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Kosovo an experiment in nation-building
Philadelphia Inquirer | Tue, Aug. 12, 2003 | KEN DILANIAN

Posted on 08/13/2003 9:50:59 AM PDT by mark502inf

PRISTINA, Kosovo - Blaga Stevic doesn't have a problem with his ethnic Albanian neighbors, and they don't have a problem with him.

Stevic, a Serb who was born here, fled with his family to Serbia after NATO went to war in 1999 on behalf of Kosovo's ethnic Albanian majority. He was afraid of revenge-minded extremists, he said, not the Albanian residents of his tiny hilltop village of Stara Kolonija. So when the United Nations offered to restore his damaged home last year, he decided it was time to return.

"We're all in good relations here," Stevic said, drawing a nod from an Albanian friend sitting in his refurbished kitchen.

Stevic's dilemma now is that he can't find a job, and neither can two of his three grown children. The family, like most in the tiny hamlet, is living off paltry government aid.

Believe it or not, the Stevics' situation is evidence of progress in Kosovo, one of the world's most notorious cauldrons of ethnic hatred, but now becoming one of the international community's most audacious experiments in nation-building.

Their village may be an economic dead zone, but the Stevics are able to live in it unmolested, which is more than can be said for hundreds of Serbs targeted by revenge killings after the 1999 war, and for 10,000 Albanians killed by Serbs before that.

Four years after a U.S.-led bombing campaign drove out Serbian troops and paved the way for Kosovo to become a U.N. protectorate, civil society has been restored here in a way that could offer lessons for reestablishing order in Iraq. But economic prosperity remains elusive.

Ethnic killings have abated, a multiethnic local police force is patrolling the streets, and a diminishing number of NATO peacekeeping troops are playing a role now described as largely psychological. The United Nations is gradually handing over power to an elected Kosovo government even as it oversees implementation of a new set of commercial and criminal laws.

The United Nations introduced the euro as local currency - a boon to cross-border trade that has allowed creation of a stable banking system.

In the last few weeks, Kosovo's top Albanian politicians made a public plea for the return of Serbian refugees. Officials also opened bids for the sale of five state-owned businesses and sentenced some former Albanian guerrilla leaders to prison for war-related crimes. All three developments would have been unimaginable two years ago.

Without question, enormous problems remain. Serbs still face harassment, unemployment is running at 60 percent and the unresolved issue of Kosovo's possible independence is a constant bone of contention. But there also are unmistakable signs of hope, among them the proliferation of cheap Internet cafes wired by a young entrepreneur.

A sense of normality is evident, particularly in Pristina, the capital, which is awash in cafes and restaurants frequented by both expatriates and locals.

"Things have improved dramatically," said Dale Pfeiffer, who heads the office here of the U.S. Agency for International Development, which is spending about $31 million per year on aid projects. The international community has together spent about $1 billion per year to aid Kosovo over the last five years, not including the cost of peacekeeping troops, U.N. officials say.

"People who criticize the U.N. should come to Kosovo and see what we've done," said Sunil Narula, the chief spokesman for the U.N. Mission in Kosovo. "A lot has happened here."

Narula spoke a few days before unknown assailants fired a rocket-propelled grenade at the Pristina courthouse and exploded a bomb under a police car in simultaneous attacks. Although no one was hurt, it was a sobering reminder of how quickly things could go bad again.

Locals speculated that the bombings were a protest against the convictions of the former Albanian guerrillas, the first time Albanians had been sentenced for war-related crimes.

Still, no one would dispute that Kosovo has come a long way since February 2000.

"It's much better now than after the war," said Milos Tomic, a Serb who operates a small convenience store in the Serbian village of Klokot. "There are still evil minds with bad intentions, but people who were decent before the war are decent now. I buy goods from Albanians."

Ethnic Albanians had long made up the majority in this former Yugoslavian enclave of about 2 million people, but Serbs ran it. For years under Communist dictator Josip Broz, also known as Tito, Kosovo Albanians were full participants in the running of the province. But the rise of Serbian nationalism under Slobodan Milosevic ushered in a decade of repression during which Albanians were fired from their jobs, forbidden to buy property and barred from being educated in their language.

In the 1990s, the insurgent Kosovo Liberation Army began to mount attacks on Serbian police. The Serbs responded with reprisals that included massacres of whole villages. In March 1999, President Bill Clinton gave Milosevic an ultimatum to withdraw from Kosovo, and when he didn't, NATO began a bombing campaign that lasted 78 days.

