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Kosovo, The disturbing truth aboutJudge Danica Marinkovic
B92 and Humanitarian Law Center ^ | 8 March 2002 | Natasa Kandic

Posted on 06/23/2002 8:30:48 PM PDT by ABrit

The disturbing truth
Natasa Kandic
Humanitarian Law Center
8 March 2002

Judge Danica Marinkovic, formerly investigating judge of the Pristina District Court, reacted to the Humanitarian Law Center (HLC) press release on the murder of Kosovo Albanian politician Fehmi Agani by accusing the HLC and its executive director, Natasa Kandic, of lying. According to Judge Marinkovic, Predrag Nikolic and Zoran Dzeletovic, who were police officers in Kosovo and to whom I referred in connection with the murder, performed their duty "honorably" and Agani was killed by the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA). In her defense of these two ex-police officers, she asserted that members of the force once saved my life in a Kosovo village during the NATO bombing in spite of my working against them.

In an effort to clarify the murder of Agani, I shall set out facts that will show beyond doubt just how "honorably" the cited policemen did their job in Kosovo. On 6 May 1999, the day of Agani's murder, Predrag Nikolic and Zoran Dzeletovic killed five members of the Blakqori family - Miradije (54), Fehmi (60), their son Labinot (14), Mahmut (56), and his wife Sabile (59) - on the rail track from Lipljan to Kosovo Polje.

The Pristina Police Department filed criminal charges against Nikolic and Dzeletovic as well as Ivan Ivanov, their fellow-officer, on 27 May 1999 (Ku.br.546/99). The accompanying documentation, including the prosecutor's request for an investigation, decision to institute the investigation, and detention orders, were either removed to Serbia or destroyed.

Judge Marinkovic sets herself up as a protector of Serb victims and the Serbian police but her attempts to manipulate public opinion are in vain. It is known within the police force who killed Fehmi Agani, who did what in Kosovo, who fired the guns, who removed the corpses, who looted by the truckload, who brought the orders from Belgrade and conveyed the president's commendations and expressions of support.

These people, who were involved in the crimes or in shielding the perpetrators on the pretext of defending Serbia and its people from NATO, are now making lists of traitors in their own ranks and having them placed under surveillance.

Judges who served on crisis teams are trying to obliterate the evidence of their presence at those meetings. Some judges, prosecutors and police chiefs are destroying any remaining papers that might implicate them, forging documents, and testing the strength of the wall of silence. Top officials of the former Kosovo police and the Socialist Party of Serbia are worried about what could happen if "traitors" among them started talking. Their concern is warranted: the wall of silence is cracking.

More and more policemen are coming out with what really happened in Kosovo. It was from them that I first heard about the murder of Fehmi Agani. I also heard from them that liquidation orders were not given only by police and military commanders. They told me Danica Marinkovic personally ordered several wounded men of the Ahmeti family to be shot on 28 February 1998 in Likosane village. Then an investigating judge, she came to conduct an on-site investigation together with Jovica Jovanovic, the deputy district prosecutor, and a team of investigators. There was a pile of bodies outside the Ahmeti house in which some men were still giving signs of life. In the presence of about 30 members of the Special Anti-terrorist Units, Danica Marinkovic allegedly said: "I'm not taking them - kill them." The men were finished off with a Heckler weapon. There was no investigation and, on 1 March 1998, 14 corpses were taken to the Pristina hospital morgue. The investigating judge did not order autopsies to be performed and, after they were identified, the bodies were claimed by relatives. Members of the police force assigned to the Likosane operation said that rifles and grenades were placed next to the bodies, after which photographs were taken and used to "inform" the public about the incident.

While in Kosovo during the NATO bombing, I was frightened most of all by the Serbian police, paramilitary units and such "protectors" of Serbs as Judge Danica Marinkovic. In the silence that prevailed in Serbia and Kosovo, anyone who tried to help Albanians was an enemy, a spy, a traitor. The police and the Kosovo Serbs were intoxicated with the official sanction to defend Serbia by any means. In such a climate, I was less afraid of crossing a bridge than of the policemen I saw behind refugee columns, standing around burnt houses, or at checkpoints on the roads. Every time I passed without having my papers scrutinized I felt very lucky.

But, on 27 May 1999, the day the indictment against Milosevic was made public, I was on my way to Prizren to get out the wife and child of the editor of the Koha Ditore newspaper when the police stopped me at a checkpoint in Lipljan. They asked for my ID and searched the car in which they found HLC reports on human rights violations. They immediately contacted the State Security and took me to a house which served as their headquarters where two inspectors questioned me for hours. My driver was held separately and told he would be killed like everyone who spoke English. When I said where I was going and why, they started shouting that I was a spy and traitor and that they would not let me drive Albanians around. Threatening to charge me with espionage, they said I would disappear in the night and they would tell the public I went missing in KLA-controlled territory. I suggested that they consider the credibility of a report on the disappearance of a human rights activist on the very day the Milosevic indictment was made public. They told me to hand over my money. I refused and said they could take it by force like they were doing with Albanians. In the end, they did not take it though they could have. I told them openly I would not stay silent about what was happening in Kosovo, adding that I had already stated publicly that Fehmi Agani was killed by the police. At the mention of Agani, one of the inspectors said it was "a mistake." I do not know what he meant by that but he in effect admitted that Agani was murdered by Serbian police. In my mind, I had come to terms with the possibility of being "disappeared" like many others in Kosovo at the time, and I do not owe them a debt of gratitude for not killing me. They let me go late that evening when a third inspector appeared with word from Belgrade that I was not "their case."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: balkans; campaignfinance; kosovo; milosevic; serbia
The story of a crooked judge, the same one who "investigated" Racak for the Serbs.
1 posted on 06/23/2002 8:30:49 PM PDT by ABrit
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To: *balkans
bump
2 posted on 06/23/2002 8:31:29 PM PDT by ABrit
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To: ABrit
Wasn't she kept out of Racak by Walker and his KLA
escorts while they 'set the place up' for pictures?
3 posted on 06/23/2002 8:43:26 PM PDT by duckln
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To: duckln
The KLA kept firing at her with mortars and artillery when she tried to visit the site, and on her second attempt, they hit her car with missiles and almost hit her too. The OSCE didn't want her to come with an armed guard - did they want her to be kidnapped or killed?:

