Kosovar Albanian guerrillas transported 300 Serbian prisoners to Albania....

Braznor

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 2005
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Text

Organ-harvesting claims spark controversy

Del Ponte's memoirs detailing her eight years as war crimes prosecutor are making waves


Allegations by former war crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte of organ trafficking in Kosovo and Albania must be fully investigated, says a Swiss ex-parliamentarian.

In her new book, Del Ponte claims - based on what she describes as credible and eyewitness reports - that Kosovar Albanian guerrillas transported 300 Serbian prisoners to Albania where they were killed and their organs removed and trafficked.

Serbia and Russia are demanding a war crimes investigation into the accusations. The Kosovar government, now headed by the former guerrilla leader Hashim Thaci, dismisses the claims as untrue, and other officials and politicians have expressed scepticism.

The allegations appeared in Del Ponte's just published memoirs, "The Hunt: Me and War Criminals", of her eight years as chief prosecutor for the international war crimes tribunal for former Yugoslavia, based in The Hague.

Ruth-Gaby Vermot-Mangold, a former Social Democrat parliamentarian who has investigated organ trafficking in Europe, told swissinfo it was crucial to shed light on the affair.

"We hear about these kind of trafficking stories but we have very few concrete cases," said the human rights campaigner. "It's important to go right to the end of the investigation for Kosovo, Serbia and for justice."

New York-based Human Rights Watch has urged the Kosovo authorities to determine the veracity of the charges, saying there was "sufficiently grave evidence" in Del Ponte's book.

But on Wednesday Olga Karvan, a spokeswoman for the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal, said UN investigators had found "no substantial evidence" to support the allegations.

And Florence Hartmann, Del Ponte's former spokeswoman at the war crimes court, said the claims were "irresponsible".

"Mixing up genres, juxtaposing crimes that have gone to trial, and these non-verified theories from witnesses she doesn't know anything about, even their identity, encourages confusion between rumour and fact, and risks encouraging all kinds of revisionists," she wrote in Wednesday's French-language newspaper Le Temps.

Del Ponte, now Switzerland's ambassador to Argentina, has been ordered to keep silent by the Swiss government.
House-clinic

In the book, published in Switzerland and Italy, Del Ponte writes that her investigators visited a house in a mountainous region of Albania. The clinic was reportedly being used to hold 300 Serbs captured by the Kosovo Liberation Army and transported across the border from Kosovo to Albania in June 1999.

According to witnesses - including one who said he had driven some of the organs to Tirana airport, and a team of unnamed journalists who investigated the allegations - the victims had had their kidneys removed before being killed and having other organs taken.

UN investigators examined the house and found medical equipment used in surgery and traces of blood, but were unable to determine if the blood was human.

Most of the victims were said to be Kosovo Serbs, but they also included women from Kosovo, Albania, Russia and Slavic countries.

Other sources claim the body parts were flown to Turkey, where they were transplanted into wealthy patients.

If the accusations prove to be true, Turkey's role in the trade in organs is not surprising, said Vermot-Mangold.

"We have proof that people have their organs transplanted there and we know there is a market for organs, especially kidneys," said the campaigner, who investigated the trade in body organs for the Council of Europe in 2003.
"Fabrications"

Del Ponte's account is the first time such accusations have come from such an authoritative source. But some people are amazed that she should report five years after her investigators went to the alleged scene of the crime. Del Ponte says it proved impossible at the time to pursue a full investigation owing to insufficient evidence.

Kosovo Justice Minister Nekibe Kelmendi dismissed the allegations as "fabrications".

"I have had four private meetings with Carla Del Ponte and she never once mentioned any such allegations," she told Associated Press.

She criticized Del Ponte "for writing about issues that were not turned into official charges".

Albania's former prime minister, Pandeli Majko, who held the post during the Kosovo war and its aftermath, rejected Del Ponte's claims as "strange stories, a fantasy".

On Tuesday the Slovak foreign affairs minister, Jan Kubis, told the Council of Europe that Del Ponte's allegations risked weakening the credibility of the UN tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.

However, families of missing Serbs accuse the prosecutor of failing to take action even though they have provided the names of 300 people they say were involved in the kidnapping of Serbs.

I have a feeling that Albania is a gift that's gonna keep on giving dividends......
 

AnitaPeterson

Diamond Member
Apr 24, 2001
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Yeah, thanks in no small measure to the U.S. for giving the Kossovar Albanians support during the Yugoslav conflict...!
KLA trafficked in drugs, prostitution and weapons, received money and logistics from Osama bin Laden... but they are "oppressed" and should be helped, right?
 

fskimospy

Elite Member
Mar 10, 2006
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Originally posted by: AnitaPeterson
Yeah, thanks in no small measure to the U.S. for giving the Kossovar Albanians support during the Yugoslav conflict...!
KLA trafficked in drugs, prostitution and weapons, received money and logistics from Osama bin Laden... but they are "oppressed" and should be helped, right?

Uhmmm, they were also the victims of genocide. While they certainly did plenty of scummy things themselves, to say that they we should have allowed the Serbians to do what they were doing is pretty absurd. (of course we allow it plenty of other places... but I don't think that's right either)
 

dphantom

Diamond Member
Jan 14, 2005
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Originally posted by: eskimospy
Originally posted by: AnitaPeterson
Yeah, thanks in no small measure to the U.S. for giving the Kossovar Albanians support during the Yugoslav conflict...!
KLA trafficked in drugs, prostitution and weapons, received money and logistics from Osama bin Laden... but they are "oppressed" and should be helped, right?

Uhmmm, they were also the victims of genocide. While they certainly did plenty of scummy things themselves, to say that they we should have allowed the Serbians to do what they were doing is pretty absurd. (of course we allow it plenty of other places... but I don't think that's right either)

I am not condoning anything that the Serbians did but but the Albanians and others given the opportunity would have done the exact same thing. As we now see. The only reason they did not then was the Serbs had bigger guns.

That whole area is messed up, just like the ME. It will be generations before anything ever really is settled.
 

dahunan

Lifer
Jan 10, 2002
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Was this a ethno-religious cleansing or just ethnic cleansing... did they at least agree on religion but just not facial structure?