As destruction rained on Kosovo and Belgrade, Serbian troops stepped up a campaign of ethnic cleansing. About 900,000 Albanians left the country. Some were forced onto railroad cars and driven out. An estimated 10,000 Albanians were killed by the Serbs.

Milosevic, who is being tried on war-crimes charges in The Hague, eventually capitulated, and Serbian forces withdrew. Along with them went about 200,000 Serbs, some of whose families had been in Kosovo for generations. The exodus included doctors, teachers, civil servants, electrical technicians, mining engineers and the entire police force. Most of the Albanians returned, but only about 100,000 Serbs remain in Kosovo.

"How can we live with the Serbs again?" a Kosovar Albanian woman said at the time. "They killed our brothers and our sons. They held knives to our children's throats. They must leave Kosovo and never come back."

Into that whirlwind came the two organizations that would shape Kosovo's future: A 50,000-strong international peacekeeping force known as KFOR, and the United Nations Mission in Kosovo, known as UNMIK. Included in KFOR, which has drawn soldiers from 30 nations, were about 8,000 U.S. troops.

The international approach differs from the one being carried out in Iraq, where the United Nations has no formal role.

The soldiers, diplomats and aid workers arrived to scenes of chaos: Neither rule of law nor institutions of government survived.

"When I came here" in 1999, "there were no banks, no judicial system, no license plates on cars, nothing," said Capt. Ben Rost of Wayne, Pa., who returned recently for a second peacekeeping stint in Kosovo with the Pennsylvania National Guard.

Even a year after the war, the situation in Kosovo seemed every bit as dire and lawless as it does now in Iraq, except that instead of targeting the occupying troops, Albanians exacted revenge by killing Serbs and burning their houses. Then as now in Iraq, there were complaints that reconstruction aid was not flowing fast enough, and that electricity and clean water were in short supply.

Gradually, journalists turned their attention elsewhere. Years passed, and things started to get better.

Peacekeepers, whose numbers are to shrink to 20,000 by year's end, played a major role in the reestablishment of order by guarding Serbian villages and seizing weapons from both sides. But with civilian police gone, the United Nations also began hiring a force of international police officers, now numbering about 4,000. Those officers in turn began training a local force, the Kosovo Police Service.

UNMIK and European officials, meanwhile, created a judiciary from scratch, wrote a constitution and set up a tax and customs system to pay for the government.

"Ordinary crime is now at Western European levels, far lower than in the United States," said Barry Fletcher, a former New Orleans police officer who now is a top official in the UNMIK police force. "We are about halfway through the process of turning things over to the local police."

Many observers believe the key to further peaceful integration lies in tackling what arguably is Kosovo's biggest remaining problem: its dismal economy.

There is no industry to speak of, and much of the country seems to be surviving on international assistance and help from relatives living abroad.

The United Nations, which is growing ever more unpopular among Kosovars the longer it holds power, has come in for particular criticism in the economic realm. Critics say it has been too slow to set the conditions needed for development - for example, by writing business-contract laws.

But while it is easy to lampoon U.N. bureaucrats who live well amid poverty, it's not clear that anyone has figured out how to woo capital investment to a war-torn place that has never known a modern market economy.

The other major unresolved issue is what diplomats call Kosovo's "final status." Many Kosovo leaders argue that foreign investment will not come until that status is decided.

Technically, Kosovo remains a province of the nation of Serbia and Montenegro, but it is an article of faith among diplomats, NATO soldiers and locals that Kosovars will never again be ruled from Belgrade.

Ethnic Albanians want an independent Kosovo nation, while Serbia would like to retain, at the least, the Serb-populated areas near the border. The United States opposes partition, and most U.N. and U.S. officials believe full independence is inevitable.

U.N. officials have put forth a list of standards they want Kosovo to achieve before the status question is addressed, including better integration of minorities, economic progress and dialogue with Belgrade.

Some Kosovar politicians object to this, but others accept it.

