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: Kosovo In the 1980s
Tuesday, June 22, 1999
NOTE: This archive, intended for research purposes, contains copyrighted
material included "for fair use only."
Contents:
- Wash. Post, April 3, 1981; Yugoslavs Take Emergency Steps In Face of
Ethnic Disturbance
- The Economist, April 11, 1981; Yugoslavia; Home-grown Bother
- NY Times, April 19, 1981; One Storm Passed, Others Gathering in Yugoslavia
- Christian Science Monitor (CSM); May 7, 1981; Kosovo sparking a Yugoslav
purge?
- AP; Oct. 23, 1981; Minorities Leaving Yugoslav Province Dominated by
Albanians
- CSM, Dec. 16, 1981; Why turbulent Kosovo has marble sidewalks but troubled
industries
- Financial Times, Feb. 5, 1982; Police fail to crush resistance in Kosovo
- Financial Times, June 1, 1982; Kosovo riots jolt the regions
- NY Times, July 12, 1982; Exodus of Serbians Stirs Province in Yugoslavia
- Facts on File World News Digest; September 10, 1982; Serbs in Kosovo
Exodus
- NY Times; Nov. 9, 1982; Yugoslavs seek to quell strife in Region of Ethnic
Albanians
- BBC World; May 4, 1985; Serbian Presidency discusses emigration from
Kosovo
- The Economist; Nov. 9, 1985; Yugoslavia; Is fair unfair?
- NY Times, April 28, 1986; In One Yugoslav Province Serbs Fear the Ethnic
Albanians
- Reuters; May 27, 1986, Kosovo Province Revives Yugoslavia's Ethnic
Nightmare
- Sen. Robert Dole; June 18, 1986; Senate Resolution Nr. 150
- NY Times; July 27, 1986, Minorities are Uneasy in Yugoslavian Province
- CSM; July 28, 1986; Tensions among ethnic groups in Yugoslavia begin to
boil over
- BBC; Nov. 10, 1986; Group of Citizens from Kosovo Received in SFRY
Assembly
- Wash. Post; Nov. 29, 1986; Ethnic Rivalries Cause Unrest in Yugoslav
Region
- Reuters; April 25, 1987, Serb Demonstrations Add to Yugoslavia's Economic
Woes
- NY Times; June 28, 1987; Belgrade Battles Kosovo Serbs
- Reuters; August 16, 1987, Serbs & Montenegrans Rally Against Alleged
Albanian Attacks
- Xinhua; Oct. 17, 1987; Thousands of women demonstrate in Kosovo,
Yugoslavia
- AP, Oct. 21, 1987; Serb, Montenegrin Pupils Boycott Classes in Kosovo
- Xinhua; Oct. 26, 1987; Federal police sent to troubled Kosovo, Yugoslavia
- NY Times; Nov. 1, 1987; In Yugoslavia, Rising Ethnic Strife Brings Fears
of Worse Civil Conflict
- CSM; March 11, 1988; Yugoslav groups struggle for same land
- Reuters; July 30, 1988; Yugoslav Leaders Call for Control in Kosovo;
Protests Loom
- NY Times; Sept. 23, 1988; 70,000 Serbs Vent Anger at Officials
- Wash. Post; Oct. 7, 1988; Serb Protesters Oust Yugoslavian Province
Officials
The following excerpted article appeared in my inbox in early February and
got me thinking and collecting articles about Kosovo in the 1980s from major
newspapers and wire services. A number of good people contributed to finding
these articles and I thank them.
The New York Times, Monday, July 12, 1982
Exodus of Serbians Stirs Province in Yugoslavia
"Serbs .... have... been harassed by Albanians and have packed up and left
the region.
"The [Albanian] nationalists have a two-point platform, ...first to establish
what they call an ethnically clean Albanian republic and then the merger with
Albania to form a greater Albania."
"Some 57,000 Serbs have left Kosovo in the last decade... The exodus of Serbs
is admittedly one of the main problems... in Kosovo..."
[Full text included below in Article #9.]
I got more and posted an archive on the web Readers retrieved more articles
from Lexis-Nexis and other archives and I present a broad sampling herein.
Contrast Bob Dole's assertions of Serbian oppression of the Albanians in his
Senate Resolution (article #16 below) with articles from the newspapers and wire
services at the time. US foreign policy was led astray.
The Kosovo Question is vastly more two-sided than we have been led to believe
in the last two years of buildup to the NATO Air War against Yugoslavia.
Benjamin Works
Census Data; 1981
2. Extract From SIT-7-6-98, Strategic Issues Today; Kosovo
Minorities in Census Data:
The following data were provided in March by a Professor Batakovic to Bob
Djurdjevic, a computer industry consultant and independent journalist from
Phoenix, AZ. Mr. Djurdjevic forwarded the following note, which I have edited
and added percentage breakdowns for Prof. Batakovic's census figures:
"According to Prof. D. Batakovic, member of the Serbian Academy of Arts and
Sciences (SANU), who has done extensive demographic studies of Kosovo, the
following are the Kosovo population stats in 1981, when the manipulation of the
numbers was not as blatant as it is now:"
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Kosovo Population (per Prof. Dusan Batakovic, SANU, 11-Mar-98):
POPULATION . . . . .1981 . ...Percent
Albanians . . . . ..1,226,736 . . ..77.5%
Other Muslims . . . ...71,075 . . . ..4.5%..(Turkish and Slavic Muslims)
Serbs . . . . . . . .209,497. . ....13.2%
Montenegrin Serbs . .....27,028 . . ...1.7%
Others (Gypsies, etc.) ....50,104 . . .....3.0%
Total . . . . . . ..1,584,440
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: The Census data do not reflect that some 50,000 Serbs had left the
province by the time of this census, as confirmed by The New York Times
article preceding this item. The data do not do a particularly good job of
reporting the other 18 minorities which are neither Serb nor Albanian.
Now the population has grown over the last 17 years and some non-Albanians
have moved out, being tired of this political nonsense, but the Muslim and
Christian communities of non-Albanians remain strongly entrenched in Kosovo as
do the Albanian Catholics. So what we have is Albanian Geg neo-fascists and drug
lords against virtually everybody --and anybody-- else.
At the same time, it is reasonably estimated that some 300,000 Albanians have
left Kosovo for Switzerland, Germany and the US since the Milosevic crackdown,
which qualifies these emigrants as refugees.
The International Roma organization militating for Gypsy rights estimates the
Kosovo Gypsy population as high as 400,000 and others estimate the Kosovo Roma
at 100-150,000. -BCW, Feb. 27, 1999.
The Articles:
The Washington Post; April 3, 1981, Friday, Final Edition
SECTION: First Section; World News; A17
1. Yugoslavs Take Emergency Steps In Face of Ethnic Disturbance
By Michael Dobbs, Washington Post Foreign Service
DATELINE: BELGRADE, April 2, 1981
Yugoslavia's communist authorities today imposed emergency measures in an
attempt to quell mounting disturbances among the country's politically
sensitives ethnic Albanian minority.
Serious clashes between demonstrators and security forces in the province of
Kosovo, which borders on Albania, have triggered the first crisis in Yugoslavia
since president Tito's death 11 months ago. The gathering unrest reached a
climax yesterday when, according to official sources, several hundred people
were injured as police firing tear gas broke up a march of at least 10,000
protesters through the provincial capital of Pristina.
Under the emergency measures, all public gatherings and movement by "group of
people" are banned in the province -- Yugoslavia's poorest region. Army units
have been called into protect public buildings, including Pristina's town prison
that was the target of yeaterday's march.
The protesaters, who included university students and miners, were demanding
the release of people detained following riots over the last month. Officials
said that demonstrators, some of them armed with guns and firing at the police,
pushed children in front of them to make it more difficult for the security
services to disrupt the march.
Kosovo has long been regarded as one of the weak points in post-Tito
Yugoslavia because of its economic backwardness and rivalry between the
province's ethnic Albanian majority and Serb minority. Years of what Kosovo's
million Albanians considered repression by the Serb elite last boiled over in
1968 when violent demonstrations had to be quelled by the Army.
In a nationwide television broadcast, Kosovo's president, Dzavid Nimani,
accused the demonstrators of being manipulated by "enemy forces" wanting to
destroy Yugoslavia -- a federal state made up of many different national groups.
Some of the marchers are said to have chanted slogans calling for unity with
Albania, a militantly communist neighbor state, but the main demand was for
Kosovo to be upgraded from a province into a republic.
A complicating factor is the reported serious illness of Albania's
isolationist leader, Enver Hoxha, 72, who succeeded in breaking away from Soviet
domination in 1961. One of the "nightmare scenarios" for post-Tito Yugoslavia is
of the Kremlin somehow regaining control over Albania after Hoxha's death and
fomenting unrest among the Albanian minority here.
The latest round of disturbances began March 11, when about 2,000 students at
Pristina University rioted over poor living conditions and inequality. The riots
were suppressed by police and the discontent has now spread both to other
sections of the population and other parts of the province.
Serious incidents have been reported in half a dozen towns in Kosovo over the
past three weeks, including Pec, where the refectory of a Serbian monastery was
burned in mysterious circumstances. This created the danger of a backlash among
Serbs, Yugoslavia's largest national group, for whom the patriarchate of Pec has
great historical and emotional significance.
Taken together, the latest events reflect the two gravest problems
confronting Tito's successors: ethnic differences in the complex multinational
state and an increasingly serious economic crisis. Inflation is running at more
than 40 percent, there are 800,000 unemployed in a total population of 22
million, and Yugoslavia is heavily in debt.
The economic problems are most pronounced in poor provinces such as Kosovo,
despite a program of large scale investments over the last 10 years. One fear of
Yugoslav leaders is that economic strains in less developed parts of the country
could trigger new political tension.
The comparison with Poland springs to mind, but Yugoslavia is very different.
Its multinational make up virtually precludes a protest from a largely united
population, as in Poland. Tito, during his 35-year rule, excelled in playing one
nationality against another.
In addition, there are more outlets for tension than in Poland. Yugoslavs are
free to travel abroad and, to a limited extent, participate in political and
economic decision-making through the system of workers' self-management.
Nevertheless, the latest disturbances do represent the most serious ethnic
unrest to have erupted in Yugoslavia for a decade. In his televised speech,
President Nimani said the authorities were determined to use all necessary
measures to safeguard public order.
A statement from the provincial Interior Ministry said the emergency
restrictions would remain in force "as long as the extraordinary situation in
the province continues." Territorial reserve units, normally intended to serve
against an external enemy, have been mobilized to assist the police and security
services.
Officials said meetings were being held in factories throughout Kosovo to
drum up support for the firm stand taken by the authorities. Local Communist
Party branches have sent telegrams to Yugoslavia's collective leadership
condemning the disturbances and pledging their loyalty.
Last week officials said 21 students were detained following a 24-hour
occupation of Pristina University.
The flare-up coincided with the arrival in the province of a ceremonial baton
that youths carried around the country to mark Tito's birthday. The annual event
is intended to demonstrate unity and brotherhood among the south Slav
nations.
Copyright 1981 The Washington Post
The Economist; April 11, 1981
SECTION: World politics and current affairs; EUROPE; Pg. 67 (U.S. Edition Pg.
49)
2. Jugoslavia; Home-grown bother
Kosovo, Jugoslavia's poorest region, is behaving in an un-communist fashion.
Trouble began with student demonstrations on March 11th in Pristina, the capital
of the mainly Albanian-inhabited province. They were put down by the police with
relative ease but two subsequent bouts of rioting, on March 26th and April 1st
and 2nd, were more serious, and spread to a number of Kosovo towns besides
Pristina.
Mr Stane Dolanc, a member of the Jugoslav Communist party's top body, on
Monday said that 11 people had been killed in the riots so far, two of them
policemen, and 57 wounded. Unofficial estimates put the numbers higher. Whatever
the figures, nobody denies that the Kosovo riots were a serious affair.
Overnight curfews were imposed in a number of Kosovo towns, and foreign
journalists were not allowed into the province. Those who managed to get there
before the ban were told to leave because the authorities said they ''could not
guarantee their safety''. A ban on all public gatherings remains in force.
Mr Fadil Hoxha, a member of Jugoslavia's collective state presidency and a
Kosovo Albanian (not to be confused with Albania's leader across the border,
Enver Hoxha), spoke the day after the last and most serious of the riots of a
''counter-revolution'' in Kosovo aimed at creating a rift between the province's
Albanians on the one hand and its Serbs and Montenegrins on the other.
Montenegrins and Serbs are Orthodox Christians and Slavs; most of the Kosovo
Albanians are Moslems and non-Slavs. Mr Hoxha called the organisers of the riots
''the darkest servants and agents of various intelligence centres and
agencies''. Mr Dolanc was more circumspect on Monday, saying that the
authorities would have to be deaf and blind to blame the trouble entirely on
''outside factors''.
Indeed Albania, one potential ''outside factor'', has remained reserved
throughout. Frontier posts between Albania and Jugoslavia have remained closed.
Official announcements from Tirana have merely noted the outbreak of
disturbances in Kosovo. Clearly the Jugoslav policy of keeping on
good-neighbourly terms with Albania has paid off.
Could the Russians have been stirring it? Mr Hoxha did speak of
Marxist-Leninist slogans used in the Kosovo demonstrations that were strongly
reminiscent of ''Cominformism'', which is a Jugoslav term for pro-Sovietism. But
it seems unlikely that the Soviet Union would choose this moment to kindle a
crisis in Jugoslavia to add to the other crises on its hands. The west, for its
part, is doing nothing more inflammatory than praying for post-Tito Jugoslavia
to stay stable and united. Clearly the trouble in Kosovo is home-grown.
What the Kosovo Albanians appear to want is not necessarily secession from
Jugoslavia but concessions within Jugoslavia: more economic aid and, more
awkwardly for the authorities, the upgrading of Kosovo's status. At the moment
Kosovo is an autonomous province of the Serbian republic. Kosovo nationalists
want it to become a fully-fledged republic on a par with Serbia, Croatia and the
other four. Albanian nationalists in Kosovo have argued for years that it is a
nonsense for Montenegro, with only a third of Kosovo's population, to be a
republic while Kosovo is not. But this demand has been resisted by Serbs unhappy
that in Kosovo, once the heartland of the medieval Serbian kingdom, the Serbs
are now a minority (18% at the time of the 1971 census and almost certainly less
now).
So rather than yield on the demand for republic status, the Jugoslav
government will try to offer more economic aid, especially more investment for
the development of its lignite and other mineral riches. The university of
Pristina, which now has 35,000 students, has been promised more facilities. But
all this will cost money, and Jugoslavia will not find it easily in the present
tight financial squeeze. Besides, Kosovo already gets nearly half of all
internal Jugoslav development aid. If it were to get more still, there would be
grumbles from elsewhere, not least from Serbia, which has poor areas bordering
on Kosovo which would not be eligible for aid.
The New York Times, April 19, 1981, Sunday, Late City Final Edition
SECTION: Section 4; Page 4, Column 1; Week in Review Desk
3. ONE STORM HAS PASSED BUT OTHERS ARE GATHERING IN YUGOSLAVIA
By DAVID BINDER
DATELINE: WASHINGTON
Josip Broz Tito has not been dead a year, but the Yugoslav ''brotherhood and
unity'' he nurtured for 35 years has already developed fissures on a sensitive
flank, the mostly Albanian province of Kosovo.
What started March 11 as an isolated, seemingly insignificant protest - a
student at the University of Pristina dumped his tray of cafeteria food on the
floor - escalated by April 2 into riots involving 20,000 people in six cities.
Nine people died and more than 50 were injured. Only last week did authorities
relax a state of emergency in the province, lifting a curfew and reopening
schools.
There are other multi-ethnic countries with sizable minorities. But none
equals Yugoslavia for ethnic, linguistic and religious diversity and is so
vulnerable to centrifugal forces. Hence the concern of Marshal Tito's successors
over the explosion of resentment among Yugoslavia's predominantly Moslem
Albanian minority of 1.4 million, most of whom live in Kosovo. After the riots,
Stane Dolanc, a member of the Communist Party Presidium, warned of ''the danger
of the growth of other kinds of nationalisms'' in Yugoslavia - a thinly veiled
allusion to the traditional and still virulent rivalry between the dominant
Serbs and Croats.
The Kosovo rebellion was bad enough news for the Belgrade leadership; it
coincided with setbacks that have put Yugoslavia's economy in its worst straits
in decades. Industrial production dropped 0.6 percent from February 1980 to
February 1981 (Kosovo's dropped 2 percent), while the cost of living rose 40.5
percent, according to official figures. Exports now constitute only 10 percent
of the gross national product - the lowest proportion in Europe - and are
sinking. The Yugoslavs also spent $1.2 billion more in 1980 for oil imports,
despite such conservation measures as gasoline rationing. The foreign debt
stands at $17 billion.
