10 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April 7, 1999 WAR IN Kosovo 0 Turmoil in the Balkans Team begins. inve stigations of war crimes. Los Angeles Times MORINE, Albania - Some crimes alleged to be taking place in Serbia's Kosovo province are horrific: mutila- tions, parents killed before their chil- dren's eyes, a 2-year-old girl burned alive. Then there are the more common, if numbing, acts - nearly half a million people forced from their homes and dri- ven for days in an atmosphere of terror, whole towns and villages set ablaze, possessions looted and cars stolen at gunpoint, wedding rings stripped from women's fingers. Investigating such acts is the meat- and-potato work of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, which has declared the cur- rent Kosovo crisis within its jurisdiction. This week, the tribunal launches its investigation into the crimes and terror that have accompanied the expulsion of nearly half a million ethnic Albanians to neighboring countries during the past two weeks. Two international war-crimes inves- tigators began meeting with local pros- ecutors and refugee officials in north- ern Albania yesterday, working on pro- cedures to locate and interview wit- nesses who can help the prosecution in any future war-crimes trials. The investigatory team, one a profes- sional police officer from Australia and the other a veteran of South Africa's post-apartheid Truth and Reconciliation Commission, did not have to look far in their inquiries - from where they stood in this border post, they could easily see a Kosovo village going up in smoke. Midday, Serbian police ignited the Kosovo village of Vernic, only a few hundred yards from the border, within view of international journalists and aid workers. Smoke from a dozen burning houses combined into an enormous plume that blotted the sky. The sight intensified the wailing and panic of the refugees, who hurried to cross into Albania. Watching the spectacle, investigator Tim Kelly, the Sydney police officer, vowed that the probe will proceed as soon as the witnesses among the refugees have their immediate humani- tarian needs addressed. He said the tribunal is looking into killings, summary executions, rapes and persecution based on ethnic and religious grounds. "One of the clear issues is forceable deportation of people," Kelly said. "By all reports, that has happened on a sys- tematic basis" in the Kosovo crisis. "People having their documents taken, the licenses removed from their cars - that terribly contradicts Yugoslavia's official line that they want the people to come back." The commission's main target will be those people who directed the crimes, he said. "You cannot prosecute every soldier. You have to aim for the people in command." Both men said the Kosovo investigation have an advantage over other war-crimes probes because they will be taking place within days of when the crimes were committed. Macedonian border Closed to Albanan Los Angeles Times DJENERAL JANKOVIC, Yugoslavia - Only nine cars full of Kosovo Albanian refugees were left waiting to cross into Macedonia yesterday, and Aishe Rexhbogoj has slept in the driver's seat of one of them for nine nights. Rexhbogoj and her daughter Saranda were sec- ond in line on the Yugoslav side of the border, stuck living in a Renault because Macedonia has closed its border. Rexhbogoj would give up and drive back home, as hundreds of other trapped refugees have over the last couple of days, but she isn't sure whether it's safe in Kosovo's capital, Pristina. "I told the police, 'If you can guarantee our lives, we will go back to our home,"' Rexhbogoj said through the open door of her car. What was a flood of Kosovo refugees a couple of days ago has suddenly dried up at Djeneral Jankovic, the main border crossing between Kosovo and Macedonia. Serbian police began telling refugees to turn around and go back to their homes in Kosovo on Monday night as Yugoslav authorities in Belgrade prepared to declare a unilateral cease-fire in its war with Kosovo Liberation Army guerrillas. Dozens of cars and tractors pulling wagon loads of ethnic Albanian refugees were heading north back into Kosovo along the main highway yester- day after giving up at the Macedonian border. On the other side of the border, the thousands of people still trying to move into Macedonia are trapped in a kind of no man's land by Macedonian police, who have penned them in, standing shoul- der-to-shoulder, surrounded by steel barricades and a barbed-wire fence. "They don't have the right to do that under inter- national law," complained one of the men stuck on the Yugoslav side of the border. Rexhbogoj's two sons and her daughter-in-law crossed into that no man's land to look for bread a few days ago and never came back. She doesn't ABOVE: A woman from Decane, In western Kosovo, holds her face after crossing into Albania at the Morini border cross- ing yesterday. LEFT: A young Serbian girl takes part In a nighttime vigil outside the U.S. Embassy In Nicosia yesterday. The vigil has taken place every night since the strikes began. AP PHOTOS A irlifts displace" fleeing refugees know where they have gone. "I cannot return because half of my family is on the other side," Rexhbogoj said through an inter- preter. "I will not return without my children. The Macedonians took people away in trucks and buses, so maybe they are in Macedonia now." According to relief workers in Macedonia, the scene at Djeneral Jankovic does not appear to be representative of the still very bleak refugee picture at other border crossings. The Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees estimated that 50,000 people were backed up at the Jazince border crossing west of Djeneral Jankovic, about two-fifths of them on the Macedonian side of the border and three-fifths on the Yugoslav side. A Macedonian news service reported yesterday that Yugoslav authorities had shut the border at Jazince. UNHCR officials said refugees might have been scarce at the Djeneral Jankovic crossing - called Blace in Macedonia - because it has been virtual- ly closed to by the Macedonians for days, except for trains. The UNHCR had reports that many people were leaving clogged border crossings and moving to the ones where they thought