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Strategy: expel all Serbs and force them to sell their property
Marek Antoni Nowicki - Serbs Cannot Survive In Kosovo
"Almost three years since the intervention of the international
community in Kosovo with the goal of preventing a humanitarian
catastrophe, today the governments of the countries that have
troops in this region must question the achieved results and whether
all ethnic communities in Kosovo have at least remotely similar
living conditions and same rights, or whether we've slipped from
one catastrophe to another," Marek Antoni Nowicki, Kosovo's ombudsman,
says at the beginning of our interview. BLIC: Could
you summarize for us your assessment of the situation in which
Serbs live in Kosovo?
NOWICKI: All those who follow the events in Kosovo already
know the answer to that question. There is no freedom of movement.
Human rights are not respected and are endangered in all their
facets. Generally, the situation is becoming increasingly difficult
with every new day. Serbs are increasingly shutting themselves
off in their enclaves. Many say that there are improvements,
but not to the extent that would allow anyone to claim with
clear conscience that there is evidence of any tangible changes.
The main problem, and everyone is aware of that, is that there
is no freedom of movement, there is no freedom in general, private
property has been usurped... Serbs are weighing whether to stay
or leave, and so far they haven't been told how they can stay
in Kosovo. We are far from any semblance of freedom, or at least
minimal conditions for decent life. If there are no basic human
rights, then we cannot discuss any human rights, and that is
why it is necessary not only to change the attitude of the international
mission with respect to the problems in Kosovo, but also, and
more importantly, the attitude of a narrow circle of ethnic
Albanians. They now have power and force. The fate of Kosovo
and communities living in it depends on them. However, they
are using that power to exert additional pressure on Serbs.
One gets the impression that their strategy is to apply pressure
with the goal of expelling all Serbs and forcing them to sell
their property. We have observed the situation that some traditionally
ethnic Serb settlements have been transformed into ethnic Albanian
settlements, while the international mission idly stood by.
All Serbs, simply, are increasingly leaning towards leaving
Kosovo, because they see no perspective in the province, and
that is why we must wonder whether the future generations also
have to pay together with their parents. Basically, the only
accessible activity in the Serb enclaves is farming.
Who and how protects Serb property?
The non-governmental organization HPD - "Habitat" is a big
failure. People from Croatia and Bosnia-Hercegovina are acutely
aware of that. As long as that organization exists and continues
with its current practices, there is no hope for better life.
One must wonder how long people can withstand in Strpce, Pristina,
Gracanica, while awaiting "Habitat's" decision, in isolation.
If HPD continues to work with current speed, they will need
more than 500 years to resolve property rights and relations
in Kosovo, and the Serb community cannot wait that long. That
problem obviously must be resolved by the governments that have
troops in Kosovo, because the increased number of appeals has
been met with the reduction of the employees of the HPD, supposedly
because of the lack of funding. I doubt that funding is a problem
in this case.
Your prediction of the status of Serbs in the future
of Kosovo?
With the current structure, the Serb community cannot survive,
even if optimal living conditions are to be created for it.
The Serb community has been beheaded. They need urgent assistance.
There are no educated individuals. There aren't people who could
deal on equal footing with ethnic Albanian intellectuals and
politicians. Without the return of the intellectuals, even in
the conditions of multi-ethnic life in Kosovo, the Serb community
would have a subservient position. Ethnic Albanians have succeeded
in expelling the Serb elite and that is why it is necessary
to as soon as possible define the international community's
vision of Kosovo's future. Not only Serbs, but also other non-Albanians
must know what the future status of Kosovo will be, and every
postponement of that decision will be costly for the future
of multi-ethnic Kosovo.
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