''Evidently our economy does not function well,'' acknowledged Milos Minic, a
member of the collective party leadership, in a speech to party activists in
Zagreb last month. ''Stop the uncontrolled rise of prices!'' demanded Cvijetin
Mijatovic, the current President in the revolving succession to Tito, in another
grim assessment of the economy before a gathering in Nis.
The Government, having just authorized sharp price increases for alcohol and
tobacco products, declared that price rises would have to be held this year to
30 percent at the producer level and 32 percent at the retail level. Belgrade is
also looking to revitalize Tito's vaunted system of factory self-management,
which has ''deteriorated'' under the pressure of inflation, according to Mr.
Mijatovic. He and other leaders have described cases of economic anarchy arising
when worker councils have raised prices for their products without considering
the common good.
The collective leadership, created by Tito partly because he did not want to
be succeeded by one prominent figure, has functioned adequately despite its Rube
Goldberg construction. Yet its very dispersal of authority has deprived it of
the charisma required to persuade a nation of independent spirits that it is
really leading Yugoslavia.
Of course, Tito is a hard act to follow. According to Belgrade officials, the
leadership took pains after his death last May to maintain a low profile, but
this soon may change. One official said he expected the next Prime Minister, to
be elected next year, to play a more prominent role. He also noted that all but
one of the eight members of the collective presidency will be replaced in 1983
and he suggested that this might encourage the current leaders to ''become more
inspirational because they have nothing to lose.''
Serbs, Turks and Albanians
Outsiders sometimes forget that socialist Yugoslavia was born not only of the
war against Hitler, but also of a raging civil war that pitted nationality
against nationality and church against church, at a cost of 1.7 million
lives.
The nationality problems of the Kosovo region, desperately poor despite
considerable mineral wealth, are centuries old and were exacerbated in both
world wars. Originally the home of Serbia's founding dynasty in the
12th century, Kosovo lost most of its remaining Serbian population in
the 17th century when the Serbs, Orthodox Christians, fled northward
to distance themselves from the Ottoman Turks. Albanian tribesmen filled the
vacuum; they now constitute more than four-fifths of the province's
population.
When the great powers agreed in 1913 to make Albania independent more or less
within its present borders, they ceded Kosovo to the Serbian monarchy. It was a
blow the Albanians have never forgotten, the more so because their own
independence movement had begun in the Kosovo town of Prizren in 1878.
World War II brought more upheavals when Kosovo was handed to Mussolini's
Italy by Germany and some Albanians enlisted out of gratitude on the Italian
side. Retribution came when Tito's partisans entered the area, massacring
suspected collaborators before the horrified eyes of their own Albanian
Communist comrades in arms.
Tito Partisans Once Ruled Albania
For a time, Tito's dominant forces ruled Albania and a permanent
Yugoslav-Albanian federation was even contemplated. One holdout was Enver Hoxha,
who had earlier called for a plebiscite in Kosovo. In 1948, the reversals caused
by Tito's ouster from the Cominform lofted Mr. Hoxha into the Albanian
leadership he still holds today.
For two succeeding decades, Tito's Yugoslavia held down the Albanians of
Kosovo, denying them proper schooling and arresting or killing outspoken
Albanian teachers. The repression ended in 1966 with the fall of the Serb leader
who was Tito's number two, Aleksandr Rankovic. Since then, federal money has
poured into Kosovo at a higher rate than into any other part of the country.
Pristina University has grown to become one of the country's largest with 48,000
students. Most of the region's administrators, and its police, are ethnic
Albanians. The Kosovars are even allowed to fly the Albanian flag, a black eagle
on a red field.
Yet this ''tremendous dynamic of development,'' as Mr. Dolanc described it,
ironically has fed unrest. There were riots in 1968 and again in 1975. This time
the youths of Kosovo shouted ''We want a republic'' (their semi-autonomous
province has almost all rights of a Yugoslav republic except the right to
secede) and some even demanded annexation by Mr. Hoxha's Albanian
fatherland.
Copyright 1981 The New York Times Company
THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR; May 7, 1981, Thursday, Midwestern Edition
SECTION: Pg. 5
4. Kosovo sparking a Yugoslav purge?
By Eric Bourne, Special correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
One year after they assumed office, members of Yugoslavia's collective
presidency are facing the first post-Tito jolt to the unity of this
multinational state.
The nationalist riots that erupted in Kosovo province, which has an ethnic
Albanian majority, in mid-March have shaken the confidence of the new leaders,
who seemed to be enjoying smooth sailing as they held to such Tito-established
policies as nonalignment.
The unrest also prompted an outcry from a public concerned that officials had
supporessed evidence of impending trouble and done nothing to prevent its
developing into a full-fledged threat to the federation as a whole. Now the
Communist Party chief in the province has resigned amid calls for a purge.
Mahmut Bakali accepted much of the responsibility for not heading off the
extremist nationalist riots.
Ever since 1945, this backward, onetime Serb "colony" has been the problem
child in the effort to forge and maintain a stable Yugoslav union of so many
differing peoples, languages, and religions. Anti-Serb demonstrations have
flared periodically. Steady federal aid since the 1950s, and the
"Albanianization" of the police in 1966, have made little real difference.
It is not surprising, therefore, that Tito's successors are preoccupied with
this first menacing threat to his dream of security through "brotherhood and
unity." It has even overshadowed massive economic problems --ports still not
competitive in the West despite closer ties to the European Community, and a
consequent 44 percent dependency on Comecon trade. Since 1974, Kosovo has had
autonomy in all domestic affairs. Why not then republican status? It seems a
simple enough solution.
The latest unrest repeated the demand that Kosovo be made a republic and
incorporate Albanian populations in the neighboring republics of Macedonia and
Montenegro.
A Belgrade newspaper calls it absurd to speak of exploitation (as Kosovo)
extremists do) of a region that has had so much aid from the rest of the
country. But economic gain s have not moderated acute nationalist sentiment or
the underlying sense of social-political inferiority.
COPYRIGHT 1981 THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING SOCIETY
AP; October 23, 1981, Friday, PM cycle
ADVANCED-DATE: October 17, 1981, Saturday, PM cycle
SECTION: International News
5. Minorities Leaving Yugoslav Province Dominated by Albanians
By KENNETH JAUTZ, Associated Press Writer
DATELINE: PRISTINA, Yugoslavia
Hundreds of Serbs and Montenegrins are leaving Kosovo Province in the
aftermath of rioting that erupted last spring over demands of the ethnic
Albanian majority for greater autonomy.
Nine people were killed and 260 others injured in the disorders, during which
extremists proposed making Kosovo part of neighboring Albania, Eastern Europe's
most-orthodox Communist nation.
Local officials say security has been restored to the province, but the
minorities leaving are said to fear for their future in the area.
"We have the situation under full control, but this does not mean hostile
activity has totally ceased," Azem Vlasi, president of the Kosovo Socialist
Alliance, told visiting journalists recently.
Reports on the number of those leaving Kosovo vary widely. But the newspaper
Politika of Belgrade, the national capital, estimated that as many as 4,000
people have left or are planning to leave the province, which has a population
of about 1.5 million, 77 percent of whom are ethnic Albanians. Officials here
downplay the reports of departures, saying citizens have a right to move about
the country as they please.
Nevertheless, a municipal commission, set up in this provincial capital after
the rioting to help those moving obtain job transfers and new housing elsewhere,
recently has been turning down requests for such assistance. Enver Redzepi,
deputy president of the provincial legislative assembly, said 882 Serbs and
Montenegrins have formally applied to move from the area since the riots.
"There may have been some other cases of people leaving our area, perhaps
nearly a thousand," he said.
Most of those asking to leave say new jobs, better living conditions and
family considerations prompted their move, but Redzepi said 147 requests had
been turned down.
"We will not assist in departures that are not justified," he said without
elaboration.
Politika indicated that many do not give "true reasons," fearing they will
not receive official help with their move.
The departures from the province could prove significant for Yugoslavia,
since the nation is made up of areas inhabited by various ethnic groups with
long histories of rivalry.
In Kosovo, relations have long been poor between the province's Albanian
majority and the Montenegrins and Serbs, who used to hold the most important
political and economic jobs.
The province is in the southern part of the Republic of Serbia, one of
Yugoslavia's six constituent republics. In view of Kosovo's large non-Serbian
population, however, the province enjoys a greater degree of autonomy than
provinces in other constituent republics.
"It's a real worry for them," one Western diplomat said of the departing
Serbs. "It's a part of Serbia, but over the years there's fewer and fewer
Serbs."
Serbs have been gradually leaving the province for years. This trend, coupled
with an ethnic Albanian birthrate three times the national average, could raise
the likelihood of increased Albanian nationalism in the area.
Diplomatic analysts say the Pristina commission, although advertised as a
government body to assist in moving, is a way of hindering people from leaving.
"The net effect is that it shows they want to keep Serbs there," one diplomat
said in Belgrade, the Yugoslav capital.
Authorities here emphasize the trouble-free reopening of Pristina University,
where student unrest first sparked the demonstrations, but say there have been
isolated cases of "nationalist-oriented grafitti." "Nationalism is a state of
mind, an ideology," said Vlasi. "One does not fight it quickly, with hostile
measures, but over time and with education."
© 1981, The Associated Press
THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR; December 15, 1981, Tuesday, Midwestern
Edition
SECTION: Yugoslavia; Pg. B2
6. Why turbulent Kosovo has marble sidewalks but troubled industries
By Elizabeth Pond
DATELINE: Zagreb, Yugoslavia
Yugoslavia's poorest region, Kosovo, never seems to catch up with the rest of
the country no matter how much money is poured into it.
This is because the area's energy and transport facilities are so much poorer
than those in the north - and because the birthrate (the highest in Europe) is
so much greater in the south. In fact, one unit of investment in northern
Croatia is 71/2 times as productive as one in southern Kosovo, the Zagreb
Economic Institute calculates.
It is Yugoslavia's own north-south problem in microcosm. And it can lead to
ominous political consequences, as shown by last spring's nationalist
demonstrations by the Kosovars (ethnic Albanians) that left eight protesters and
one policeman dead.
For the Kosovars, it's a cause of constant resentment that they still trail
far behind the rest of the country in economic development 35 years after the
launching of postwar Yugoslavia with its dreams of economic equalization. For
the Serbs, it's a cause of constant exasperation that the Kosovars turn the
donations from the rich parts of the country into marble sidewalks and the
handsomest university library in all of Yugoslavia (as one disgruntled northern
taxpayer expressed it), while never seeming to get their own industry past the
handout stage.
The task of getting a laggard economic region to a takeoff point is not
impossible. Bosnia, another Yugoslav hinterland, has made the transition, even
though no one admits this yet officially. For the rest of the 1981-85 five-year
plan, Bosnia will still receive federal development funds. But by 1985 it will
be considered mature enough to continue on its own economic strength, leaving
Kosovo and Montenegro as the main underdeveloped regions.
Kosovo's problems seem more intractable, however, for historical and
geographic as well as demographic reasons. Kosovo, unlike the once
Austrian-ruled Slovenia and Croatia in the north, was for centuries under
the rule of an Ottoman empire that cared very little for industrial
development. The deeper one went into the Ottoman Balkan provinces, the more
primitive the economy. Kosovar was among the most primitive of all. Even the
unification of Yugoslavia after World War I did little to modernize the
region.
In the post-World War II period there has been a conscious attempt to bring
Kosovo into the 20th century. But setbacks have included (besides the birthrate)
politically guided investment in prestige projects rather than in a sound
economic base, a draining of population away from farms to the glamorous city,
and overeducation of an unemployable Kosovar intelligentsia in the 10-year-old
university in Pristina.
The urgent question must therefore be how Kosovo can get out of the vicious
circle of underdevelopment. And just about the only answers that have come up
that go beyond more-of-the-same are energy and raw-materials investment and
direct investment.
The former is promising because of Kosovo's concentration of lignite, nickel,
lead, zinc, and other resources - and Yugoslavia's push in the current five-year
plan to reduce imports, especially energy. One of the investment priorities
between now and 1985 is coal, and it is hoped that accelerated lignite
production could stimulate the overall Kosovo economy. The idea of having
prosperous northern enterprises invest directly in Kosovo companies (rather than
funneling money through the more politicized development fund) has long been a
pet proposal of the Slovenes. Now the Slovenes have won Belgrade's approval for
half of their mandatory contribution to Kosovo's development to come in this
form.
There are precedents for such direct cooperation. Fifteen years ago
Slovenia's big wine enterprise took an active interest in developing Kosovo
vineyards and marketing Kosovo wine in West Germany and Britain. There has been
similar cooperation in pharmaceuticals, and Slovene companies are now investing
heavily in the expansion of lignite production and in construction of a
thermonuclear power station in Kosovo. Proposals are also circulating for
Slovenia's labor-short textile industry to farm out work to Kosovo's
underemployed population.
COPYRIGHT 1981 THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING SOCIETY
Financial Times (London); February 5, 1982, Friday
SECTION: SECTION I; European News; Pg. 2
7. Police fail to crush resistance in Kosovo
By Paul Lendvai in Vienna
POLICE in Yugoslavia claimed to have destroyed 33 secret Albanian nationalist
groups in the southern Yugoslavian province of Kosovo, and to have seized arms
caches and large amounts of propaganda material. They admit, however, that the
situation there remains "serious."
Students are continuing to cause trouble at the University in Pristina, the
capital, and elsewhere, despite the severe jail sentences of up to 15 years
handed out to demonstrators.
Mr Mehmet Malici, the provincial police chief, revealed that 280 people have
been sentenced, more than 800 fined and some 100 are still under investigation.
Nevertheless, "minor incidents" still occur. So far this
year, for instance, almost 300 hostile slogans have been daubed on buildings.
The authorities blame the unrest on the "internal enemy in collusion with
foreign forces, above all with the Albanian intelligence service." The
autonomous province of Kosovo is part of the republic of Serbia but almost 80
per cent of the 1.6m population are ethnic Albanians.
It has been under virtual military rule since last April, when successive
waves of violent demonstrations shattered public order.
Latest reports confirm the situation to be still highly volatile, with the
great majority of the ethnic Albanians refusing to co-operate with the police.
"Nin," the Belgrade weekly publication, has recently revealed that Serbs and
Montenegrans are being attacked, their wives and daughters occasionally raped
and their property destroyed.
Such "Fascist type" intimidation methods, it said, is forcing them to migrate
to other parts of Yugoslavia.
There are sporadic reports about the unrest spreading to Montenegro and
Macedonia, where hundreds of thousands of ethnic Albanians live in compact
groups. The demonstrators, primarily young people, last year demanded republic
status for the province. The Belgrade leadership has rejected this, seeing it as
a prelude to a merger with neighbouring Albania.
The entire political leadership of Kosovo, from the party secretary to the
police chief and television director, have been removed and the Serbian
republican authorities have tightened their control over the province. But in
view of the severe unemployment -- only 176,000 are employed, against 72,000
officially registered workless -- young ethnic Albanians are likely to remain a
serious cause for concern.
The Belgrade newspapers also admit that ethnic Albanian officials and
politicians in the province are often physically threatened and their cars and
houses damaged by the nationalists, who regard them as collaborators.
The eruption of national hatred and the accelerated migration of Slavs has
provoked an equally dangerous nationalist backlash in Serbia and other parts of
eastern Yugoslavia. The crisis in Kosovo has also whipped up nationalistic
sentiments among the estimated 35,000-40,000 Albanians working in the West.
In recent months, several Yugoslav diplomatic and trade offices have been
attacked by Albanian extremist groups and three politically active Albanian
residents in West Germany were murdered in mysterious circumstances last
month.
Copyright 1982 The Financial Times Limited
Financial Times (London); June 1, 1982, Tuesday
SECTION: SECTION II; Financial Times Survey; Yugoslavia III; Pg. 29
8. Kosovo riots jolt the regions
David Buchan / D.B.
Problems are compounded by a lack of unity in the Yugoslav market
AS FAR back as 1960, Marshal Tito claimed to have solved Yugoslavia's
nationalities question. In a way he had. It has been a remarkable feat that the
19 different nationalities recorded in the Yugoslav census (including the small
proportion which actually declared themselves "Yugoslavs") have lived together
in more or less continuous peace for 37 years now in a federation of six
republics and two autonomous provinces.
But the nationalities issue will never be really settled until the regional
problem is. With the poorest region (Kosovo) having one-sixth of the average
income of the richest (Slovenia), vast differences remain. The problem is
compounded by lack of unity in the Yugoslav market.
To let the nationalities "do more of their own thing," wide economic powers
-- from investment planning to foreign currency allocation -- have been devolved
on republics and provinces. The result is something like eight economies. This
has left the federal authorities in Belgrade a thin line to tread: between
appearing to hold back a relatively rich region, which sparked the 1971 outbreak
of Croatian nationalism and which frets Slovenes now, and letting a poor region
fall too far behind, which underlay the outburst in Kosovo last year.
