MPJ: Democratic World Stops Serbia's Denial Access to Recorded Crimes

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Kosovo has expressed deep concern over the antihuman and antihuman approach of Serbian state leaders in relation to the crimes and genocide their state has committed during last century wars in the entities of the former Yugoslavia, including Kosovo. MPJ through a communique says denial [...]
MPJ through a communique says the denial of the Recak Massacre (15 January 1999) by Serbian state leaders, led by President Aleksandar Vuciq and Foreign Minister Ivica Dacic, both former close Balkan associates former president Slobodan Milosevic, constitutes nothing political or diplomatic, but it is simply the fascist approach of a neighbouring state that has not changed until 20 years later.
“In the Kosovo War (1997-1999), Serbian military forces have killed over 13 thousand Albanian civilians, of them 1133 children; they have raped about 20,000 women; they have buried in mass graves in Serbia about 6,000 troops (some hundreds have burned them in metal smelter ovens), intended to pay off the traces of crime; they have burned over 120 thousand homes, deported about one million citizens and robbed everything they could, money, gold, and to the tractors and livestock of Albanian farmers.
For wars in the former Yugoslavia, the International Court of Justice for War Crimes has convicted Serbia of genocide in Srebrenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while dozens of its leaders -- political, military, police and paramilitary -- have been convicted of war crimes and crimes against humanity they committed in Croatia and Kosovo. The leader of these criminals, known as the Balkan Kasap, Slobodan Milosevic, died in The Hague while being tried for crimes committed in Kosovo and other entities of the former Yugoslav federation”, it is said in response.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Kosovo invites the international community's relevant institutions, especially the democratic world, the European Union and the United States, to pressure Serbia's institutional leaders to halt racial hate speech and denial of crimes testified to even by the United Nations Organization War Crimes Court, because their current language is incapable of building good inter-sidement reports, and thus endangers the peace and security of this part of Europe. /Kosovo pres/












