimates,
there are approximately 300 fighters from Croatia in Kosovo -- of course,
moreAlbanians and fewer Croats -- but one cannot give a precise number. One
of them is Kadri Kastrati, a citizen of Pula, who has been in Kosovo
for almost a year.
"They Cannot Close the Roads"
"Last night, the Serbs showered us heavily with shells, but there were no
victims on our side -- there were victims on their side," Kadri Kastrati
told us by cellular phone during a lull in the fighting early in the morning
last weekend from the surroundings of Podujevo.
Kadri is an experienced soldier, he participated in the Liberation War
and has the memorial certificate for the year of 1991 and 1992. For two and a
half years he was a member of the Pula "Vangas" and defended Croatia
along its Adriatic coast, from Zadar to Dubrovnik. From Pula, where he lived
with his family, he arrived in Kosovo in April last year.
"Like most of the people, I arrived in Kosovo through Albania, but when I
returned from my vacation in Pula, I entered Kosovo through Macedonia," Kadri
Kastrati tells us, derisively commenting on the amassing of
Yugoslav forces along the border with Macedonia. "The roads can never be
closed, because they were opened by the will to help one's own people."
Before his participation in the Liberation War, this 39-year-old soldier had
spent 11 years in the JNA, and, today, he is the deputy commander of the region
in which he fights.
We Have Repelled Eight Serbian Offensives!
"I went to fight in Croatia, because we had a common enemy, and that was also
an opportunity for me to prepare for the war in Kosovo. It became clear a long
time ago that this conflict was inevitable. Everything I learned in the
Liberation War is more than helpful to me now, and has been so particularly in
the last two and a half months. The
attacks never cease, we have repelled eight Serbian offensives so far, and
they attacked us with more than 100 tanks and armored vehicles. They will have
to give up soon, because they are losing equipment, and their
soldiers are deserting every day," Kadri
proudly says about their successes so far. [ reality is that Kadri
and Remi are under siege and these UCK fighters are essentially irrelevant to
the fighting in KosMet, by mid-March they were surrounded in a tiny
area.]
According to his knowledge, about 100 soldiers from Croatia are in Kosovo,
and, when asked whether they are still coming in,
Kadri answers: "Not so many of them are arriving now,
because, at the moment, we need
only well-trained people. After all, the time to come is already past: those
who wanted to come to Kosovo have already come. Those who stroll all over
Croatia and Europe and brag that they were in the UCK have been
watching too much television! All the UCK combatants are here!"
New Fighters Are Arriving Constantly
According to what Kadri knows, the UCK has 20,000
people in Kosovo, and they turn away new people every day because there is no
need for them. "Sometimes we turn away as many as 150 people. We recently
received a petition with 3,000 signatures from Pristina students who want to
join us, but there is no need for them to come. There are also many women who
want to join us," Kadri says, and explains that
the UCK fighters are no longer trained in Albania, but on the liberated
territory in Kosovo. For his unselfish sacrifice,
Kadri receives no reward, because he, as he
says, does not need it.
"The families of the fighters receive their salaries, according to the needs
and standards of the countries they live in. Thus my family receives about
DM1,000 a month," concludes Kadri Kastrati, who
was interrupted in our interview by new troubles in the Podujevo region. [
this is 2-3 times what Kadri would earn if he worked in
Croatia.]
We Have Collected More Than DM4 Million So Far
"Our model was the Croatian Diaspora during the Liberation War. In a very
similar way, the Albanians from Croatia help their people in Kosovo. We have
organized committees in all counties, and their task is to collect
financial and any other assistance for those displaced from Kosovo and the
UCK," says Ton Marku, president of the Union of Albanian Community in Croatia.
He continues to say that, apart from significant quantities of aid, many
soldiers left for Kosovo from Croatia.
"More than 1,000 Albanians volunteered in the Liberation War. Most of them
are already in Kosovo, and those who have not left yet will go soon!
Apart from the Albanians from Croatia, fighters from Bosnia-Herzegovina also
joined the UCK. More than 5,000 Albanians fought against the Serbs in
Bosnia-Herzegovina. Also, the Albanians who are still officers in the
Croatian Army will leave their active duty and go to Kosovo. It is their duty
to teach their people in Kosovo all they know about military matters," Mr. Marku
says.
There is a fund called "Homeland Calls" in the Union, and it is based in
Zadar. Ton Marku points out that, so far, more than DM4 million has been
collected in money, food, clothes, and medicines. Pliva [pharmaceutical
industry] and Varteks [textile industry] are among the many Croatian
companies that have helped.
Gang Pressing of Unwilling Albanians into UCK
The Independent, 1 April 1999
War in The Balkans - KLA's ragged army imposes draft
Emma Daly in Kukes, Albania, and Marcus Tanner
A curious guard of honour - 10 soldiers in red berets and mis-matching
uniforms - stood around the gate of the electricity sub-station in Kukes, amid
flat ground packed with hundreds of tractors and thousands of refugees.
The soldiers were not there to protect the Kosovo Albanians fleeing the
Serbian army's savage assault; they were seeking new blood for the fight that
goes on.
Along the border road, and in the main street of Kukes, and south of Kukes on
the main road to the Albanian capital, Tirana, uniformed soldiers of the Kosovo
Liberation Army set up roadblocks and started searching for young men fleeing
the Serbs.
"I want to go with my family - if they let me go," said 23-year-old Binak
Likaj, who was leaning against the plastic sheet covering a tractor-trailer
parked in a roadside camp. "The KLA is recruiting soldiers for the army to go
back to fight." He looked nervous, as 10 guerrillas were standing around at the
gate to the camp. "I want to go with my family," he repeated.
Fatmir Krasniqi, 21, was forcibly recruited to the struggle by the KLA at the
Kosovo-Albania border crossing at Morini, where he was waiting for news of his
older brother, Flamur. Hours before, their mother, Mihirie, had died
in Kukes hospital. Mihirie's heart problem had proved too much for the
terrifying 21-hour walk out from Kosovo.
"They took Fatmir last night, but I went and showed them the death
certificate for my wife, so they released him for one or two days," said his
father, Muharrem Krasniqi.
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