Kosovo has given many Yugoslavs a nasty jolt that the
nationalities-cum-regional problem may be getting worse, not better. The bloody
riots that erupted in March-April 1981 in the streets of Pristina, Kosovo's
capital town, have not been repeated since. But the calls by some of the
province's million ethnic Albanian majority for Kosovo to be a full republic
have not totally subsided either. With a couple of smaller protests this spring,
police and militia are still in force there, and a total of 280 people have been
locked up in the past year or so.
The elevation of Kosovo from a province loosely attached to Serbia to full
republican status might seem a harmlessly small step to most non-Yugoslavs.
Kosovo already largely runs itself. As a province it has slightly fewer
representatives at the federal level than a republic, but has a blocking veto
over most major decisions.
But fears by other Yugoslavs of such a change are also easy to see. Albania,
with its powerful radio Tirana transmissions and whirring presses, has weighed
in to accuse "Great Serb chauvinism" of once again trying to deny Kosovan
Albanians their just rights.
This has confirmed many Yugoslavs in their suspicion that "republican"
demands are the thin end of a wedge that would split Kosovo off into the waiting
grasp of President Enver Hoxhas of Albania. Short of that, it is probably the
case that a change in Kosovo's status would set off other centrifugal forces in
Yugoslav society.
Wide gap
The root, however, of Kosovo's discontent is economic, and its plight is but
the severest of these less-developed regions, which are very roughly to the
south of the Sara and Danube rivers, the limit of the old Turkish occupation.
Thus, Kosovo has a per capita gross national product of 31 per cent of the
Yugoslav average, Bosnia-Hercegovina 66 per cent, Macedonia 65 per cent,
Montenegro 80 per cent, Serbia 96 per cent. Roughly to the north of those rivers
formerly under Austrian rule, is Voyvodina with 121 per cent of the national
average, Croatia with 126 per cent and Slovenia with 198 per cent.
The gap was not always this wide. Between 1947 and 1980, the underdeveloped
regions rose from 30 to 37 per cent of the population, but their share in
national net social product (a measure of physical output that excludes
services) fell from 23.4 per cent to 21.6 per cent and in per capita terms this
meant a drop from 77 per cent to 58 per cent of the national average. This is
despite a transfer of resources from richer areas to poorer by means of the
Yugoslav regional fund set up in 1966. All Yugoslav companies pay 1.8 per cent
of their income into this fund which then backs investment projects in the
under-developed regions. The federal government also creams off 0.8 per cent of
republics and provinces incomes to boost social
services for the poorer areas.
In fact, Kosovo's particular problems have not gone unnoticed by the regional
fund's administrators who have steadily increased the share going to the
province, from 30 per cent of the total in 1966-70 to 42 per cent in 1981-5. But
the effort clearly failed -- for reasons, some of which are special to Kosovo
and others typical of the whole underdeveloped region. In the opinion of Mr
Dragan Vasiljevic, the fund's assistant director, they include diversion of
capital investment funds into operating social services for an expanding
population, investment into energy and extractive industries, products from
which were kept artificially low in price by the federal government, and
production of other goods poor in quality and design.
Perhaps another reason for Kosovo's current problems might be added. For
cultural reasons relatively fewer Albanian Kosovans have felt inclined to up
sticks and move to richer pastures. Migration has been Yugoslavia's traditional
safety valve -- both to western Europe, and to other parts of Yugoslavia.
The biggest internal migration has, for instance, been from Bosnia to
Slovenia. But there is now a net "reflow" of some 25,000 Yugoslavs a year from
countries like West Germany, and with housing shortages and slowing economies,
the richer Yugoslav republic no longer want fresh labour in the quantities they
once did. So, if the labour cannot go to the jobs, the jobs must come to
them.
But that is precisely the problem. A unified market, in terms of a free flow
of capital and goods, barely exists in Yugoslavia, as countless officials and
businessmen will attest. The republics and provinces have used, or misused,
their economic autonomy won in the 1970s to try to create the infrastructures of
mini-states.
Mr Edo Rasberger, a Slovene, for instance, says it makes sense for each
region to have its own separate oil products distribution to ensure its fair
share; he runs Petrol, a company that does just that for Slovenia. But he points
out that it makes no sense for each Republic to try to build its own refinery,
as they are doing, when the country's existing refineries are working way below
capacity. Mr Ivan Racan, a leading Croatian communist, complains of the economic
nationalists in his republic who wanted to build an unneeded Zagreb-Split
highway (in preference to a vital new Zagreb-Belgrade route) simply because it
was within Croatian boundaries. He sees in the current climate of austerity a
welcome chance to axe similar prestige follies.
Dr Ljubisav Markovic, a leading federal parliamentarian, notes that republic
contracts often do not get out to competitive tender but go to local companies,
creating local monopolies. Mr Pavle Gazi, secretary of the federal communist
central committee, says that in present circumstances, key raw materials like
iron ore or coal have stopped circulating freely because some companies would
rather export them than ship to another republic. Major effort
On top of this, the country's foreign exchange market had virtually collapsed
as companies hoarded foreign exchange even when they did not need it, for fear
of not being able to get it back again to buy imports.
This Balkanisation of the economy has serious national consequences in terms
of competitivity and inflation, and the flow of resources from "have" to
"have-not" regions inside Yugoslavia.
Luckily, something is being done about it. First, there is a major effort
under way to reform the foreign exchange market by requiring a compulsory
pooling of foreign exchange so that the poorer regions of the country which do
less exporting get some share. Second, half of the regional fund is now
available on very easy terms (14 years repayment at 4.2 per cent for most
underdeveloped regions and 17 years at 3 per cent for Kosovo) to back joint
ventures between companies in the rich north and poor south of the country.
The aim is to get the more efficient companies from Yugoslavia's richer areas
to lend a direct hand to those in Kosovo and elsewhere and in the process to get
both to think more "nationally."
Copyright 1982 The Financial Times Limited
The New York Times, Monday, July 12, 1982
9. Exodus of Serbians Stirs Province in Yugoslavia
By MARVINE HOWE, Special to the New York Times
DATELINE: PRISTINA, Yugoslavia
Danilo Krstic and his family are hardworking wheat and tobacco farmers, Serbs
who get along with their Albanian neighbors.
"You have to love the place where you live to stay on the land here," Marko
Krstic, the oldest son, told visitors to the farm at Bec, a few miles from the
Albanian border. There have been no serious troubles between Serbians and
Albanians in Bec, but Serbs in some of the neighboring villages have reportedly
been harassed by Albanians and have packed up and left the region.
The exodus of Serbs is admittedly one of the main problems that the
authorities have to contend with in Kosovo, an autonomous province of Yugoslavia
inhabited largely by Albanians.
Rioting Brought Awareness
Last year's riots, in which nine people were killed, shocked not only the
troubled province of Kosovo but also the entire country into an awareness of the
problems of this most backward part of Yugoslavia, which is made up of many
ethnic groups.
In June a 43-year-old Serb, Miodrag Saric, was shot and killed by an Albanian
neighbor, Ded Krasnici, in a village near Djakovica, 40 miles southwest of
Pristina, according to the official Yugoslav press agency Tanyug. It was the
second murder of a Serb by an Albanian in Kosovo this year. The dispute
reportedly started with a quarrel over damage done to a field belonging to the
Saric family.
The local political and security bodies condemned the murder as "a grave
criminal act" that could have serious repercussions, according to the press
agency. Five members of the Krasnici family have been arrested and
investigations are continuing.
The authorities have responded at various levels to the violence in Kosovo,
clearly trying to avoid antagonizing the Albanian majority. Besides firm
security measures, action has been taken to speed political, educational and
economic changes.
Past Errors Acknowledged
Privately, some officials acknowledge that the rise of Albanian nationalism
in a society that is based on the principle of the equality of nationalities is
the result of past errors - at first neglect and discrimination, and more
recently failure to act against divisive forces or even recognize them.
"The [Albanian] nationalists have a two-point platform," according to Becir
Hoti, an executive secretary of the Communist Party of Kosovo, "first to
establish what they call an ethnically clean Albanian republic and then the
merger with Albania to form a greater Albania. "
Mr. Hoti, an Albanian, expressed concern over political pressures that were
forcing Serbs to leave Kosovo. "What is important now," he said, "is to
establish a climate of security and create confidence."
The migration of Serbs is no ordinary problem becuase Kosovo is the heartland
of Serbian history, culture and religion. Serbs have been in this region since
the seventh century, long before they founded their own independent dynasty here
in 1168.
57,000 Serbs Have Left Region
Some 57,000 Serbs have left Kosovo in the last decade, and the number
increased considerably after the riots of March and April last year, according
to Vukasin Jokanovic, another executive secretary of the Kosovo party.
Mr. Jokanovic, former president of the Commission on Migration set up after
last year's disturbances, said the cause of Serbian migration was "essentially
of a political nature."
The commission has given four basic reasons for the departures:
social-economic, normal migration from this underdeveloped area, an increasingly
adverse social-political climate and direct and indirect pressures.
Mr. Jokanovic, a Serb, called the pressures disturbing and said they included
personal insults, damage to Serbian graves and the burning of hay, cutting down
wood and other attacks on property to force Serbs to leave.
The 1981 census showed Kosovo with a population of 1,584,558, of whom 77.5
percent were ethnic Albanians, 13.2 percent Serbs and 1.7 percent Montenegrins.
The population in 1971 of 1,243,693 was 73.8 percent Albanian, 18.4 percent
Serbian and 2.5 percent Montenegrin.
Ex-Defense Minister Concerned
In a recent visit to Kosovo, Nikola Ljubcic, head of the Serbian Presidency
and a former Minister of Defense, expressed particular concern about the
continuing exodus of Serbs.
"An ethnically clean Kosovo will always be cause for instability," Mr.
Ljubicic said, adding that Yugoslavia "will never give up one foot of her land."
Conversations with Serbs and Albanians in different parts of the province
showed that that they were generally troubled about the Serbian migration but
did not know what to do about it. Some people described it as "psychological
warfare" but were at a loss to explain who was at fault.
In Pristina, the provincial capital, with its skyscrapers and bustling
streets, people said they felt relatively secure because the authorities
maintained "a close watch." Although the army remains at a distance and has not
had to intervene, there is a strong militia presence.
Things appear relaxed on the Corso, Pristina's main street. As in other
Yugoslav cities, every night from about 6 to 10 the main thoroughfare is closed
to traffic and practically everyone turns out for a stroll, encounters and
discussions.
Different Sides of Street
What is special about Pristina is that it has always been Serbs on one side
of the street and Albanians on the other. Residents say Albanians have been
encroaching on Serbian "territory" since the disturbances.
After the crackdown on Albanian nationalists - about 300 have been sentenced
- they are said to have changed tactics, moving to the villages, where there is
less security control.
In some mixed communities, there were reports of [Serbian] farmers being
pressured to sell their land cheap and of Albanian shopkeepers refusing to sell
goods to Serbs.
"We don't want to go because we have a large farm," a Serbian farmer's wife
said in a village near Pristina. "Our property hasn't been touched, but there
are the insults and the intimidation, so we feel uncomfortable." Several
neighbors have left, she said, and her own sons who were planning to build a new
house have stopped "to see how things will turn out."
There have been many changes since the riots, but most people in Pristina
agree with Mr. Ljubicic that more could be done. The main thrust of the changes
is economic. "We're going to change the economic structures with more emphasis
on agriculture, the processing industry, small business and handicrafts," Aziz
Abrashi, the Economics Minister, said in an interview.
"Ninety-nine percent of the Albanians have no wish to live in Albania," Mr.
Abrashi, an Albanian, said, "but they view the rest of Yugoslavia and are aware
of the higher living standards. Our young people want the same good life, the
nice houses and cars, and they can't get them if they can't get jobs."
Facts on File World News Digest; September 10, 1982
SECTION: OTHER NATIONS; Yugoslavia PAGE: Pg. 670 E3
10. Serbs in Kosovo Exodus
Some 57,000 Serbs had left the Yugoslav autonomous province of Kosovo within
the past decade, it was reported July 12.
A great number had left after the riots of March and April 1981, according to
local officials. The region's economic problems and the ethnic Albanian
nationalism that had sparked the riots were mentioned as the principal reasons
behind the Serbian migration. [See 1981, p. 261G1]
"The nationalists have a two-point platform, first to establish what they
call an ethnically clean Albanian republic and then the merger with Albania to
form a greater Albania," said Becir Hoti, a Kosovo Communist Party official and
an ethnic Albanian.
Officials cited widespread harassment of Serbs by Albanians, including two
recent murders, personal insults, defacing of graves, burning of hay and other
attacks on property.
Economic problems in the country's poorest region were also stressed.
"Ninety-nine percent of the Albanians have no wish to live in Albania," Aziz
Abrashi, the economics minister, was quoted as saying. "But they view the rest
of Yugoslavia and are aware of the higher living standards. Our young people
want the same good life, the nice houses and cars, and they can't get them if
they can't get jobs," Aziz added.
Copyright 1982 Facts on File, Inc.
The New York Times; November 9, 1982, Tuesday, Late City Final Edition
SECTION: Section A; Page 6, Column 3; Foreign Desk
11. YUGOSLAVS SEEK TO QUELL STRIFE IN REGION OF ETHNIC ALBANIANS
By DAVID BINDER, Special to the New York Times
DATELINE: PRISTINA, Yugoslavia
In Belgrade, three muscular men in black windbreakers boarded a night train
to Kosovo, the southern province where nearly all of Yugoslavia's more than 1.5
million ethnic Albanians live.
In a conversation with a visitor in the aisle, the three men said in Serbian
that they were headed for the provincial capital, Pristina, for a few days of
what they called ''service work.''
On arrival near dawn, they were picked up by a van marked ''Militia.'' The
three were plainclothesmen of the Yugoslav Federal Security Service, apparently
sent here to help prevent acts of violence by Albanian nationalists.
An official in Belgrade, 150 miles to the north, said that since the rioting
in March 1981 when nine people were killed, the Yugoslav Government had spent
more than $30 million to maintain order in the Kosovo Autonomous Province, which
abuts Albania. The province, which is dominated by ethnic Albanians, contains
only about 180,000 Slavs.
Both the Yugoslav Army and the militia maintain a large visible presence
here. Yet acts of violence, mostly attacks on Kosovo Serbs or their property,
continue to be reported every week in the Belgrade press.
Non-Albanians Flee Area
A few days ago a newspaper reported that a young Albanian had splashed
gasoline in the face of a 12-year-old Serbian boy and ignited it with a match.
The boy avoided serious injury by pulling his sweater over his head,
extinguishing the flames.
Such incidents have prompted many of Kosovo's Slavic inhabitants to flee the
province, thereby helping to fulfill a nationalist demand for an ethnically
''pure'' Albanian Kosovo. The latest Belgrade estimate is that 20,000 Serbs and
Montenegrins have left Kosovo for good since the 1981 riots. The hatred that has
developed between ethnic Albanians and the Slavic inhabitants is reflected in
slogans painted overnight on walls here. In an interview, Ismaili Bajra, a husky
53-year-old ethnic Albanian who is a member of the province's Communist Party
presidium, spoke with pride of progress in the industrialization of the
province, but he spoke scornfully of the Kosovo nationalists as
''traitors.''
Terming the political situation good, he said it was getting ''more stable''
every day. ''Now the school year has begun,'' he said, adding that, with
''500,000 youngsters enrolled,'' there have been ''no hostile actions, though of
course you do find slogans painted here and there.'' The ethnic turmoil in
Kosovo has origins that go back more than five centuries when the Serbian nation
developed in this region and created a brief-lived empire that was ended by the
Ottoman Turks in 1389. As the Turkish grip tightened, Serb peasants gradually
migrated northward, and Albanians moved in.
Tito Ruled With Strong Hand
After Serbia became independent again in the 19th century, Belgrade asserted
dominance over the Albanians of Kosovo. After Marshal Tito's Communists took
power in the 1940's, Kosovo's Albanians were ruled with an iron hand by the
Serbian authorities of Belgrade for nearly 21 years. A minority in Serbia as a
whole, the Albanians were already a majority in Kosovo.
Copyright 1982 The New York Times Company
BBC Summary of World Broadcasts; May 4, 1985, Saturday
SECTION: Part 2 Eastern Europe; B. INTERNAL AFFAIRS; YUGOSLAVIA; EE/7942/B/1;
12. Serbian Presidency discusses emigration from Kosovo
Belgrade home service 1300 gmt 29 Apr 85
Today's debate [29th April] on the emigration of Serbs and Montenegrins from
Kosovo has in many respects gone beyond the schematic framework according to
which the situation in Kosovo is better, but emigration has not been curbed. Or,
as Presidency President Dusan Ckrebic put it, it is good that the discussion is
not held within familiar formulae, because what is at stake is equality of
peoples and nationalities, and that is, according to him, an issue that goes
deep into the foundations of the Constitution; so, in this context, emigration
from Kosovo is Yugoslavia's most difficult problem, which is casting a dark
shadow on the democratic achievements of socialist self-management.