"In order to get that formal recognition, you have to work day and night to prove that Kosovo deserves independence," said Bujar Bukoshi, who was Kosovo's prime minister-in-exile in the 1990s and has now formed a new political party. "It will take time. But the most important thing is fixing the economy."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: balkans; campaignfinance; clintonlegacy; humantrafficking; humwarriors; kosovo; liberallies; narcotics; nationbuilding; nato; peacekeeping; prostitution; separatist; serbia; un; unitednations
Note the similarity of complaints in Kosovo about post-conflict reconstruction with what is going on in Iraq now.
1 posted on 08/13/2003 9:51:00 AM PDT by mark502inf
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To: *balkans
Bump
2 posted on 08/13/2003 10:16:22 AM PDT by Dragonfly
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To: mark502inf
>>>>>People who criticize the U.N. should come to Kosovo and see what we've done," said Sunil Narula, the chief spokesman for the U.N. Mission in Kosovo. "A lot has happened here." <<<<

Yes, a lot has happened indeed. Partial tally is as follows:

-Ethnic cleansing of 300,000 Serbs, Roma, Muslims and moderate Albanians

-Murder of more than 1000 non-Albanians and 2000 moderate Albanians by KLA goons

-JUDENREIN Kosovo

-Illegal settlement of 400,000 citizens of Albania, a war crime under Geneva Convention

-Destruction of more than 100 Christian shrines

-arson and destruction of more than 10,000 dwellings belonging to non-Albanians

. -Illegal appropriation of more than 10,000 houses and appartments belonging to non0-Albanians

-Production and trafficking of Narcotics, $300M annually (KLA goons are principal laergest supplier of narcotics to Europe)

-Human traficking and forced prostitution

The list of NATO-sponsored KLA crimes B>is growing daily

3 posted on 08/13/2003 10:17:48 AM PDT by DTA
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To: mark502inf
>>>>>>But the rise of Serbian nationalism under Slobodan Milosevic ushered in a decade of repression during which Albanians were fired from their jobs, forbidden to buy property and barred from being educated in their language<<<

Another liberal lie. Kosovo authonomy was stripped under IMF request in order to quell gross mispending and graft of public funds. Yugoslav state was guarator for loans and Kosovo Albanian communist elite was splurging the funds. Authonomy was not stripped by Milosevic but by Yugoslav state.

Regarding education, the issue was not the language but CONTENTS. Albanians wanted to use the funds of Yugoslav state to fund curriculum imported from Albania. When educational authorities banned imported curriculum, Kosovo Albanians BOYCOTTED State schools. That is the fact.

Situation in Kosovo today is very similar to situation prior to 1989. See media reprts from that time. </>

4 posted on 08/13/2003 10:31:29 AM PDT by DTA
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To: mark502inf
>>>>>>>"When I came here" in 1999, "there were no banks, no judicial system, no license plates on cars, nothing," said Capt. Ben Rost of Wayne, Pa., who returned recently for a second peacekeeping stint in Kosovo with the Pennsylvania National Guard.<<<<<<

Majority of Kosovo Albanians have evaded taxes, refused to pay utility bills or even get license plates for vehicles. All this was considered as "Serb opression". Mind that since 1945 considerable number of Albanians from Albania settled in Kosovo and Metohia. Comparable to Mexicans in CAL, AZ and TX.

KOSOVO NATIONBUILDING= bomb nation to the stone age under false pretext and install heroin goons to run it afterwards.

5 posted on 08/13/2003 10:37:06 AM PDT by DTA
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To: mark502inf
>>>>>"In order to get that formal recognition, you have to work day and night to prove that Kosovo deserves independence," said Bujar Bukoshi...<

Kosovo deserves independence the same way Aztlan deserve independence.

6 posted on 08/13/2003 10:41:54 AM PDT by DTA
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To: DTA
BELGRADE, Serbia-Montenegro -- The Albanian National Army issued a statement on Tuesday (12 August) claiming responsibility for a weekend mortar attack against an army base in southern Serbia. Belgrade reported there were no injuries and little damage when three mortar shells landed in the compound. Government officials who visited the area afterwards accused the group of trying to stir up tensions in an area plagued by unrest until 2001, when a local militia disarmed under a US-sponsored peace plan.
7 posted on 08/13/2003 10:43:59 AM PDT by Seselj (CCCC)
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To: mark502inf
A strong case can be made for ethnic hatred being promoted and embraced under conditions of economic competition, then shelved when those conditions no longer apply, like when cooperation means making more money, as in this rather unfortunate example.

Comparing the recent history of Iraq's Shias, Sunnis, and Kurds on one hand, and the Balkan residents on the other, it should be interesting to see who can disengage themselves from their history and start living their lives first.

8 posted on 08/13/2003 2:21:08 PM PDT by Hoplite
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