Text of report by Dragana Bokan headlined: "Who goes hunting with a
Zolja rocket launcher?" by Serbian newspaper Borba on 30 October
Four Albanians from southern Serbia were part of an international
criminal gang suspected of smuggling at least 275 illegal immigrants from
Kosovo into Western Europe over the past seven months. The gang was
smashed recently in a joint operation of the Slovak, Serbian, Croatian,
and B-H police forces.
The four Albanians, who live close to a border crossing with Kosovo,
were identified by members of the Organized Crime Squad. A coordinated
police operation was carried out after 10 months of surveillance kept
on members of this criminal group in Slovenia, Serbia, Croatia, and
Austria; also, 39 apartments were searched and 36 people were arrested.
"In Kosmet [Kosovo-Metohija], there is systematic terrorism against
Serb civilians, which UNMIK [UN Interim Administration Mission in
Kosovo] records, while the provisional Kosovo institutions may perhaps note
its existence, but they do nothing about it. The purpose of this is to
show that the situation there has improved and that the territory should
be given independence, while disrupting the territorial integrity of
the Republic of Serbia. The fact is that the Serbian MUP [Interior
Ministry] and the Security Information Agency (BIA) are foiling more and more
cases of people trafficking. These are Albanians moving across Serbia.
Who is to say, for example, that these activities are not planned and
that they are not meant to finance terrorism in Kosovo-Metohija," Milan
Mijalkovski, professor at the Belgrade University Faculty of Security,
explains for Borba.
According to Mijalkovski, terrorism is practiced in Kosovo-Metohija
because perpetrators are not being arrested or, if they are, they are
released within a very short time.
"A glaring example of this is the case of a 17-year-old youth that
recently threw a grenade on the Dolce Vita cafe bar in Mitrovica. The
reasons given for his release were that he was under age, mentally
incompetent, and so on. This suggests that somebody manipulated him,"
Professor Mijalkovski says.
Senior police officials have recently said that the security
situation in Serbia is stable and that security in our country is at the same
level as security in the other countries in the region. The question
that arises is whether there are organized terrorist groups in Serbia.
"We have already had a number of incidents where extremists took
quite strong action. I will draw one parallel here: a trial is in progress
of members of the National Formation [Nacionalni Stroj neo-nazi
organization] in Novi Sad. On the other hand, however, inasmuch as we are
making a comparison, an incident that occurred in Novi Pazar, where
extremists smashed the musical instruments of the Balkanika band, was a much
more serious one, in my opinion. Were any measures taken in that case?
People have no information about this. They were both of them incidents.
On the one hand, consistent action is being taken against people from
the National Formation, who are answering charges of fanning racial and
religious hatred. As for the situation in Presevo, Bujanovac, and
Medvedja, it is true that there are no terrorist incidents there, but two
weeks ago, a grenade was fired on army members at their base in the south
and this grenade had come not from the territory of Kosovo, but
from our own territory. Media did not say much about this. Why is this
being hushed up? The grenade was fired on a hunting day. Was this a
coincidence and who fired the grenade? Did they go hunting with a Zolja
[Wasp rocket launcher] and what were they hunting? Obviously, this was a
deliberate act and one which was not the work of a lone individual.
There is no terrorism there in the conventional sense that has a violent
expression, but there is smoldering terrorism," our interviewee says.
The recent large explosion at the military depot at Paracin is
attracting people's attention. Various stories have appeared in the media,
one of which was that there was a suspicion that the series of explosions
and fires at Paracin had been caused by a terrorist act.
Our interviewee, who headed the Department of Security at the
Military Academy for many years, believes that the investigation will discover
the true causes of the Paracin disaster.
"One must take into account objective facts and these show that,
since the start of the army reform two years ago, the reduction of military
cadres has been going on at a brisk pace. Thus, we have a situation
where a large number of commissioned officers and noncoms, who are
competent to handle mines and explosives, have met the requirements for
retirement and are leaving. On the other hand, one should not rule out the
possibility of a terrorist attack, if one bears in mind that the number
of army members that were securing the depot was very small. There were
something like six or seven guards, in addition to the technical
security measures," Professor Mijalkovski says.
Some people were of the opinion that the security services should
have had information about the facility's security and should have acted
to prevent the accident.
Our interviewee says that Defence Minister Zoran Stankovic himself
said that the government had been warned down the chain of command about
the possibility of a disaster.
"If the minister was issuing the warning, he could have been informed
down the chain of command, as well as by the Military Security Agency
[VBA]. The VBA is certainly competent to know, because its main job is
to protect personnel, materiel, and facilities of the Army of Serbia and
the Defence Ministry against all kinds of threat. If there were
indications that the protection of the materiel was inadequate, the VBA should
certainly have had to have been aware of all these fine points," our
interviewee says.
Speaking about the military security services, many people are of the
opinion that these have not been adequately reformed. We ask Professor
Mijalkovski for his opinion.
"Where the military security services are concerned, they have been
reformed already. Practically, when we take into consideration all the
elements of the Defence Ministry and the army, I believe that the
military security service is near the top of the list of the reformed
institutions. I am not just saying this off the top of my head; I am speaking
from facts and from the simple reason that a large number of VBA
members have attended various specialist training courses and are cooperating
highly successfully as part of agreed cooperation with the intelligence
services in the Euro-Atlantic security structures. It is easy to say:
'Carry out a reform.' In my opinion, this is tendentious," Professor
Milan Mijalkovski says at the end of our talk.
Source: Borba, Belgrade, in Serbian 30 Oct 06