Nobody calls into question the efforts of the subjective forces in Kosovo
that are fighting against Albanian nationalism and irredentism, but practice and
results in curbing emigration are the only measure of efficacy.
Therefore, the statements on positive trends in Kosovo can be understood as
efforts on the mobilisation
of forces, but by no means as a definite evaluation of the situation.
True, Ckrebic said, there are no demonstrators in the streets, but a heavy
atmosphere of pressure has been created on a broader front. Therefore, new forms
of struggle and support against the irredentists' intentions must be sought in
the municipalities, local communities, work organisations and among the
intelligentsia.
All these communities, without exception, have to be preoccupied by questions
of equality, and efficacious measures have to be undertaken against any form of
discrimination. Dusan Ckrebic then pointed out that the Kosovo political
leadership must concern itself with cadre policy, which is now such that entire
spheres have been covered by Albanian cadres, especially in culture and
education, spheres that are most sensitive in view of equal expression of
national identity. Serb and Montenegrin cadres should especially contribute to
bettering the situation in Kosovo. The forthcoming elections should be used for
disposing of careerists and those who do not enjoy confidence in the ranks of
their own peoples.
Copyright 1985 The British Broadcasting Corporation
The Economist; November 9, 1985
SECTION: World politics and current affairs; EUROPE; Pg. 66 (U.S. Edition Pg.
62)
13. Yugoslavia; Is fair unfair?
Yugoslavia has run into trouble with what some people in the West call
reverse discrimination. The problem involves Kosovo, an autonomous province of
the Serbian republic, where nearly 80% of the population are ethnic Albanians.
(The rest are mainly Serbs and Monte negrins.) For several years the provincial
government's policy has been to share out jobs among the nationalities in Kosovo
by means of ethnic quotas. Now the constitutional court of Serbia has struck
down this practice as unconstitutional.
The court's president, Mr Radosin Rajovic, a Serb, held that proportional
representation was contrary to the principle of equality embodied in
Yugoslavia's 1974 constitution, "because it facilitates the suppression of
members of numerically smaller nations and nationalities." The court's
decision was not unanimous; one judge, a non-Serb, argued that proportional
representation of nationalities was needed to put the principle of equality into
practice.
Behind this dispute lies a bitter conflict about the future of Kosovo.
Yugoslavia's Serbs think that they are being deliberately squeezed out of
Kosovo, once the centre of Serbia's medieval state. There has been a steady
emigration of Serbs and Montenegrins from the province, particularly since the
riots there in 1981.
The Albanians retort answer that positive discrimination hasn't gone far
enough. In 1966, before the policy was introduced, Serbs and Montenegrins
occupied just over half the public-sector jobs in Kosovo, although their share
in the population was 27%. Now 22.5% of those employed in the public sector are
Serbs, but this is still far greater than the Serbian share of Kosovo's
population, which has fallen to 13.2%. The Albanians say Serbs and Montenegrins
tend to emigrate in search of better opportunities outside Kosovo, Yugoslavia's
poorest province.
What happens now? It is unlikely that the authorities in Kosovo will pay much
heed to what the Serbian constitutional court says. But Serbia's party leaders
are under strong pressure from Serbian public opinion to demand a closer
integration of Kosovo into Serbia. Ironically, the Serbs who have emigrated from
Kosovo to Serbia proper are not finding life easy. According to the Belgrade
weekly Nin, the old (also Serbian) residents accuse them of getting preferential
treatment for jobs and housing. They are even called
"Siptars", a pejorative Serbian word for Albanian.
Copyright 1985 The Economist Newspaper Ltd.
The New York Times; April 28, 1986, Monday, Late City Final Edition
SECTION: Section A; Page 13, Column 1; Foreign Desk
14. IN ONE YUGOSLAV PROVINCE, SERBS FEAR THE ETHNIC ALBANIANS
By HENRY KAMM, Special to the New York Times
DATELINE: PRISTINA, Yugoslavia
The ethnic Albanian majority in the autonomous province of Kosovo is feared
by the minority population of Serbs and Montenegrins, who believe the Albanians
are seeking to drive them out of the province. A 1981 fire that gutted the
medieval nunnery of the Serbian Orthodox Patriarchate in Pec, a center of
Serbian national feeling, has been officially ascribed to bad construction.
An aged nun at the Patriarchate said she and her sisters were convinced that
the fire had been set to chase them from Kosovo. But she said the nuns would
never leave, and three Serbian or Montenegrin visitors agreed with her. The
provincial leadership, dominated by ethnic Albanians, has said it believes that
a Serb grossly mutilated last May by a broken bottle inflicted his injuries
himself while performing an auto-erotic act. The maiming of Djordje Martinovic,
a 56-year-old farmer and father of three, has become the most widely discussed
Yugoslav criminal case in years, debated in Parliament and covered in full
detail by television and the press.
Yugoslavs Blame the Albanians
The case remains unsolved, but Yugoslavs' minds seem mainly made up on both
incidents. They blame ethnic Albanians. They also blame them for continuing
assaults, rapes and vandalism. They believe their aim is to drive non-Albanians
out of Kosovo.
''A legitimized genocide against the Serbian people is being carried out in
Kosovo,'' said Dobrica Cosic, a dissident novelist published here and in the
United States, in an interview in Belgrade. ''More than 200,000 Serbs have been
forced to leave their home in the last 10, 20 years.'' A steady exodus
continues.
Since Albanian nationalists went on a rampage in 1981, leaving at least nine
people dead, the level of violence has declined. But enough agitation continues,
punctuated by acts of violence, to make a burning issue of the antagonism
between the 1.4 million ethnic Albanians and the little more than 200,000
Serbs.
Under the federal Constitution, Kosovo is part of the Serbian Republic. In
effect, it is as self-governing as the six republics of the nation. It is also
the poorest region of Yugoslavia. Men in their 20's line the main street of
Pristina - a stretch of grandiose modern buildings that separates near-slums on
either side - offering to shine the shoes of passers-by who can hardly afford
such luxury. Begging children accost diners in restaurants.
Use of Funds Criticized
The overambitious buildings, such as a recent, prematurely rundown, 300-room
hotel with 3 restaurants in a little-visited town of 100,000, sustain criticism
of the provincial leadership a a misuse of federal development funds. To many,
the aid represents a futile effort to solve an intractable problem through
financial bounty.
Mohammed Mustafa, director of the Provincial Economic Planning Instititute,
said there were 115,000 registered unemployed out of a potential work force of
804,000. The economic growth rate has been 1.5 percent a year since 1980, while
the population is growing at 2.5 percent, he said. The average wage is 20
percent below the national average.
''Kosovo is Yugoslavia's single greatest problem,'' said a Western diplomat.
''They can pay off their huge debt, but Kosovo defies solution.'' Serbs and
Montenegrins feel beleaguered. Communists and non-Communists express distrust of
the provincial leadership and chagrin over the federal and Serbian authorities
who in their opinion do nothing to halt increasing Albanian domination over a
multi-national population and lands that are historically inseparable from
Serbian national identity.
Restrictive Atmosphere
Non-Albanian Yugoslav residents and visitors characterize the atmosphere of
Kosovo as frighteningly restrictive and its Communist leadership as so dogmatic
as to resemble the rigorously Stalinist regime that holds power in nearby
Albania.
In contrast to officials elsewhere in Yugoslavia, who readily acknowledge
problems and errors and de-emphasize ideology in favor of pragmatism, a leading
Kosovo official, Ekrem Arifi, offered an entirely ideological explanation of
Kosovo's problems.
In prepared statements that took the place of replies to questions, he blamed
outside forces for all difficulties -agents of Albania and emigres in the West.
Mr. Arifi, executive secretary of the provincial party, spoke in Albanian and in
stock phrases long out of use in Yugoslavia, such as ''proletarian
internationalism,'' ''the class enemy'' or ''the solidarity of the working
class.''
They are not echoed by the non-Albanian population. Asked whether the nuns
felt safe in their rebuilt convent, the old nun replied, ''Yes, with God's
help.''
Copyright 1986 The New York Times Company
Reuters; May 27, 1986, Tuesday, BC cycle
SECTION: International News
15. KOSOVO PROVINCE REVIVES YUGOSLAVIA'S ETHNIC NIGHTMARE
By Peter Humphrey
DATELINE: PRISTINA, Yugoslavia
Ethnic conflicts are boiling again in Yugoslavia's wayward Kosovo Province,
reviving nightmares that the country's federation may split at the seams. In
recent months serious nationalist tension has resurfaced between Kosovo's 1.7
million majority of ethnic Albanians and the region's minority of 200,000 Serbs
and Montenegrins.
Authorities have smashed a plethora of separatist groups, and scores of
Albanians have been jailed for activities allegedly aimed at bringing about
Kosovo's secession from Yugoslavia.
The subject has filled the Belgrade press and dominated public debate, with
fears expressed that the tensions could lead to a repeat of the kind of fierce
nationalist riots which broke out here in 1981. Troops were then put on the
streets and martial law was clamped on Kosovo.
Over 1,000 people have been convicted here since 1981 on charges of
activities aimed at illegally changing Kosovo's status in the Yugoslav
constitution, according to police figures.
Western diplomats are watching the troubled region, along the sensitive
border with Albania, with great interest. "It's Yugoslavia's 'Northern Ireland'
-- a powder keg," one diplomat said, "and they're struggling to keep the lid
on."
He echoed a view aired in official circles that Kosovo is Yugoslavia's single
most pressing problem and will be one of the thorniest issues for the Communist
Party Congress in June.
Some of the secessionist groups recently uncovered here were hoarding guns
and explosives, official reports said. Yugoslav officials have blamed Albanian
and overseas emigres for funding such groups in the region, where ethnic
Albanians outnumber the other nationalities eight to one.
Tensions rose to a peak this year over alleged Albanian harassment of Serbs
and Montenegrins, who sent petitions to Belgrade or flocked there to protest and
seek official help. Protesters said Albanians were trying to create a pure
Albanian Kosovo by driving others from their homes and land. Belgrade, anxious
to hold the fragile balance of races making up
Yugoslavia's hodge-podge federation of six republics and two autonomous
provinces, has played down the conflict.
It urged restraint among both Serbs and Albanians, warning that Serb
militancy could solve Kosovo's problems no more than Albanian militancy
could.
Last month, at Kosovo Polje, near Pristina, it was Serb nationalism that
almost sparked the prairie fire, when Kosta Bulatovic, a popular Serb leader,
was arrested on "hostile propaganda" charges after organizing petitions.
Some 6,000 Serbs flocked to protest at Bulatovic's home and Belgrade had to
fly down Serbian Communist Party leader Ivan Stambolic to defuse the tense
confrontation with local police.
"If one Albanian policeman had opened fire on those Serbs, it would have been
1981 all over again," a Yugoslav said here.
Thousands more Serbs, meanwhile, organized protest trips to Belgrade and
poured out their complaints to the authorities.
An official inquiry later found their grievances justified and a purge of the
Kosovo judiciary and police was ordered.
It was found that local security and justice bodies had let Albanian offenses
against Serbs go unchecked, including rape, assault, arson, intimidation and
property offenses.
At ground level here it is hard to get to the truth. Both Serb and Albanian
citizens told Reuters of similar charges against each other. The other side,
each group said, was taking land and jobs.
Albanians said Serbs took the best farmland and got all the plum jobs. The
region has around 50 per cent unemployment and a poll of local residents showed
it was mainly Albanians who were out of work, while unemployment was rare among
Serbs.
Belgrade argues it has in recent years poured funding amounting to millions
of dollars into the region, Yugoslavia's poorest, to subsidize development and
raise living standards.
As a result, Pristina is one of Yugoslavia's most impressive cities, with
mosque minarrettes blending in among modern skyscrapers.
A few years ago, Albanians out for an evening stroll would stay on one side
of the street and Serbs on the other, a tense line of animosity dividing them.
Today it is in the cafes.
"Serbs don't drink in Albanian cafes and we keep away from theirs," said one
Albanian. "We want a republic," said his unemployed friend, sipping Turkish tea
with a group of colleagues.
It is Belgrade's great nightmare because federal authorities fear that if
Kosovo wins republic status, it will break away.
Kosovo is a heartland of the Serbs who originally populated it but many moved
north after Ottoman onslaughts in the 14th century, leaving a vacuum filled by
Turks and Albanians.
It became part of Serbia in 1945 and won autonomous status after widespread
rioting in 1968.
"We know they will drive us out completely if they get their republic," said
a middle-aged Serb whose ancestors have lived for centuries at Kosovo Polje, the
site of the landmark 1389 battle when the Serbs were defeated by the Turks.
The Serbs' present battle seems faced with defeat also -- in the long term.
The Albanian population is multiplying rapidly, while several thousand Serbs
quit the province each year.
"It's just a question of time," said one Albanian. "It's dangerous to talk
about this. But we will get a republic."
Copyright 1986 Reuters Ltd
16. CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE; June 18, 1986
Page 14439 (Vol. 132 Part 10, June 11-19, 1986)
SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION 150 - EXPRESSING CONCERN OVER THE CONDITION OF
ETHNIC ALBANIANS LIVING IN YUGOSLAVIA
Mr. DOLE submitted the following concurrent resolution; which was referred to
the Committee on Foreign Relations:
S. Con. Res. 150
Whereas there are more than two million ethnic Albanians living within the
borders of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia;
Whereas the ethnic Albanians constitute one of the largest ethnic groups
within Yugoslavia;
Whereas there are reports that several hundred ethnic Albanians have been
killed in communal violence and the Government's efforts to control it
Whereas there is evidence that several thousand more have been arrested by
the Yugoslavian Government for expressing their views in a non-violent
manner;
Whereas most political prisoners within Yugoslavia are ethnic Albanians;
Whereas many of those arrested have been sentenced to harsh terms of
imprisonment ranging from one to fifteen years;
Whereas many ethnic Albanians have been denied access to full economic
opportunity because of alleged "Albanian nationalist" activities;
Whereas Amnesty International, a respected international human rights
organization, has published allegations of torture and assassination of ethnic
Albanians in exile by the Yugoslav secret police;
Whereas the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia is a signatory to the
Final Act of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe [CSCE, now
OSCE], known as the Helsinki Final Act;
Whereas one of the provisions of the Act states that "the participating
States on whose territory national minorities exist will respect the rights of
persons belonging to such minorities to equality before the law, will afford
them full opportunity for the actual enjoyment of human rights and fundamental
freedoms and will, in this manner, protect the legitimate interests in this
sphere;"
Whereas the Government of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia has
failed to protect fully the rights of ethnic Albanians, in accordance with its
obligation under the Act;
Resolved by the Senate, the House of Representatives Concurring, That
Congress:
- is deeply concerned over the political and economic conditions of ethnic
Albanians in Yugoslavia and over the failure of the Yugoslav Government to
fully protect their political and economic rights;
- urges the Government of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to
act so as to ensure that human rights and fundamental freedoms as expressed
in the Helsinki Final Act and the Concluding Document of the Madrid CSCE
Follow-Up Meeting are respected in regard to persons from all national and
ethnic groups in Yugoslavia;
- calls upon the Government of the Socialist Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia to review in a humanitarian spirit the cases of all ethnic
Albanians currently imprisoned on political charges and to release all of
those who have not used or advocated violence;
- requests the President of the United States to direct the Department of
State to convey the contents of this Resolution to the appropriate
representatives of the Government of the Socialist Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia.
Mr. DOLE. Mr. President, I rise today to submit a concurrent resolution
expressing the concern of the Congress about the conditions of ethnic Albanians
in Yugoslavia. Congressman DIO GUARDI of New York has introduced a similar
resolution in the House, and I am pleased to be working with him to focus
attention on this important matter.
Mr. President, there are approximately two million ethnic Albanians living in
Yugoslavia, making them the third largest ethnic group in that country. They
have extensive ties of ancestry and common culture with the growing
ethnic-Albanian community in the United States.
Regrettably, the Yugoslav Government has not granted to the Albanian
community the full protection of their political and economic rights. While many
ethnic groups in Yugoslavia have suffered at the hands of the government, the
Albanian community has been singled out for particularly harsh treatment.
Under the guise of responding to the greatly exaggerated threat that ethnic
Albanians might try to assert political independence from Yugoslavia, the
government in Belgrade has arrested thousands of Albanians, hundreds this year
alone, often for doing no more than peacefully expressing their commitment to
the preservation of Albanian culture. In fact, the Helsinki Commission and other
knowledgeable, independent observers have reported that more than one-half of
all political prisoners in Yugoslavia are Albanian.