they had more chance of getting through, said Kris Janowski, spokesperson for the UNHCR. Meanwhile, the UNHCR is still seeing floods of refugees leaving Kosovo. For instance, 15,000 peo- ple crossed into Albania in a matter of hours yester- day. Those coming in said that there was an endless line of cars trying to get out. Yesterday, Sadako Ogata, the U.N. high commis- sioner for refugees, accused Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic of rechanneling the refugees in order to create the most chaos. The flight of Kosovo Albanians was "forced, planned and directed" in an effort to destroy their identity, Ogata told an emergency meeting of donor nations in Geneva. The Washington Post SKOPJE, Macedonia - Several thousand ethnic Albanian refugees from Kosovo endured a second expul- sion yesterday when the Macedonian government ordered them aboard city buses, drove them to the capital's air- port and airlifted them - many against their will - to Turkey and Norway. The passengers included scores of people who had been forcibly separat- ed from relatives and friends by Macedonian police amid the chaos at a border station where tens of thousands of others remained trapped yesterday night within a cordon of police and sol- diers. Some refugees were reported to have expressed relief upon their arrival in Turkey, but many others had said before leaving Macedonia that they had no desire to leave. The forced expulsions of people who only last week were forced at gunpoint to flee the Serbian province of Kosovo earned swift condemnation from refugee workers, who said they had no way of tracking those who left or reuniting divided families because the Macedonian government had not passed along their names or hometowns. "We're gravely concerned about what's happening with these flights to Turkey, because refugees are saying they do not want to go," said Paula Ghedini, spokesperson for the United Nations Commissioner for High Refugees. "The vast majority do want to return to Kosovo someday" and fear that being sent so far away will make9 that impossible, she said. "Families are being separated more and more because they are being put on different buses going to different loca- tions," Ghedini added. "We are still asking for registration and destination information," but the government has been entirely unresponsive, she said. The speed with which the Macedonian government acted to expel the Kosovo Albanians contrasted* sharply with the slowness of its efforts to alleviate the suffering of an estimat- ed 70,000 refugees at the border. While the government was awaiting word on whether other nations would agree to harbor some of the refugees, it provid- ed them scant food and medical care - some refugees were beaten by police for protesting the dismal conditions. One reason the logjam broke yester- day, aid workers said, was the promise by six countries, including the United States, to accept a total of 97,000 refugees from the Kosovo conflict. The Macedonian government evidently wanted to act before Albania and the Yugoslav republic of Montenegro - which have also been swamped by exiles - filled those quotas with refugees from their towns and camps. Guantanamo ready to receive Kosovars The Washington Post As sickly and demoralized refugees. continued to stream into Macedonia and Albania, the U.S. Navy began gearing up to receive 20,000 expelled Kosovars at its base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The ethnic Albanian refugees are to be flown aboard U.S. military planes on a strictly voluntary basis to the 45- square-mile base, which is separated from a hostile Cuba by. barbed wire ,fences and nninefields. Base authorities yesterday readied accommodations for about 1,300 peo- ple but said it would take days to erect the temporary quarters for 20,000 peo- ple. The first arrivals are expected as early as Friday. U.S. officials said they are committed to ensuring that the refugees do not become permanent exiles, but also warned that as many as a million people strains in Macedonia, which has been swamped by more than 120,000 refugees in the last two weeks. U.S. officials said Guantanamo was picked as the site to house the Kosovar refugees in part because, unlike the Pacific island of Guam or other alterna- tives on the U.S. mainland, the base is not considered U.S territory for the pur- pose of claiming asylum in the United States. Under immigration law, a person must be on U.S. soil to apply for politi- cal asylum. "We wanted to make sure we're sending a message that this is a temporary solution to the problem," Atwood said in explaining the choice of Guantanamo. He said the message was meant both for the refugees and for Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic, whose "ethnic cleansing" campaign in Kosovo ,: KOSOVO4 Continued from Page 1. Liberation Army that has battled for independence from Serbia, and seek to reach a political agreement on auton- omy for the province within Serbia. But the announcement did not say that Yugoslav forces will shut down their air defenses, which remain a military threat that has discouraged NATO from using the slower, low-flying aircraft capable of attacking tanks and troop formations involved in the deportation campaign under way in Kosovo. U.S. leaders quickly denounced the cease-fire as an empty gesture by a tyrant who has waged war against civilians. Cohen called the offer "absurd" and Clinton administration officials said it would not affect their plans to continue hitting an array of Yugoslav targets. "Mr. Milosevic could end it now by withdrawing his military police and paramilitary forces, by accepting the deployment of an international security force to protect not only the Kosovar Albanians - most but not all of them are Muslims - but also the Serbian minority in Kosovo," Clinton said at the White House ceremony. Presidential Press Secretary Joe Lockhart, briefing reporters shortly after Milosevic announced the ceasefire, said, "A mere ceasefire is clearly not sufficient to meet these conditions. NATO operations will continue until either Milosevic accepts these conditions or we will seri- ously diminish his capacity to maintain his grip and impose his control on Kosovo." Fourteen days of NATO attacks have badly damaged 41