Complete Analysis of the Incident at Racak on Jan. 15, 1999 by Chris Soda

Danica Marinkovic, investigating judge with the District Court of Pristina, made her first attempt to arrive in Racak along with Ismet Sufto, Deputy District Public Prosecutor; this followed the public pronouncements of OSCE head William Walker that unarmed civilians had been massacred there. Ms. Marinkovic could not begin her investigation when she arrived at Racak because the KLA fired at her from their positions in the area. OSCE told the judge and prosecutor that they would have to investigate without an armed guard, as this security was seen as a provocation by the KLA.

At this time, the Yugoslavs notified Walker that their first investigations into the incidents at Racak would begin Jan 17/99, starting at 8:00am and would continue that day until 1:00 pm, with an armed guard being sent along for everyone's' protection. The Yugoslav government, as they had done before their police operation on the 15th, invited OSCE to attend.

During this Yugoslav investigation, the KLA again fired on OSCE, Ms. Marinkovic and her team, with mortars and other artillery, from various positions including nearby Petrovo. One of the missiles hit the judges' car, while others narrowly missed the judge herself. Some reports record a total of three attempts by the Yugoslav government to recover the bodies and investigate the "crime" scene, other reports indicate four attempts. The EU pathologist, Helena Ranta, never did go to Racak.


4 posted on 06/23/2002 9:39:28 PM PDT by joan
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To: joan
I wonder if ol' a(lbanian brit) is also in favor of LEGALIZED drugs/white slavery like the money-man behind the so-called, "humanitarian law center"...none other than that fascist-pig-one world order, SOB, george soros?????

One cannot help but ponder what old' soros would do if his one world order fell apart due to the leftist, anti-globalist crowd... would he pi$$/cr@p his pants.....yes, he would because he is a bloody coward.

5 posted on 06/23/2002 9:59:44 PM PDT by crazykatz
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To: crazykatz
The Humanitarian Law Center - next time anything that comes from them should be 'BARF ALERT'-ed. In Serbia, they're better known as "The Centre for the Protection of Shiptar Terrorists".
6 posted on 06/23/2002 10:03:20 PM PDT by Banat
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To: Banat
Natasa Kandic is Serbian version of Jane Fonda.

She prepared hearsay that was quoted by Human Rights Watch that was later on used as an "evidence" by ICTY.

The quality of "evidence" can be seen from Kangaroo Kourt videos.

If not tragic, with grave consequences ofr western jurisprudence, it would be funny.

ABrit, you forgot to quote another scum, her name is Sonja Biserko, gun for hire for State Department's Helsinki Rights

7 posted on 06/23/2002 10:19:00 PM PDT by DTA
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To: DTA
Oh good, I'll look her up! Thanks!
8 posted on 06/24/2002 3:04:21 AM PDT by ABrit
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To: ABrit
Wow, how devastating.

VRN

9 posted on 06/24/2002 7:21:04 AM PDT by Voronin
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To: ABrit
more hysteria from the gal who is evidently trying to drum up more Soros donations.....

What is so cute about her tale is that so much depends on people coming to her secretly and telling her stuff, so much depends on her infering a context for a particular statement........

but what is most telling about her tale is that it dircetly contradicts three simple facts

1) That Adem Demaci ultra-hardline founder of the KLA lived safe and sound in Pristina during the entire time going about his daily business
2) Paul Watson LATimes reporter spent the entire bombing campaign in Kosovo wandered all over and never saw the slightest evidence of any harrasment of Albanian civilians by the government
3) That Kfor finally agrees that KLA was responsible for killing dozens of Albanian civilians prior, during, and after the bombing. Kfor has arrested or cashiered virtually the entire KLA officer corps for crimes against Albanians

so, Abrit keep posting the incredible tales. We'll provide the hard facts.....and you will continue to be discredited just like the ICTY

10 posted on 06/24/2002 9:08:40 AM PDT by vooch
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To: joan
turns out the KLA won't even let Albanian judges investigate Racak.

KLA Prevent Reconstruction of Racak Event
http://www.FreeRepublic.com/fo cus/news/646128/posts
11 posted on 06/24/2002 9:12:24 AM PDT by vooch
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To: crazykatz
soros is no good, you got that right;

the balkans tragedy over last 15 years has been incredible and terrible from the angle of so many peoples of the region. I will admit that in the end the albanian muslims turned out to be the most pernicious of the lot in that they truly do encourage bin-laden type terrorism, they do in fact distribute drugs and provide white slaves for prostitution.

12 posted on 06/24/2002 9:40:24 AM PDT by Red Jones
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To: vooch
BIGGGEST BUMMMPPPPP ever!!!
13 posted on 06/25/2002 5:24:19 AM PDT by crazykatz
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