And when arrested these ethnic Albanians face the harshest kind of penalties.
Prison sentences of from 1 to 15 years are common for offenses that may be no
more than holding up a placard at a public gathering pledging to uphold elements
of Albanian culture.
Many Albanians have also been fired, or denied access to particular jobs,
because in some way they have expressed their Albanian heritage or manifest some
element of Albanian culture. A number of university professors, for example,
have been fired solely for teaching courses on Albanian history or culture.
Finally, and most disturbing of all, hundreds of ethnic Albanians have died
in recent years as a result of communal strife and the government's often
violent efforts to put down communal unrest. These dead have become martyrs
within the ethnic Albanian community. Even admitting that the government's
actions in all cases were not unprovoked, the strong evidence is that the
government has vastly overreacted, as part of a conscious campaign to stamp out
even any sign of Albanian ethnocentrism or any inclination for ethnic Albanians
to develop a stronger political self-identification.
Mr. President, as I noted, the Albanian populations [sic!] is not the only
group that suffers. But it appears that it may well be the group that suffers
the most.
For that reason, I believe we have a responsibility to express our deep
concern about the plight of these suffering people, in the hope that the
influence we can bring to bear will encourage the Yugoslav Government to meet
its solemn commitments under the Helsinki Accords to grant ethnic Albanians
--and all other ethnic groups in Yugoslavia-- their full rights and
freedoms.
Mr. President, I send the concurrent resolution to the desk and ask for its
appropriate referral.
The New York Times; July 27, 1986, Sunday, Late City Final Edition
SECTION: Section 1; Part 1, Page 6, Column 1; Foreign Desk
17. MINORITIES ARE UNEASY IN YUGOSLAV PROVINCE
By HENRY KAMM, Special to the New York Times
DATELINE: BELGRADE, Yugoslavia
The Yugoslav Government is keeping a watch on Serbs and Montenegrins in
Kosovo Autonomous Province to prevent them from staging protest marches on
Belgrade. The two groups charge that the region's Albanian ethnic majority is
trying to force them from their ancestral homes.
The Serbs and Montenegrins of Kosovo began agitating during a Communist Party
convention in June. The police blocked roads to forestall planned marches to
dramatize the issue.
But even without marches, ethnic tension in Kosovo was a topic of debate at
the convention. Speakers said that Albania was fomenting agitation in the
autonomous province with the intent of detaching it from Yugoslavia. The
convention also heard an attack on Bulgaria and Greece over the longstanding
issue of Macedonian nationality. Macedonians, a Slavic group with historical
links both to Bulgaria and to Greece, form one of the constituent republics of
Yugoslavia.
Turkish Minority in Bulgaria
Along with the persecution of the Turkish minority in Bulgaria and resentment
among ethnic Hungarians in Rumania, ethnic issues that have marked Balkan
history are returning to the fore.
''We have to say how dangerous the Kosovo problem is to the integrity of our
country,'' said Ivan Stambolic, President of the Serbian Republic, which
includes Kosovo Autonomous Province. Kosovo's population of 1.6 million is 78
percent ethnic Albanian.
''It is the most delicate problem we have ever had,'' said Mr. Stambolic in a
meeting with Western reporters at the convention hall. ''It is a problem of long
duration that cannot be solved overnight.''
Since earlier this year, hundreds of Serbs living in Kosovo have staged
marches in Belgrade to protest what they consider the failure of the Government
to protect them from attacks and threats by Albanians against them and their
property.
'Unfavorable Trends'
Vidoje Zarkovic, head of the party's collective presidency, spoke at the
convention about ''continuing unfavorable trends in the province'' and said,
''We have not succeeded in stabilizing the disturbed interethnic relations and
in developing trust.''
In a resolution, the convention accused Albania of fomenting ethnic conflict.
''Albania has continued to openly and blatantly interfere in the internal
affairs of Yugoslavia,'' the resolution declared. ''Irredentist and
nationalist indoctrination of our citizens by Albania constitutes a serious
threat to peace and security in the Balkans and beyond.''
Despite a perceptible thawing of Albania's isolationist attitude since the
death last year of Enver Hoxha, the Albanian leader, its hostility to Yugoslavia
has grown.
''Albania is intensifying its anti-Yugoslav campaign,'' said Dobrivoje Vidic,
a member of the Yugoslav party's presidency. ''It unrelentingly attacks all the
values of our society, expresses unconcealed territorial aspirations, flagrantly
interferes in the internal affairs of our people and extends open support to the
counterrevolutionary goals of the Albanian separatists in Yugoslavia.''
Copyright 1986 The New York Times Company
The Christian Science Monitor; July 28, 1986, Monday
SECTION: International; Pg. 10
18. Tensions among ethnic groups in Yugoslavia begin to boil over
Yugoslavia Tensions. Part 1 of 2 part series.
By Eric Bourne, Special to The Christian Science Monitor
DATELINE: Batuse, Yugoslavia
A flare-up in a tiny Yugoslav village spotlights longstanding animosity
between Albanians and Serbs. The government is trying to lessen tensions, but
leaders know they have a potentially explosive situation on their hands.
This dusty little village a few miles from Pristina, the capital of Kosovo
Province, is quiet again. But only relatively so.
One night in mid-June, most of its 700 Serbian families packed their
belongings onto tractors and trucks, in cars and buses, ready to emigrate.
Batuse's threatened ''diaspora'' was sparked by the arrival of Albanians in
what had long been a ''Serbian village.'' It was only five families, but to
the villagers it was the start of a process that had already obliterated the
established Serbian character of other such communities.
The Serbs had planned a ''long march'' to Belgrade to present their
grievances to the federal government. But the column had not gotten far from the
village when armed riot police and Army vehicles blocked the highway.
Officials told the convoy it could not proceed. The authorities, they said,
were aware of their problems and were working hard to solve them. Although the
people remained unconvinced, most were persuaded to abandon their journey.
Several hundred, however, walked doggedly on, past the roadblock, bent on
reaching a train station to journey on to Belgrade.
A newspaper here vividly described an extraordinary scene in which young and
old, veterans and tiny children, trudged along, mothers pushing strollers or
carrying a child or bundles in their arms.
They covered 25 miles before a police line stopped them again. This time, it
was said, truncheons were used in the first moments of confrontation. But
according to subsequent accounts, the police were restrained and obviously aware
of what the use of force might provoke.
Well they might be, given the explosive potential of this startling episode
in the life of a humdrum Balkan village and of the Kosovo problem in general.
Moreover, the threat is not confined to Kosovo. It is seen as involving ethnic
relations throughout this multinational country.
Batuse dramatically highlights an emigrant movement in process for some
years. A fast-diminishing Serbian minority in this south Yugoslav province feels
itself increasingly menaced by a mushrooming takeover by the more than 1C
million Albanians who make up 77.5 percent of its population. The immediate
official follow-up to Batuse was an announcement that a radio-parts factory is
to be established in the village in cooperation with a Belgrade enterprise. It
is to provide 150 jobs. It is the first in a series of ''joint ventures'' that
the Kosovo provincial government is negotiating with firms all over Yugoslavia
in a program to relieve unemployment. The jobless rate in the province stands at
30 percent, compared with a national average of 11 to 12 percent.
Seventy percent of Kosovo's unemployed are 25 years or younger. And many of
these young people seem willing enough to support nationalist extremists among
the Albanian population, who call for a separate Kosovo republic, enlarged by
slices of Serbian and Montenegrin territory (where Albanians also live).
There is a historical background of former Serbian colonialism. The
Albanians' language and literature were suppressed under Serbian and Yugoslav
monarchies. With the new postwar republic, Albanians regained useof their
language in Albanian schools, and in due course in a university, in libraries,
newspapers, radio broadcasts, and later, on television. But with old antipathies
so deep-seated, 40 years was not enough for them to be forgotten. The Belgrade
regime's pro-Serbian hard-line behavior in Kosovo up to the mid-1960s did
nothing to help.
Thus it was not surprising when strong Albanian passions boiled over in 1981,
a year after President Josip Broz Tito had died, and were rapidly aggravated by
the economic slump that hit all of Yugoslavia - and backward Kosovo much more
than anywhere else.
''Even in Tito's time, the volcano was always there,'' says a Kosovo TV
journalist. ''Albanians and Serbs have never gotten along. Now, however, even
normal minimal contacts between them are broken. In the long run, it will not
help the Albanians. Nor will it help Yugoslavia, if things go on like
this.''
But in trying to satisfy Kosovo's restless Albanians, the federal government
finds itself increasingly in conflict with Serbian national feeling. GRAPHIC:
Picture, Village in Kosovo Province: Serbs feel threatened by Albanian
population.
Map, Kosovo, Yugoslavia indicated. JOAN FORBES -- STAFF
Copyright 1986 The Christian Science Publishing Society
BBC Summary of World Broadcasts; November 10, 1986, Monday
SECTION: Part 2 Eastern Europe; B. INTERNAL AFFAIRS; YUGOSLAVIA; EE/8412/B/1;
19. Group of Citizens from Kosovo Received in SFRY Assembly
SOURCE: Yugoslav News Agency in Serbo-Croat (i) 1609 gmt 3 (ii) 1437 gmt
4
(iii) 1852 gmt 7 and (iv) 1736 gmt 7 Nov 86
Excerpts from report Tanjug in Serbo-Croat 1052 gmt
The recent attempt by a 17-year-old Albanian to rape a 10-year-old girl from
the Jakovljevic family in the Kosovo village of Plemetina was the direct cause
of today's [3rd November] arrival by a group of more than 150 locals of Serbian
and Montenegrin nationality from this and surrounding villages in Pristina
Municipality at the SFRY Assembly. This group was joined by individuals from
Smederevo and other places where Serbs who have moved there from Kosovo live in
large numbers. The conversation, which was chaired by Nedjo Borkovic,
Vice-President of the Assembly, was attended by Veselin Djuranovic, member of
the SFRY Presidency, Milan Pancevski, member of the LCY Central Committee
Presidium, Branislav Panic, [presumably Branislav Ikonic; Panic untraced]
President of the Serbian Assembly, and Petar Vajovic, Federal Secretary for
Justice and Organisation of the Federal Administration.
The first to take the floor were members of the Jakovljevic family who, not
concealing their extreme bitterness, spoke of the disagreeable incident. The
rape was attempted during our wedding celebrations, said the uncle of the
assaulted girl, Jovica Jakovljevic, and wondered what would have happened if the
tipsy wedding guests had taken their revenge. The father of the little girl,
Petar Jakovljevic, sought a significantly more severe punishment for the
perpetrator of these and similar crimes.
What the people from Kosovo said, as could be expected, also extended to the
most important problems in Kosovo. It is a sorry state of affairs when a tractor
driver like me, Svetislav Tanaskovic said, must speak about the difficulties of
Serbs and Montenegrins from the floor of the Federal Assembly. Today, he said,
we feel as if we are living in the middle of Albania. . . It is impermissible
that while children throughout the country are sleeping peacefully, the little
ones of Serbian and Montenegrin nationality in Kosovo are afraid, Tanackovic
said.
There were also a number of direct criticisms of members of the highest
leadership in Kosovo and it was stressed, some of whom regardless of whether
they were Albanians, Serbs or Montenegrins, were not seen as guaranteeing a
settlement of the situation or providing protection from injustice. There had
been plenty of political arguments. We have had enough of these, Zagorka
Jakovljevic stressed, and added that this visit to the Assembly would not have
come about had provincial leaders wanted to come for talks to the village of
Plemetina when they were invited. As a member of the LC, I maintain, she
stressed, that the situation in Kosovo will not be sorted out if we remain
silent about the problems.
Typically, almost no speakers failed to mention the emigrants from Albania as
the chief exponents of the counter-revolution and separatism and the instigators
of the emigration of Serbs and Montenegrins from the province.
Complementing Velimir Andjelkovic, chairman of the local community of the
SAWP of the village of Plemetina, who demanded that at this gathering a
guarantee be given for a concrete solution to the problems of Kosovo, Dimitrije
Jakovljevic in effect even said that if this were not done there would be
nothing else for Serbs and Montenegrins to do but to defend themselves with arms
or emigrate. . .
Many participants in the debate agreed with the view of Ljubisa Djordjevic
that far more severe measures should be taken against those who were doing
everything to ensure that as few Serbian and Montenegrin families as possible
remained in Kosovo. We are here, Milika Aleksic said, for you to help us to
implement consistently the constitution and legal equality. Expressing their
distrust of the work of the provincial law enforcement and judicial organs, it
was also pointed out that it was still difficult to track down perpetrators of
crimes which violated national equality and that those that were found were
being punished with inappropriately mild sanctions. Hence the reserve shown
towards the results recently achieved by the working groups of the federation
and Serbia in Kosovo. . .
The request was stressed a number of times today for the convocation of an
extraordinary session of the SFRY Assembly, at which there would be a detailed
discussion of the situation in Kosovo and measures adopted which should not be
allowed to be disregarded.
The Assembly and Presidency of the SFRY will soon consider the implementation
of the conclusions of the Presidium and the Presidency on Kosovo, the
implementation of which has been worked on intensively since their adoption in
March, Veselin Djuranovic, a member of the SFRY Presidency, stressed in his
address to the group of citizens from Kosovo, 30 of whom had spoken earlier.
I am not saying, Djuranovic said, that there are no major problems and that
there is no need for us to be more effective, but irredentism in Kosovo cannot
be rooted out in a short time. We are not deceiving ourselves that the
irredentists are defeated and we are using all constitutional and legal measures
against them. All those, however, who think that Kosovo will fall to someone
else are deceiving themselves, for this country knows what the gains of the
revolution are and it will defend them with all its might, he stressed. . .
[Djuranovic outlines measures being taken to investigate and right situation
in Kosovo. Notes success of ban on trade in immovable property in Macedonia]
Practical moves towards integrating organisations from Kosovo, Serbia,
Vojvodina and Belgrade should not be underestimated as part of the political
action we wish to implement.
Djuranovic categorically refuted the harsh words directed at the leaderships.
In particular, he stressed that repression should not be the main way to
stabilise the situation in Kosovo, but joint political action by all socialist
forces, and that this loathsome attempted rape in the village of Plemetina
should be politically and morally condemned and not just criminally, he added,
after recalling that in the last five years in Kosovo more than a 1,000 people
had been sentenced and 7,000 punished for minor offences .
Djuranovic then warned that all Albanians should not be equated with the
irredentists and that the same resolve should be displayed in confronting all
hostile forces, regardless of whether they were Ballists, Chetniks or Ustashas,
or anyone seeking to break up the country.
Accepting as justified the criticisms and dissatisfaction over the slowness
of individual organs in solving many of t he problems and inconsistencies,
Djuranovic stressed that there had to be a decisive stand against these
phenomena, as well as a consistent policy and effective action.
Stating that many of the assessments made in the debate coincided with the
stances of the Presidium and the Presidency, Djuranovic pointed out that in
Kosovo the process of ideo-political differentiation had not been fully
implemented. We must create more resolute measures of differentiation regardless
of people's positions, Djuranovic stressed.
Turning to the forthcoming constitutional changes, which received
considerable mention in the discussion, Djuranovic rejected demands that the
SFRY Constitution of 1974 and the Serbia and Kosovo Constitutions be
''abolished''. This would not, he stressed, be accepted by the majority in
Yugoslavia. By the end of the year the SFRY Presidency will submit a proposal
for changes to the constitution which will not be formal but will be an
important stage in the development of self-management, democracy, the
consolidation of equality and greater efficiency and cohesion in our Federation.
The changes will be aimed at removing the sensitive points in the political
system and creating the conditions for the concentration of all the social
forces on solving the economic crisis, which is the worst to affect the
country.
Veselin Djuranovic dissociated himself from the harsh political judgements
which individual participants in the debate had made at the expense of Azem
Vlasi, President of the Kosovo LC Provincial Committee Presidium. Pointing out
that Vlasi was working in difficult conditions in which more experienced cadres
would not easily be able to orientate themselves either, Djuranovic stressed
that people should not be disqualified politically in the absence of a firm
conviction and sufficient arguments. Vlasi's work as
a youth leader and this in Tito's time had been valued. This was not to
justify, Djuranovic stressed, a single action taken by the leadership in Kosovo,
including the failure to respond to [the invitation of] talks with citizens,
because every Serb, Montenegrin or Albanian could have talks with the most
senior leaders. If mistakes had been made and they had the question should be
raised in a resolute manner, he added.
The guarantee which we can give is that we will fight with all our might for
the implementation of the conclusions of the Presidium and the Presidency and
try to mop up any negligence, weakness, error or injustice. But we must all join
forces to fight resolutely and effectively along these lines, Veselin Djuranovic
concluded.
Stressing that the LCY Central Committee would be informed about today's
discussion, Milan Pancevski, a Presidium member, stressed that the fight against
the irredentists would be fought with full vigour and that this included the
halting of the emigration of Serbs and Montenegrins and the realisation of the
rights of all citizens in Kosovo. . .
