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| Readers' Forum: Use our bulletin board (BBS) to exchange views on the NATO attack on Yugoslavia. | |||||||||||||||
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| NATO convoy massacre a scene of horrors by John Bosnitch, April 16, 1999 (Includes a MediaWatch supplement) Scores of ethnic-Albanian Yugoslavs were killed by attacking NATO aircraft along a road in southwestern Kosovo on Wednesday, April 14. In a series of attacks, jets fired high explosives on a column of thousands of ethnic Albanians traveling in a convoy of buses, cars and tractors between Djakovica and Prizren. Citing a figure of 72 dead, Yugoslav media accused NATO of deliberately committing the largest massacre in the three years since separatist Albanian guerrillas made their first attack on Serb civilians. NATO authorities initially denied responsibility and U.S. President Bill Clinton dismissed the killings as "regrettable, but inevitable." NATO said that any dead were "collateral damage" from a legitimate attack on a military convoy. IMCnews has prepared a detailed report on the massacre.
Despite NATO pounding, Serbs united |
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| Belgrade before the bombing Friday, February 19, 1999 Despite threatening news of possible bombing from CNN and other foreign media, local television in Belgrade is focusing on how Yugoslavia cannot accept foreign occupation and how Russia will not allow intervention in Kosovo and Metohija. Click here to read the rest of this story
Strikes on Yugoslavia By Sakamoto Ayuri NATO began airstrikes on Yugoslavia on 24 March. So far, the thousands of Yugoslav citizens including ethnic Albanians have been killed by NATO strikes and the hundreds of thousands of ethnic Albanians have been expelled from the Kosovo province to the neighboring countries. Sakamoto reports on the tragedy in Yugoslavia by NATO attacks. (These articles in Japanese only)
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