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Court jails Serb former policeman for Kosovo killings by AFP Staff Writers Pristina (AFP) Oct 5, 2021 A Pristina court on Tuesday jailed a former Serbian police officer for 20 years for his part in the murder of 13 ethnic Albanian civilians during the 1990s Kosovo war. A court statement said had been part of a "large-scale and systematic attack" carried out in 1999 by Serbian police and paramilitary forces against the ethnic Albanian civilians in Sllovi and neighbouring village of Terbovc. The court referred to him only by the initials G.S., but the Kosovar media identified him as Goran Stanisic. Surviving witnesses, mostly women, testified that they had repeatedly seen him among the groups that put men in front of a wall and shot them in front of their wives, mothers and daughters. The former member of Serbian reserve police force was convicted not just of murders, but also for having participated in the expulsion of local civilians, the court added. Kosovar human rights groups say the attack by Serbian forces on Sllovi and Terbovc killed 45 people and wounded 11 more, while nearly 100 Albanian homes were burned. Hundreds were forced to flee. Verdicts against members of armed forces of both Kosovo and Serbia are very rare -- as lack of diplomatic relations make extradition of suspects from one territory to another impossible. According to the indictment, Stanisic hails from the same village of Sllovi where the killings took place. He fled to Serbia after the war, but was arrested in 2019 when he tried to cross the border. Stanisic, who had denied the charges, can still appeal. The 1998-1999 war between independence-seeking Kosovo Albanian guerrillas and Serbian armed forces claimed some 13,000 lives, most of them ethnic Albanians. It ended after a three-months-long NATO bombing campaign that forced Belgrade to withdraw its forces and leave the governance of the region to the UN. In 2008, Kosovo declared independence from Serbia. It was recognised by some 100 countries as a sovereign state -- but not by Serbia and its allies, Russia and China.
Syria must admit chemical weapons inspectors: West The Hague (AFP) Oct 4, 2021 Western countries on Monday called on Syria to allow in chemical arms inspectors, saying Damascus continued to breach its obligations to the world's toxic weapons watchdog. Britain, the United States and other allies also pushed Russia for clarity on last year's poisoning of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, in which Western experts said the Soviet-designed nerve agent Novichok was used. Syria faces fresh pressure at the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) after refusing ... read more
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