Nedjo Borkovic, the Vice-President of the SFRY Assembly, concluding the
talks, announced that the so-called petition of the 2,011, mentioned separately
in these talks, would be sent for consideration in the regular proceedings of
the Assembly.
[Note: Another attempted rape by an Albanian youth of a young girl of Serbian
nationality had come to light, Tanjug reported on 8th November (in Serbo-Croat
1052 gmt). The 15-year-old assailant, R.S., had attacked the girl on 4th
November between the villages of Donja Sipasnica and Carakovce in Kosovska
Kamenica Municipality. He had been detained and criminal proceedings were to be
taken against him. Meanwhile, the boy's father, Hamdi Sabanija, had been
sentenced to 60 days' imprisonment and fined 4,000 dinars for supporting his
son, who, he said, had been forced to admit the offence by the security organs,
and for neglecting his upbringing.]
(ii) Text of announcement by Pristina LC Municipal Committee: The public
information media was today [4th November] sent the following e xplanation by
the Pristina LC Municipal Committee:
''As some newspaper reports of the visit by a group of citizens of Serbian
and Montenegrin nationalities to the SFRY Assembly on 3rd November, have created
the impression that leading officials in the province did not want to address
the group at its meeting in the village of Plemetina, we feel obliged to give
the following explanation:
The Plemetina village community structures invited a number of officials to
the meeting convened on 30th October. Among those who attended were Bozidar
Lazic, President of the [Pristina] Municipal Assembly; Daut Jasanica, President
of the Pristina SAWP Municipal Conference; Izet Sehu, President of the TU
federation municipal council; Jordan Stanojevic, President of the municipal
veterans association; Sulj Rama, member of the Presidium of the Pristina SAWP
Municipal Conference; Hiljmi Ismaili, Executive Secretary in the Pristina LC
Municipal Committee; and Milos Kovacevic, member of the Pristina political
aktiv.
It is true that invitations were also extended to a number of provincial
officials, among them Azem Vlasi, President of the Presidium of the Kosovo LC
Provincial Committee, and Svetislav Dolasevic, President of the Kosovo
Assembly.
However, responsible officials in the municipality were of the opinion that
as they were better informed about the situation and relations in the village
and could therefore give assistance, provide insight into the
events and point to further actions and measures, their presence alone at the
meeting in Plemetina convened to discuss the political and security situation
after the attempted rape of an 11-year old girl (on 19th October) would be
enough.
The officials from the municipality informed the meeting that the comrades
from the provincial leaderships were absent for objective reasons and that owing
to their other duties were unable to attend the meeting. The meeting of the
Plemetina SAWP local organisation of 30th October was frustrated and disrupted
by the provocative behaviour of individuals from other localities who attended
the meeting uninvited,'' the announcement by the Pristina LC Municipal Committee
states.
(iii) Text of report:
In the village of Preoce near Pristina, a meeting was held this evening [7th
November] of the branch of the SAWP, at which it was explained to the local
people who had gathered why their fellow citizen Svetislav Tanaskovic had been
detained and why he had been sentenced by the municipal court for minor offences
in Pristina to 60 days imprisonment. At the same time it was announced to the
locals that the Higher Court for Minor Offences had deferred the decision of the
municipal court that the sentence be upheld. Consequently, Tanaskovic, who had
been detained last night, had been released from detention today and allowed to
conduct his own defence whilst at liberty.
Svetislav Tanaskovic was sentenced because on 30th October, at a meeting of
local people in the village of Plemetina, he had spoken out from unacceptable
positions, sought the replacement of all leaderships in the country and in the
republics and provinces, disparaged their reputation, insulted individual
leaders and blamed them for everything which is happening in Kosovo. At this
evening's meeting Tanaskovic himself admitted that he had made a mistake.
The detention of Svetislav Tanaskovic provoked a reaction amongst local
people of this and surrounding villages and in this connection about 500 people
of Serbian and Montenegrin nationalities gathered at this evening's meeting. The
classroom of the village school in Preoce was too small to take them all so a
significant number remained outside. Although it was held in an atmosphere at
times irascible and polemical, the meeting, which lasted two hours, was
completed thanks above all to the persistence and patience of those
socio-political workers of the province and the municipality present and
activists from the local community. The meeting was also attended by Nebi Gasi,
a member of the Presidency of the SAP of Kosovo, Slobodan Dimic, a member of the
Presidium of the Pristina LC Municipal Committee, and Momcilo Trajkovic,
Executive Secretary in the municipal committee. (iv) Text of report of 8th
November Belgrade 'Politika' article, ''Endless discussions'':
The latest meeting between high-ranking Yugoslav officials and quite a large
group of Serbs and Montenegrins will be remembered, inter alia, for the fact
that this was the first time that these people felt the need to link their
personal position and collapse of intra-national relations in Kosovo with
relations in Serbia and constitutional solutions writes 'Politika' in tomorrow's
[8th November] commentary entitled ''Endless discussions''.
Noting a series of important events connected with the problems of the
constitution ever since the 1960s, commentator Slavoljub Djukic writes that as
time went by every discussion on the situation in Kosovo led to a discussion on
relations in Serbia as well. Enumerating all the political documents adopted on
Kosovo and relations in Serbia and stating that the political leadership of
Serbia never explicitly demanded constitutional changes, but a ''re-examination
of the constitutional practice'', the commentator, inter alia, writes:
Unfortunately, besides the logic of democratic practice and the principle of
''general good'', which does not recognise fetishes and taboos, the great topic
of the constitution of 1974 remained intact. Every attempt to
come face to face with certain truths was greeted with arrogance and
intolerance. This is, in fact, a shocking fact in a democratic society, because
whether the constitution and other matters in need of change will
in fact be changed remains to be seen. In any case, it has been put together
in such a way that it cannot be altered without general consent. But to reject a
discussion in advance, in the manner of ''it is out of the question'', provides
a good illustration of the political situation in Serbia and Yugoslav
society.
There are proper objections, for example that the discussion on
constitutional changes cannot be reduced to a conversation about the position
of Serbia, as some like to think. The problems are much deeper and more delicate
in the Yugoslav community. We can also attempt to estimate the extent in which
disorderly relations in Serbia and the constitutional position of the republic
have hindered the political stabilisation of Kosovo. There is no doubt about the
fact that they have hindered it. Only people with misconceptions or politically
dubious interests can ignore the fact that relations in Serbia directly reflect
events in Kosovo and Yugoslavia. The very fact that the Serbs and Montenegrins
from Kosovo turn to the federation, and not their respective republics,
illustrates the real state of affairs.
Finally, the fact that in the fifth decade of the existence of the republic
of Serbia this topic is being raised, when such topics are usually discussed at
the initial stage of every community, is an additional argument about the degree
of sensitivity of the problem and its seriousness for the entire Yugoslav
society. Those who think that it can be resolved by a compromise and delays in
facing the whole truth only add fuel to the already heated atmosphere and create
fresh grounds for the awakened forces of dark and unrest.
It is easy to abuse the statements of the Serbs and Montenegrins on the
constitution of 1974 in the SFRY Assembly. But this would be of no use. We
cannot expect people who bear their burden and who are not gifted orators to be
precise in their statements and to be able to read between the lines.
It would be better to ponder about their statements and the reason why they
felt the need to come to the SFRY Assembly.
Copyright 1986 The British Broadcasting Corporation
20. ETHNIC RIVALRIES CAUSE UNREST IN YUGOSLAV REGION
By Jackson Diehl
Washington Post Foreign Service
Saturday, November 29, 1986 ; Page A14
PRISTINA, YUGOSLAVIA -- Growing tension between lbanians and Serbs here this
year has converted this poor southern region from a chronic local trouble spot
into the potential flash point of a country increasingly divided by national
rivalries.
Since the outbreak of riots here in 1981, authorities of the autonomous
province of Kosovo have faced a steady challenge from separatist and nationalist
groups among the dominant Albanian population. More than 1,000 people have been
jailed for seeking Kosovo's independence from Serbia, the Yugoslav republic to
which Kosovo nominally belongs, or unification with the neighboring nation
Albania.
The significance of this conflict has been multiplied this year by the
emergence of concern among Yugoslavia's Serbs, the country's largest ethnic
group, about the "forced emigration" of Serbs from Kosovo under pressure from
the Albanians.
Small farmers, tradesmen and professionals have been steadily leaving the
province's cities and the small Serbian villages around them, raising the
prospect that a historic seat of the Serbian nation will soon be populated only
by Albanians. More than 20,000 have emigrated since 1981 out of a total
Serbian population of about 220,000. Meanwhile, the Albanian population
of over 1.2 million is expanding at the fastest pace in Europe.
The local Serbs, arguing that Albanian-dominated provincial authorities have
offered them no protection from violent attacks, have signed petitions and
staged several demonstrations outside Pristina this year. To the embarrassment
of authorities, they have also sent three delegations to press their case in
Belgrade, the capital of Serbia and of Yugoslavia.
The acts have inflamed nationalist feeling among Serbians outside Kosovo and
prompted demands by intellectuals and even Serbian communist political leaders
for constitutional changes and other drastic action to stop the emigration and
restore Serbia's control over Kosovo. The Serbian outbursts, in turn, have
provoked concern by leaders of Yugoslavia's five other, smaller republics, who
sympathize with some complaints but are wary of Serbian national
aspirations.
The last delegation of Serbs to visit Belgrade early this month, meanwhile,
warned that they would take up arms against their perceived tormentors among the
Albanians.
"This should be very seriously considered. This is a warning, and we
understand it that way," said Vukasin Jokanovic, a Serbian member of Kosovo's
governing executive council. "We must take urgent measures to win back the
confidence of these people."
The official receptivity to complaints from Kosovo increased this year
following local and national congresses of the Yugoslav League of Communists
that purged many Kosovo leaders, and the inauguration of a new federal
government under Prime Minister Branko Mikulic. Three federal delegations
visited Kosovo last summer to examine Serbian complaints about the courts, local
administration and police force. A package of measures was adopted to slow
emigration, including a ban on land sales by members of one ethnic group to
members of another.
Even a brief visit to Kosovo, which is about half the size of Maryland,
quickly reveals seemingly intractable roots of ethnic tension.
"Laws will never stop the emigration," remarked Jokanovic in an interview.
"The law {on land sales} is only accepted by people who really don't want to
emigrate."
The broadest cause of Kosovo's troubles, officials and residents say, is its
pervasive poverty. Living standards here are comparable to those in Africa or
Latin America and are less than one-third the level of those in Yugoslavia as a
whole. About 124,000 workers, or more than 35 percent of the work force, are
unemployed.
Development programs here have repeatedly failed, pouring money into
inefficient industrial projects and rickety, quickly rusting skyscrapers in
Pristina.
"For a long time we were wrong in our policy. We were afraid of investing in
agriculture and the private sector," said Aziz Abrashi, the provincial
economy secretary. "We tried to put peasants from the countryside straight
into modern factories."
Meanwhile, much of the rapidly expanding Albanian population has come to view
Kosovo as its homeland. Albanians felt oppressed by the rule of Serbians,
imposed by former president Tito's police chief, for two decades after World War
II. A relatively small minority in multinational Yugoslavia, the Albanians say
they are discriminated against outside the province. In Albania itself, the
world's most rigid Stalinist government has kept the nation so isolated and
poverty-stricken that about 5,000 refugees have fled across the heavily
guarded border to Kosovo. A powerful tradition of close-knit clans has bound
the community together, raised the birth rate and discouraged emigration to
other parts of Yugoslavia.
The result, said economists and government officials, has been pressure for
land in Kosovo even from those Albanians who are neither separatist nor
anti-Serbian.
"Let me explain the psychology of an Albanian farmer about the land," said
Abrashi, himself Albanian. "For centuries these people have been defining their
existence and their worth only through land. They are ready to make great
sacrifices, to work 30 years, to go and work abroad, to live in terrible
conditions so as to collect, dinar by dinar, the money to buy a piece of land.
And the land must be near that of the rest of the family. For that they will pay
almost any price."
Land prices in Kosovo, despite its poverty, are five times those in Serbia
and typically range around $35,000 for an acre of good farm land, Abrashi
said. Newspapers have reported sales of farms for over $1 million. As a
result, Serbs, who unlike the Albanians have attractive alternatives outside the
province, have had a powerful economic incentive to sell their land to
Albanians.
For the Serbs who have remained, frustrated Albanian youth have kept up a
steady harassment ranging from the painting of hostile slogans on Serbian homes
and vandalism of Serbian graveyards to beatings and rapes.
"One cannot speak of these developments as being only the deeds of individual
{Albanian} groups anymore," said Serbia's interior minister Svetomir Lalovic in
a recent speech. "At issue are seriously disturbed inter-ethnic relations."
Few killings have been recorded since the 1981 riots. But in the three months
of July, August and September, authorities recorded 34 assaults by Albanians on
Serbians. Two instances of rape provoked outraged demonstrations near Pristina
and motivated the last, angry delegation that marched on the federal parliament
in Belgrade.
Yugoslav officials predict that it will take many years to resolve the
tensions in Kosovo, and dissidents are even less sanguine.
"We did not deal with the emigration for a long time, and now that it has
reached this stage it is very difficult to break the chain of events," said
Jokanovic.
Reuters; April 25, 1987, Saturday, AM cycle
SECTION: International News
21. SERBIAN DEMONSTRATIONS ADD TO YUGOSLAVIA'S ECONOMIC WOES
DATELINE: BELGRADE
Thousands of Serbs demanding better treatment in Yugoslavia's Kosovo region
staged an all-night vigil after the area's worst reported clashes since
nationalist riots in 1981.
The incidents in the town of Kosovo Polje rekindled ethnic tensions in the
region between majority Albanians and other nationalities who say they are being
forced to leave.
They also dealt a further blow to Yugoslavia's Communist authorities, already
facing a major economic crisis and labor unrest.
A crowd of about 15,000 Serbs and Montenegrins hurled stones at police after
they used truncheons yesterday to push people away from the entrance to the
town's cultural center.
The disturbance took place as Slobodan Milosevic, Communist Party chief in
the republic of Serbia, was meeting a delegation of local Serbs and Montenegrins
in the center to discuss their grievences.'
The newspaper Vecernje Novosti said many people, including women, were
injured when police advanced on the crowd only to be pushed back by
demonstrators demanding to see Milosevic. Local reporters earlier told Reuters
that police took away at least 20 demonstrators.
The official Tanjug news agency today quoted Milosevic as saying that those
ordering the use of truncheons against citizens would be disciplined. The
violence was the worst reported since the army was dispatched to Kosovo in 1981
to quell Albanian nationalist riots in which at least nine people were
killed.
Kosovo, which borders Albania, has a population of 1.7 million ethnic
Albanians and 200,000 Serbs and Montenegrins. Thousands of non-Albanians flee
the area every year amid charges of harassment and claims that the Albanians
want to create an ethnically pure Kosovo.
Hundreds of Serbs came to Belgrade last year to complain to senior state and
party officials of alleged brutality, including rape and murder, by the Albanian
majority. Some threatened to take up arms unless they were provided with better
protection.
Television yesterday called Kosovo "Yugoslavia's number one problem" amid the
current economic crisis.
'
Tanjug later ran a full report of Milosevic's speech, which included an
emotional appeal to the Serb and Montenegrin delegation to end emigration from
the area bordering Albania.
"The migration of Serbs and Montenegrins under economic, political and
physical pressure is probably the last tragic exodus of a European people," he
said. The last such processions of desperate people were in the Middle
Ages."
He told the Kosovo Serbs: "This is your land. These are your houses, fields,
gardens and memories. You can't leave your land because its hard to live here,
because you're pressured by injustice and degredation."
He added: "Our goal is to overcome hatred, intolerance and distrust. We want
all people in Kosovo to live together. The first step towards that is you have
to stay here."
Yugoslavia, grappling with 100 per cent inflation and falling exports, was
hit last month by a wave of strikes by workers denouncing a law rolling back
wages to average levels of the last quarter of 1986.
New strikes were reported this month at the country's biggest steel complex,
Smederevo, and at a rolling stock plant in Kraljevo in Serbia. Coal miners in
Istria in northwest Yugoslavia have entered the third week of Yugoslavia's
longest-recorded strike, demanding 100 per cent wage increases and better living
conditions.
The New York Times; June 28, 1987, Sunday, Late City Final Edition
SECTION: Section 1; Part 1, Page 12, Column 5; Foreign Desk
22. Belgrade Battles Kosovo Serbs
BYLINE: Special to the New York Times
DATELINE: BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, June 27
The police clashed here early today with about 1,000 Serbs and Montenegrins
protesting what they called terrorism against them by ethnic Albanians in Kosovo
Province.
