This Shiptar bandit was unlucky!KFOR soldiers got wounded in the attack,so he will pay for it!Otherwise,I suspect,he would manage to escape from Camp Bondstill,just as previous killers of his ilk did!Or he would be released due to an "administrative error"!
What I don't get is how the Albanians would have been able to set up the bombs in those houses without notice. Already, as described in this article, there was threatening graffiti on the houses - "Villagers claim that several days before graffiti appeared on Serb homes, especially empty ones, saying: THIS IS ALBANIAN - (OVO JE ALBANSKO)". And then from another article we find that Klokot is divided by a
"main road connecting the three main U.S. base camps". How could the soldiers not have noticed, in a place like this, and especially if they were regularly patrolling the area, as they seemed to be on the night of the explosions? Unless it was actually units within the U.S. military who planted those sophisticated bombs themselves or allowed the Albanians to do it, and then had soldiers patrolling nearby to watch it. Maybe some soldiers were in on it and others not, but something could have been planned. It is no secret that U.S. policy has continually promoted ethnic and cultural cleansing of Serbs from their homes and land. Now they blame an Albanian - but could it be just a distraction from the truth. Eventually, he'll probably be let go. Could he be a scapegoat? Even if it was totally Albanians who did this, who trained them in making very sophisticated bombs? Why are they never caught with explosives before all these incidents of Serbian property, churches, businesses, etc. being blown to smithereens? In the past 3 years, literally tons and tons of explosives have been transported and placed by Albanians all over Kosovo - they couldn't do it if they weren't allowed.
U.N. to investigate Kosovo village explosions that knocked 2 U.S. soldiers unconscious:
The two soldiers, members of the 3rd Platoon, Company B, from the Bamberg, Germany-based 54th Engineer Battalion, were on patrol in Klokot, a Serbian village that straddles the main road connecting the three main U.S. base camps. They were among a handful of patrols moving in the direction of the nearby village of Ballance to investigate an earlier explosion.
Huggins and Burge were walking near a group of five vacant homes near a cornfield. Others soldiers had stopped their Humvees on a dirt road close by, next to an elderly mans home when explosions started tearing up homes around them, Calpena said.