Blooded women identify 500 Serbs who committed war crimes

Women from Gjakova have gathered arguments about the damage caused in the last war. Sadete Nikoliqi has come to the office of the local Gjakova community to declare the damages he has suffered during the 1998/1999 Kosovo war. She has also brought with her documents to argue the damage done to [...]
Sadete Nikoliqi has come to the office of the local Gjakova community to declare the damages he has suffered during the 1998/1999 Kosovo war.
It has also brought with it documents to argue the damage done by Serb forces.
But it is not only this woman who headed for this office that is gathering evidence of all the crimes that have occurred in the city of Gjakova during the war years.
Mevlyde Streni Saraci, a member of the civil society group for gathering evidence of war crimes, shows that the goal is to clarify crimes committed against citizens.
Saraci's plight has been performed officially since April 2018, although since the postwar, it has been working on collecting evidence for war crimes.
According to her, the relevant institutions have been delayed with their work.
This office voluntarily also works last weekend Hoda. For two consecutive years since the end of the war, she has collected photographs testifying to crimes committed in Gjakova, but also to those who committed them.
With its work, but also the citizens who have been victims of war crimes, Hoda says they have managed to identify about 500 people who committed crimes in Gjakova.
Despite their work, however, this office has not yet managed to issue accurate statistics on crimes committed during the recent war in Kosovo.
Meanwhile, the Sand Crimes Department at the Gjakova Foundation Prosecutor reports that they have worked on more than half of its kind.
Of the 98, as many as they have reached the prosecution, 63 of them have been resolved from January to September.
This office earlier this year has handed over to the special war crimes prosecution that took place in Gjakova, which they are expected to do again in the coming weeks.