The clash occurred shortly after a meeting of the country's Central Committee
during which there were 16 hours of debate on ways to ease tension between
Kosovo's 1.7 million ethnic Albanians and 200,000 Serbs and Montenegrins.
Witnesses said squads of policemen seized demonstrators and forced them into
buses to be driven back to their homes in Kosovo. Some protesters were detained
for several hours.
The Central Committee meeting was the first in six years dedicated solely to
Kosovo problem.
Tensions have been high in the province in southwestern Yugoslavia since the
Albanians rioted there in 1981 to back demands for higher status as a
republic.
Since then, more than 22,000 Serbs and Montenegrins have fled Kosovo. The
Government asked people from Kosovo not to come to Belgrade during the Central
Committee meeting, but hundreds came here overnight. Published excerpts from the
debate showed continued splits in the party ranks, and no decisive action was
considered likely.
The police also prevented large groups of Belgrade residents from joining the
protesters by cordoning of the entire center of the city.
Serbs have said the ethnic Albanians in Kosovo have committed atrocities
against them, including murder, rape, desecration of graves and churches and
blinding of cattle.
Copyright 1987 The New York Times Company
Reuter Library Report; August 16, 1987, Sunday, PM cycle
23. SERBS AND MONTENEGRINS RALLY AGAINST ALLEGED ALBANIAN ATTACKS
DATELINE: BELGRADE, Aug 16
About 5,000 Serbs and Montenegrins staged a protest rally in Yugoslavia's
ethnically-divided Kosovo province against alleged attacks by the region's
Albanian majority, Tanjug news agency reported.
Yesterday's protest followed a series of incidents, including an attack on an
11-year Serbian boy who was hit by a brick thrown by an Albanian teenager, and
the burning of a Serbian Orthodox cemetery in the village of Gornje Dobrevo.
Tanjug said that Zoran Sokolovic, secretary of the Serbian party's central
committee, promised the crowd at Kosovo Polje that ethnic Albanian separatists
will be dealt with severely.
The Belgrade newspaper Vecernje Novosti said Sokolovic was frequently
interrupted by hecklers who shouted that no action had been taken since the
Yugoslav ruling party plenum in June on the troubles in the province.
Others protested at the absence of the Yugoslav state president and Yugoslav
and Serbian party chiefs who had been invited to the rally. Sokolovic urged the
crowd to have confidence in the communist party and assured them a decisive blow
would be struck at Albanian separatists, Tanjug said.
The June plenum pledged action against Albanian nationalists and seperatists
and to see that Serbs and Montenegrins who had been forced to abandon their land
and property and leave Kosovo province returned home. Serbs and Montenegrins are
outnumbered eight to one by Albanians in Kosovo, Yugoslavia's poorest province
bordering Albania. Tension has been high since riots in 1981 killed at least
nine people were killed.
© Reuters, 1987
The Xinhua General Overseas News Service; OCTOBER 17, 1987, SATURDAY
24. Thousands of women demonstrate in Kosovo, Yugoslavia
Byline: Belgrade, October 17; ITEM NO: 1017070
Thousands of Serb and Montenegro women participated in a demonstration Friday
in Pristina city of the province of Kosovo. They were denouncing a wave of rape
crimes and sex discrimination remarks made by a former Kosovo leader of Albanian
nationality. Tanjug, the Yugoslav news agency, reported that the women, chanting
slogans for freedom and security, marched to the local party committee
headquarters and asked for a meeting with the committee chairman, Azem Vlasi.
The angry women read an open letter, sharply criticizing Fadilj Hodza for his
insulting remarks on Serb and Montenegro women. Hodza is the former leader of
the province of Kosovo. He is now a member of the Yugoslavia federation
council.
The province of Kosovo is dominated by Albanian people. It has long been
plagued with racial conflicts between majority Albanian people and minority Serb
and Montenegro peoples. The Albanian population has asked for a republic status.
But it was rejected by the Yugoslavian authorities. Violence and riots initiated
by Albanians took place regularly since 1981.
An Albanian soldier recently shot dead several Serb soldiers in a military
camp in Serbia. to drive minority women out of the province, Albanians have
pressured them in many ways, including rape. Hodza allegedly said last November
that non-Albanian women should work as waitresses in order to avoid to be raped.
Prostitutes often work in bars and cafes. This is why Hodza's remark trigged
waves of strong protest among Yugoslavian women.
The executive of the Yugoslavia conference on the status of women held a
meeting Friday and condemned Hodza's remarks. The executive called for the
dismissal of Hodza from the Yugoslavia federation council.
© 1987 by Xinhua
The Associated Press;. October 21, 1987, Wednesday, AM cycle
SECTION: International News
25. Serb, Montenegrin Pupils Boycott Classes in Kosovo
DATELINE: BELGRADE, Yugoslavia
Students of Serbian and Montenegrin nationalities boycotted classes in the
capital of Kosovo province Wednesday to protest alleged harassment by the
Albanian ethnic majority, a news agency reported.
The Tanjug news agency said the boycott was also spreading in schools at
three villages close to Pristina, the provincial capital.
More than 22,000 Serbs and Montenegrins have left the southern province since
ethnic riots in 1981. They alleged harassment by ethnic Albanians, who are about
85 percent of the province's population.
Kosovo is Yugoslavia's poorest region and offers little economic opportunity.
Some Albanians seek either more autonomy for Kosovo or unity of the province
with Albania. Kosovo is administered as part of the republic of Serbia.
The central committee of the Yugoslav Communist Party held its first meeting
on Kosovo in June, but ethnic tension in the province apparently has not
eased.
Thousands of Serb and Montenegrin women demonstrated throughout Kosovo over
the weekend against alleged insults by Fadilj Hodja, a former high ranking
ethnic Albanian official and vice president of Yugoslavia in the late 1970s.
Another demonstration by about 5,000 people took place Wednesday at a Pristina
suburb to protest alleged harassment by the Albanian majority. Protesters
repeated calls for Hodja to be tried, Tanjug said.
Yugoslav newspapers recently reported Hodja stated last year that
prostitution by Serbian women could halt frequent cases of alleged rapes in
Kosovo.
Belgrade newspapers have often reported alleged sexual assaults against
Serbian and Montenegrin women by Albanians in Kosovo.
The presidium of the ruling Communist Party on Tuesday expelled Hodja, now
retired, from the party for his alleged support of Albanian nationalism in
Kosovo.
The Ekspres Politika daily quoted Serb and Montenegrin pupils as saying they
fear going out after dark in Pristina because of what they said were possible
attacks by ethnic Albanian nationalists.
© The Associated Press, 1987
The Xinhua General Overseas News Service; OCTOBER 26, 1987, MONDAY
26. Federal police sent to troubled Kosovo, Yugoslavia
DATELINE: Belgrade, October 26; ITEM NO: 1026058
Yugoslavia's state presidency, worrying about a possible fresh flare-up of
ethnic disputes in Kosovo, has sent a special unit of federal police to the
troubled southern province to establish control there. the move, which was
announced Sunday, is obviously designed to forestall a possible attempt by
"Albanian nationalists and separatists" to fuel ethnic tensions in Kosovo to
revenge the sacking of a number of ranking provincial officials for their role
in fostering nationalism and separatism in the province.
Six senior officials of Kosovo have been expelled from the ruling communist
league and some others sacked from provincial posts, according to press
reports here last week. The reports said the case of Fadilj Hodza, an ethnic
Albanian and long influential leader in Kosovo, is being handled by the league
central committee, in the same action which would likely upset the Albanian
community.
The introduction of "extraordinary measures" by the presidency has been in
the wake of mounting ethnic tensions in Kosovo, where thousands of Serbs and
Montenegrins have staged demonstrations in recent weeks, protesting against
alleged harassment by ethnic "Albanian nationalists and separatists" to force
them to leave their homes. Reports said more than 22,000 Serbs and Montenegrins
have left the Albanian-dominated southern province since 1981, when the ethnic
dispute flared up.
The Albanian ethnic majority want the ethnically-torn Kosovo to be upgraded
to the status of a full republic within the Yugoslav federation and become part
of neighboring Albania. last weekend, thousands of Serb and Montenegrin women
demonstrated in Kosovo's Pristina city, denouncing a wave of rape crimes and
reported remarks by Hodza who said prostitution of Serbian women could halt
allegedly frequent rapes in Kosovo.
The state presidency, the country's collective leadership, in a statement
issued Sunday by the official Tanjug news agency, said, "danger exists for the
further worsening of the situation in Kosovo which could seriously endanger the
security of Yugoslavia." similar measures were introduced in 1981 when ethnic
Albanians rioted in the streets of Kosovo's cities and towns, demanding more
autonomy for the province.
The ruling Yugoslav communist league devoted a special plenum in late June to
seeking ways of defusing ethnic tensions in Kosovo. The meeting urged "more
forceful and effective actions" in the effort. However, tensions there have
continued unabated since and are even threatening to trigger a fresh ethnic
dispute. Yugoslav authorities accused ethnic Albanian "nationalists and
separatists" of fanning class boycotts and demonstrations, assaulting police,
murdering, poisoning, and even preparing for an armed rebellion.
The presidency's statement, issued after a one-day meeting Saturday which
discussed the situation in Kosovo, said federal police were called out to the
region because of "increased organized hostile activity from the positions of
Albanian nationalism and separatism and organized activity of Serbian and
Montenegrin nationalists."
"The federal ministry of the interior is entrusted to directly organize and
exercise certain measures particularly concerning state security on the
territory of Kosovo province," the statement said.
© The Xinhua News Agency.
The New York Times
November 1, 1987, Sunday, Late City Final Edition
SECTION: Section 1; Part 1, Page 14, Column 1; Foreign Desk
27. In Yugoslavia, Rising Ethnic Strife Brings Fears of Worse Civil Conflict
BYLINE: By DAVID BINDER, Special to the New York Times
DATELINE: BELGRADE, Yugoslavia
Portions of southern Yugoslavia have reached such a state of ethnic friction
that Yugoslavs have begun to talk of the horrifying possibility of ''civil war''
in a land that lost one-tenth of its population, or 1.7 million people, in World
War II.
The current hostilities pit separatist-minded ethnic Albanians against the
various Slavic populations of Yugoslavia and occur at all levels of society,
from the highest officials to the humblest peasants.
A young Army conscript of ethnic Albanian origin shot up his barracks,
killing four sleeping Slavic bunkmates and wounding six others.
The army says it has uncovered hundreds of subversive ethnic Albanian cells
in its ranks. Some arsenals have been raided.
Vicious Insults
Ethnic Albanians in the Government have manipulated public funds and
regulations to take over land belonging to Serbs. And politicians have exchanged
vicious insults.
Slavic Orthodox churches have been attacked, and flags have been torn down.
Wells have been poisoned and crops burned. Slavic boys have been knifed, and
some young ethnic Albanians have been told by their elders to rape Serbian
girls.
Ethnic Albanians comprise the fastest growing nationality in Yugoslavia and
are expected soon to become its third largest, after the Serbs and Croats.
Radicals' Goals
. The goal of the radical nationalists among them, one said in an interview,
is an ''ethnic Albania that includes western Macedonia, southern Montenegro,
part of southern Serbia, Kosovo and Albania itself.'' That includes large chunks
of the republics that make up the southern half of Yugoslavia.
Other ethnic Albanian separatists admit to a vision of a greater Albania
governed from Pristina in southern Yugoslavia rather than Tirana, the capital of
neighboring Albania.
There is no evidence that the hard-line Communist Government in Tirana is
giving them material assistance.
The principal battleground is the region called Kosovo, a high plateau ringed
by mountains that is somewhat smaller than New Jersey. Ethnic Albanians there
make up 85 percent of the population of 1.7 million. The rest are Serbians and
Montenegrins.
Worst Strife in Years
As Slavs flee the protracted violence, Kosovo is becoming what ethnic
Albanian nationalists have been demanding for years, and especially strongly
since the bloody rioting by ethnic Albanians in Pristina in 1981 - an
''ethnically pure'' Albanian region, a ''Republic of Kosovo'' in all but name.
The violence, a journalist in Kosovo said, is escalating to ''the worst in
the last seven years.''
Many Yugoslavs blame the troubles on the ethnic Albanians, but the matter is
more complex in a country with as many nationalities and religions as
Yugoslavia's and involves economic development, law, politics, families and
flags. As recently as 20 years ago, the Slavic majority treated ethnic Albanians
as inferiors to be employed as hewers of wood and carriers of heating coal. The
ethnic Albanians, who now number 2 million, were officially deemed a minority,
not a constituent nationality, as they are today.
Were the ethnic tensions restricted to Kosovo, Yugoslavia's problems with its
Albanian nationals might be more manageable. But some Yugoslavs and some ethnic
Albanians believe the struggle has spread far beyond Kosovo. Macedonia, a
republic to the south with a population of 1.8 million, has a restive ethnic
Albanian minority of 350,000.
''We've already lost western Macedonia to the Albanians,'' said a member of
the Yugoslav party presidium, explaining that the ethnic minority had driven the
Slavic Macedonians out of the region.
Attacks on Slavs
Last summer, the authorities in Kosovo said they documented 40 ethnic
Albanian attacks on Slavs in two months. In the last two years, 320 ethnic
Albanians have been sentenced for political crimes, nearly half of them
characterized as severe.
In one incident, Fadil Hoxha, once the leading politician of ethnic Albanian
origin in Yugoslavia, joked at an official dinner in Prizren last year that
Serbian women should be used to satisfy potential ethnic Albanian rapists. After
his quip was reported this October, Serbian women in Kosovo protested, and Mr.
Hoxha was dismissed from the Communist Party.
As a precaution, the central authorities dispatched 380 riot police officers
to the Kosovo region for the first time in four years.
Officials in Belgrade view the ethnic Albanian challenge as imperiling the
foundations of the multinational experiment called federal Yugoslavia, which
consists of six republics and two provinces.
'Lebanonizing' of Yugoslavia
High-ranking officials have spoken of the ''Lebanonizing'' of their country
and have compared its troubles to the strife in Northern Ireland.
Borislav Jovic, a member of the Serbian party's presidency, spoke in an
interview of the prospect of ''two Albanias, one north and one south, like
divided Germany or Korea,'' and of ''practically the breakup of Yugoslavia.'' He
added: ''Time is working against us.''
The federal Secretary for National Defense, Fleet Adm. Branko Mamula, told
the army's party organization in September of efforts by ethnic Albanians to
subvert the armed forces. ''Between 1981 and 1987 a total of 216 illegal
organizations with 1,435 members of Albanian nationality were discovered in the
Yugoslav People's Army,'' he said. Admiral Mamula said ethnic Albanian
subversives had been preparing for ''killing officers and soldiers, poisoning
food and water, sabotage, breaking into weapons arsenals and stealing arms and
ammunition, desertion and causing flagrant nationalist incidents in army
units.''
Concerns Over Military
Coming three weeks after the ethnic Albanian draftee, Aziz Kelmendi, had
slaughtered his Slavic comrades in the barracks at Paracin, the speech struck
fear in thousands of families whose sons were about to start their mandatory
year of military service.
Because the Albanians have had a relatively high birth rate, one-quarter of
the army's 200,000 conscripts this year are ethnic Albanians. Admiral Mamula
suggested that 3,792 were potential human timebombs.
He said the army had ''not been provided with details relevant for assessing
their behavior.'' But a number of Belgrade politicians said they doubted the
Yugoslav armed forces would be used to intervene in Kosovo as they were to quell
violent rioting in 1981 in Pristina. They reason that the army leadership is
extremely reluctant to become involved in what is, in the first place, a
political issue.
Ethnic Albanians already control almost every phase of life in the autonomous
province of Kosovo, including the police, judiciary, civil service, schools and
factories. Non-Albanian visitors almost immediately feel the independence - and
suspicion - of the ethnic Albanian authorities.
Region's Slavs Lack Strength
While 200,000 Serbs and Montenegrins still live in the province, they are
scattered and lack cohesion. In the last seven years, 20,000 of them have fled
the province, often leaving behind farmsteads and houses, for the safety of the
Slavic north.
Until September, the majority of the Serbian Communist Party leadership
pursued a policy of seeking compromise with the Kosovo party hierarchy under its
ethnic Albanian leader, Azem Vlasi.
But during a 30-hour session of the Serbian central committee in late
September, the Serbian party secretary, Slobodan Milosevic, deposed Dragisa
Pavlovic, as head of Belgrade's party organization, the country's largest. Mr.
Milosevic accused Mr. Pavlovic of being an appeaser who was soft on Albanian
radicals. Mr. Milosevic had courted the Serbian backlash vote with speeches in
Kosovo itself calling for ''the policy of the hard hand.''
''We will go up against anti-Socialist forces, even if they call us
Stalinists,'' Mr. Milosevic declared recently. That a Yugoslav politician would
invite someone to call him a Stalinist even four decades after Tito's epochal
break with Stalin, is a measure of the state into which Serbian politics have
fallen. For the moment, Mr. Milosevic and his supporters appear to be staking
their careers on a strategy of confrontation with the Kosovo ethnic Albanians.
