15-12-2008, 05:58 AM
BELGRADE - An international forensic report on the
kidnapping of Kosovo's Serbs and harvesting of their
organs is missing nine pages, a Belgrade daily writes.
The report on the so-called yellow house in Albania,
thought to have been the location where the victims'
organs were removed, was put together in 2004, daily
Blic is saying today.
A representative of the Serbian War Crimes
Prosecution, on the orders issued by Prosecutor
Vladimir Vukcevic, travelled to New York on Friday to
ask UN peacekeeping operations chief Alain le Roy to
provide him with the complete report compiled by a
group of international investigators.
The report pertains to cases of kidnapping of the
Kosovo Serbs after the 1999 war in the province.
The document was submitted in mid-June 2004 by a
five-member UNMIK forensic team, who travelled to the
yellow house in the town of Burrel in Albania.
Although the UN mission in Kosovo (UNMIK)
representatives initially claimed that the report did
not exist, the Serbian prosecution last spring gained
access to the minutes from the Burrel investigation.
However, it turned out that the document was missing
nine pages.
According to the newspaper, someone in this way tried
to hide information very important to the
investigation, including the names of persons that are
believed to be involved in this crime.
The report in question has information that could
prove exceptionally important for the course of the
pre-criminal proceedings currently under way,
especially since new testimonies from witnesses of the
human organ trafficking have emerged in the meantime,
along with the details about camps and mass graves in
Albania where those kidnapped in Kosovo were buried.
The sizeable material, Blic continued, contains
information that includes data on kidney transplants
taking place in clinics in Tirana and Skopje during
the 1999 NATO attacks on Serbia, when members of an
armed Kosovo Albanian group, known as the KLA,
kidnapped several hundred Kosovo Serbs and transported
them to camps in Albania.
http://www.b92.net/eng/news/crimes-artic...v_id=55723
kidnapping of Kosovo's Serbs and harvesting of their
organs is missing nine pages, a Belgrade daily writes.
The report on the so-called yellow house in Albania,
thought to have been the location where the victims'
organs were removed, was put together in 2004, daily
Blic is saying today.
A representative of the Serbian War Crimes
Prosecution, on the orders issued by Prosecutor
Vladimir Vukcevic, travelled to New York on Friday to
ask UN peacekeeping operations chief Alain le Roy to
provide him with the complete report compiled by a
group of international investigators.
The report pertains to cases of kidnapping of the
Kosovo Serbs after the 1999 war in the province.
The document was submitted in mid-June 2004 by a
five-member UNMIK forensic team, who travelled to the
yellow house in the town of Burrel in Albania.
Although the UN mission in Kosovo (UNMIK)
representatives initially claimed that the report did
not exist, the Serbian prosecution last spring gained
access to the minutes from the Burrel investigation.
However, it turned out that the document was missing
nine pages.
According to the newspaper, someone in this way tried
to hide information very important to the
investigation, including the names of persons that are
believed to be involved in this crime.
The report in question has information that could
prove exceptionally important for the course of the
pre-criminal proceedings currently under way,
especially since new testimonies from witnesses of the
human organ trafficking have emerged in the meantime,
along with the details about camps and mass graves in
Albania where those kidnapped in Kosovo were buried.
The sizeable material, Blic continued, contains
information that includes data on kidney transplants
taking place in clinics in Tirana and Skopje during
the 1999 NATO attacks on Serbia, when members of an
armed Kosovo Albanian group, known as the KLA,
kidnapped several hundred Kosovo Serbs and transported
them to camps in Albania.
http://www.b92.net/eng/news/crimes-artic...v_id=55723
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx
"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.
“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.
“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.