Other Yugoslav politicians have expressed alarm. ''There is no doubt Kosovo
is a problem of the whole country, a powder keg on which we all sit,'' said
Milan Kucan, head of the Slovenian Communist Party.
Remzi Koljgeci, of the Kosovo party leadership, said in an interview in
Pristina that ''relations are cold'' between the ethnic Albanians and Serbs of
the province, that there were too many ''people without hope.''
But many of those interviewed agreed it was also a rare opportunity for
Yugoslavia to take radical political and economic steps, as Tito did when he
broke with the Soviet bloc in 1948.
Efforts are under way to strengthen central authority through amendments to
the constitution. The League of Communists is planning an extraordinary party
congress before March to address the country's grave problems.
The hope is that something will be done then to exert the rule of law in
Kosovo while drawing ethnic Albanians back into Yugoslavia's mainstream.
© 1987, The New York Times
The Christian Science Monitor; March 11, 1988, Friday
SECTION: International; Pg. 11
28 Yugoslav groups struggle for same land
William Echikson, Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
DATELINE: Pecs, Yugoslavia
HIGHLIGHT: Serbs, Albanians in tug of war over Kosovo province
When two peoples fight over the same piece of land, tragedy too often
results. Everyone knows about the disputes wracking Ireland, Sri Lanka, and
Israel. A new name should now be added to the unfortunate list - the southern
Yugoslav province of Kosovo.
In Kosovo's case, the belligerents are Serbs and Albanians. The Albanians are
Muslim and proud of their Illyrian ancestry. The Serbs are Orthodox Christians
and Slavs. A few months ago, tensions between the two groups boiled over,
forcing Belgrade to dispatch 380 special militia to Kosovo.
For Albanians, who used to be a minority but now are a growing majority in
Kosovo, the issue is self-determination. As an autonomous province within the
republic of Serbia, Kosovo now enjoys considerable local self-rule. But many
Albanians want their own republic, and the noisiest want to unite with Albania.
For Serbs, Kosovo is their sacred heartland. Here are located their loveliest
medieval monasteries and the sites of their struggles against the Turks. Serbs,
the largest ethnic group in Yugoslavia, also fear that Kosovo's secession would
lead to similar demands by other Yugoslav nationalities.
''If Yugoslavia is going to disintegrate into different national states, the
process will start in Kosovo,'' worries Milovan Djilas, the country's most
celebrated dissident.
Kosovo's conflict so far has avoided widespread bloodshed. Albanians rioted
in 1981, but since then the struggle has largely been fought with intimidation
and verbal violence, not guns. Angry Serbs complain that Albanians are forcing
them to leave Kosovo by destroying their cemeteries, vandalizing their fields,
killing their animals, pouring disinfectant down their wells, even raping their
daughters.
The tactics have had a powerful impact. In the last two decades, thousands of
Serbs have moved out of Kosovo. Those who remain feel increasingly besieged.
''Kosovo's Serbs are the Palestinians of Yugoslavia,'' says Slavko Djumic, a
Serb nationalist. ''We're being forced from our land.''
Albanians also feel oppressed. In prewar Yugoslavia, the Albanians were kept
out of influential positions in Kosovo. Albanians still complain that they must
do too much to accommodate the non-Albania speaking Serbian majority.
''This is our homeland,'' says Haki, a hotel clerk, ''but if there are eight
Albanians working here and one Serb, we all have to speak Serb.'' Tensions are
aggravated by a high Albanian birthrate. Jobs, or rather the lack of them, add
to the population problem. Kosovo is Yugoslavia's poorest province. Hajrula
Zahiti, Kosovo's economics minister, reports that of the Province's 2 million or
so inhabitants, only 200,000 are employed.
Large Albanian families live in miserable conditions. The Komoni family from
the village of Brezanik numbers six sons and two daughters. All crowd into a
small two-room shack. Only one, 30-year old Gani, has a job - in the local shoe
factory. The rest mind the family's meager three hectares (7 acres) of land.
''I don't care much about politics,'' says the father. ''But look, I have no
job, no hope for my children.''
Kosovo Serbs suffer similar poverty. Miso Dugandzi, from the village of
Gorazdevac, is unemployed. So are his two sons, who live with him in a small
stove-heated shack. ''Only a strong Serbia can save us,'' he says. In an effort
to stem Serb emigration and calm these explosive feelings, Belgrade recently
announced a program to construct new factories in Kosovo. Serbs are to receive
preference for jobs.
Money to pay for the plan is to come from taxes on the richer northern
provinces. But in the past, northern Slovenes and Croats complained that their
donations were invested in showy projects such as luxury hotels instead of
productive factories. Perhaps even more, northerners fear strengthening feelings
for a Greater Serbia would let the Serbs try, as in the past, to dominate
them.
Albanians aren't happy about plans to favor Serbs, either. Hazer Susri of the
Kosovo Central Committee admits that 1,200 people in Kosovo have been arrested
for political offenses since 1981, mostly Albanians on charges of inciting
illegal nationalism.
''Nationalist actions no longer take the form of demonstrations,'' Mr. Susri
says. ''There are just pamphlets, graffiti.''
But beneath this surface calm, fear reigns. Albanians stay in their own
neighborhoods and restaurants, Serbs in their own enclaves. The two
nationalities trade few words. They only exchange angry glances. There are
worries that glances could turn into full-fledged violence.
Copyright 1988 The Christian Science Publishing Society
Reuters; July 30, 1988, Saturday, PM cycle
29. YUGOSLAV LEADERS CALL FOR CONTROL IN KOSOVO, PROTESTS LOOM
By Andrej Gustincic
DATELINE: BELGRADE, July 30
As Serbs in strife-torn Kosovo province threatened to stage one of the
biggest protests in Yugoslavia's history, state leaders and parliament on Friday
called for more federal control over the province.
Parliament asked all federal bodies to take immediate steps to stem migration
of non-Albanians from the area because of alleged persecution by its ethnic
Albanian majority.
The Yugoslav Communist Party Central Committee on Friday began a heated
plenary session to defuse the ethnic crisis in Kosovo. The meeting continued
late into Friday night.
"The Federal Assembly (parliament) and the government will take steps to
establish the personal and joint responsibility of those who fail to carry out
tasks embodied in the Yugoslav program on Kosovo," the Yugoslav news agency
Tanjug said.
"The measures employed against them will include recalls and removals from
office," it said, indicating a major shake-up of the political establishment may
come soon.
Kosovo, an autonomous province of Yugoslavia's biggest republic Serbia, has a
population of 1.7 million ethnic Albanians and some 200,000 non-Albanians,
mostly Serbs.
Thousands of Serbs flee the area every year, alleging that the ethnic
Albanians are persecuting them in order to drive them out and create an
ethnically pure, all-Albanian Kosovo.
Serb activists in Kosovo said that if the plenum failed to meet their
expectations, they would mount massive protests on a scale that would dwarf
anything seen so far in this country.
Belgrade television quoted people throughout Yugoslavia as saying they
believed the plenum was the most important political meeting in Yugoslavia for
decades.
Vice-President Stane Dolanc told the plenum the country's collective State
Presidency might soon boost the role of federal bodies in Kosovo including a
special paramilitary unit.
"The presidency is increasingly worried about the escalation of nationalism,"
Dolanc said. He said recent protests threatened state security and the
presidency might expand the role of a heavily armed 380-man special federal
police unit sent to Kosovo last November after mass protests by Serbs in
Kosovo.
Yugoslavia's six republics and two provinces enjoy great autonomy and tend to
resist control by the federal authorities.
Serbian Communist Party leader Slobodan Milosevic is pushing constitutional
reforms to give Serbia direct control over its provinces -- Kosovo in the south
and Vojvodina in the north.
He has sparked a conflict with provincial leaders by encouraging Serbs to
stage mass protests in Vojvodina to pressure local leaders there into adopting
the changes.
At the plenum, he said their protests were justified and against humiliation.
"When part of the population in Kosovo is suffering because it's a minority,
accusations that they pressure and threaten others amount to great political
cynicism," Milosevic said.
He said the protests had proven that the proposed changes in the
constitutional position of the provinces were the wish of the Serbian
people.
© 1988, Reuters
The New York Times; September 23, 1988, Friday, Late City Final Edition
SECTION: Section A; Page 12, Column 4; Foreign Desk
30. 70,000 Serbs Vent Anger at Officials
By HENRY KAMM, Special to the New York Times
DATELINE: KRALJEVO, Yugoslavia, Sept. 22, 1988
About 70,000 Serbians braved a steady rain and fields of mud after the
factories closed in this Serbian industrial town this afternoon to cheer
speakers and shout slogans.
It was perhaps the largest of a rash of rallies held since July over the
ethnic conflict in Kosovo, an autonomous province of Serbia south of here. Serbs
contend that Kosovo's ethnic majority of 1.7 million Albanians has terrorized a
minority of 200,000 Serbs and Montenegrins with the aim of driving them out of
Kosovo and turning it into a purely Albanian province.
The plight of the Kosovo Serbs was the official subject of the demonstration.
But much of the speeches, and many of the slogans that were chanted throughout
the meeting, made evident why the rallies are viewed with great unease by the
authorities.
Leaders Under Fire
In a country with an annual inflation rate approaching 200 percent, a sinking
standard of living and rising unemployment, economic problems are as prominent
as the deeply emotional ethnic problem of Kosovo. The speeches and slogans today
reflected that.
''We don't want imposing villas, planes, yachts and private beaches,'' said
Vojislav Radunovic, the union leader at the railroad car factory that is this
town's main industry, alluding to recent disclosures of high living among
Government and Communist Party leaders.
''You are not our comrades because you do not line up at dawn to buy
'people's bread,' '' he continued. He was referring to the low-quality bread
that bakeries must provide at low cost to cushion the shock of repeated
increases in the price of better bread.
''You don't share our destiny on the first, second or third shift,'' he said.
''You don't go down in the mine shafts; you don't climb high to build bridges.
You are not our comrades.''
''The people should judge them!'' was a shout that rose from the crowd, which
responded enthusiastically throughout the meeting. ''Thieves!'' the crowd
roared. ''Down with those who sit in armchairs.''
One of the hundreds of homemade posters being held high proclaimed, ''Down
with the socialist bourgeoisie!''
Yugoslavia is composed of six republics and two provinces, each with parallel
government and party bureaucracies. Because of its federal governmental and
party system, this nation of 23 million people has an extraordinarily high
density of bureaucrats, and government and party officials have become targets
of particular ire.
''Return all you have taken from the working class!'' the union leader
continued. ''You with your privileged pensions, which are bigger than the pay of
entire brigades of steelworkers, do you ever blush when you collect them?''
A Shift in Emphasis
Yugoslavs who have attended several of the rallies over the Kosovo conflict
noted a shift of emphasis today, with speeches and slogans paying greater heed
to Yugoslavia's economic plight than at earlier meetings. They explained this by
Kraljevo's working-class character.
Nonetheless, the crowd's nationalist anger was equally evident. Serbs are
Yugoslavia's largest population group, numbering more than eight million.
Increasingly, they are expressing frustration over a perception that because of
a distrust among fellow Yugoslavs based on their numbers they do not enjoy the
share of national power that they feel should be theirs.
The mounting agitation over Kosovo is the clearest expression of the sense of
Serbian frustration. ''Down with those who betray the Serbian people!'' a poster
proclaimed. And many in the crowd burst into an old patriotic song: ''Who says,
who lies, that Serbia is small?''
Slobodan Milosevic, Serbia's party chief, commands mass support for his
demand that the two autonomous provinces, Kosovo and Vojvodina, be stripped of
much of their autonomy and more fully integrated into Serbia.
Copyright 1988 The New York Times Company
31. PROTESTERS OUST LEADERS OF YUGOSLAVIAN PROVINCE
By Jackson Diehl Washington Post Foreign Service Friday, October
7, 1988; Page A25
BELGRADE, OCT. 6 -- BELGRADE, OCT. 6 -- A volatile political power struggle
in this communist-ruled country escalated here today as more than 100,000
demonstrators surrounded the ruling party's headquarters in Vojvodina, one of
Yugoslavia's eight constituent jurisdictions, and forced the resignation of the
entire provincial leadership.
The unprecedented mass demonstration in the city of Novi Sad, about 40 miles
north of Belgrade, represented a major victory for Slobodan Milosevic, the
communist leader of Serbia, Yugoslavia's largest republic. Milosevic, in an
aggressive drive for power, is seeking to establish Serbia's political control
over Vojvodina and another jurisdiction, Kosovo, that nominally are its
provinces but in practice have been autonomous.
The forceful ouster of the provincial leadership, which began when a crowd
marched on the capital late yesterday, came after months of mass demonstrations
orchestrated by the Serbian leader on the basis of nationalistic appeals to
Serbians, the most populous of the seven major national groups that coexist
uneasily in Yugoslavia.
Milosevic and his supporters say they are seeking to reassert Serbia's rights
within Yugoslavia and force the ouster of politicians they blame for ethnic
strife in Kosovo and for the country's economic crisis. But opponents charge
that the 47-year-old Serbian chief is embarked on a dangerous course in a
country that has been badly divided and practically leaderless since the death
of postwar ruler Tito eight years ago.
"Something about these rallies reminds people of our bad past, of that which
brought out extreme nationalistic hostilities," said Stanislaw Marinkovic, the
editor of the national newspaper Borba. "If that is allowed to thrive, the
consequences for the country could be grave. Some people are afraid there could
be civil war."
So far there have been no major incidents of violence in the Serbian
campaign. But the mass rallies, which began in Vojvodina in July and have been
staged in cities and towns around Serbia, evoke for many Yugoslavs the virulent
nationalism that led to some of Europe's bloodiest fighting here during World
War II.
The rallies, organized at first by a committee of ultranationalist Serbs from
Kosovo, originally focused on the issue of alleged persecution aganst Serbs in
Kosovo by the province's majority ethnic Albanian population. More recently,
however, the campaign has been taken over by the communist-run Socialist
Alliance in Serbia and demands have expanded to include increasing Serbia's
direct control over the provinces and purging their political leaderships.
Milosevic, who took power in Serbia 13 months ago and has since established
strong control over the Belgrade-based party apparatus and media, also has been
pushing for major changes in the top ranks of the Yugoslav League of Communists
at a plenary meeting due to be held in 10 days. Party officials, including
Presidium President Stipe Suvar, have said that more than 30 percent of the
Central Committee and most of the 25-member party presidium could be replaced.
Serbian party officials, in an apparent attempt to increase the pressure on
the plenary meeting, are planning a rally in Belgrade that they say will attract
more than 1 million people, crowning what already has been the largest popular
mobilization in the country since the war.
"Things have to change," said Vladimir Stambuc, a member of the Serbian party
presidium and Milosevic supporter. "If working people are not satisfied with the
leadership, then they have the right to change it. The end of the rallies will
come only when the working people see that the changes are in process."
Already, the mobilization has led to a string of political successes for
Milosevic in the last week as Yugoslavia's political elite has given in to his
demands.
Last week, Vojvodina's representative on the federal party's collective
presidency, Bosko Kunic, resigned after weeks of harsh attacks by Milosevic's
suporters. Then, last Friday, the presidency voted to endorse changes in the
Serbian constitution that will increase Belgrade's control over the provinces in
the areas of security, the judiciary, foreign policy and social planning.
In practice, the changes, which still must be approved by provincial
legislatures, will mean that the Serbian leadership will have the authority to
dispatch its own police forces to Kosovo in the event of ethnic strife and that
Belgrade's prosecutors and judges may be able to intervene in key court cases in
the southern province.
Today's events appeared to position the Serbian leadership to control
Vojvodina's communist apparatus for the first time. Through the postwar period,
the province's communist organization has operated independently of Serbia and
often has opposed it in intraparty debates. The leadership ousted today had
struggled to prevent Milosevic from expanding his power.
The power play began yesterday when local party and union officials in the
town of Backa Palanki organized about 10,000 workers to march on the party
headquarters in nearby Novi Sad, nominally because top provincial officials had
tried to expel two critics from the organization.
The crowd swelled as it reached Novi Sad, and soon tens of thousands of
protesters surrounded the party headquarters, demanding the immediate
resignation of the 14-member presidium and chanting "Slobo, Slobo," Milosevic's
nickname.
Early this morning, with a crowd estimated by the Yugoslav news agency at
more than 100,000 surrounding the building, local party chief Milovan Sogorov
gave in to the demand. Today, the party met to accept the resignations and the
provincial government leader also announced he would step down.
The resignations were quickly supported by Milosevic's Serbian leadership,
which, after an emergency meeting today, issued a statement harshly criticizing
the Vojvodina officials and supporting the popular protest.
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