Cerkini urges international pressure on Serbia: For 20 years it had been dug all of Kosovo

The Invisible Week was officially closed Friday through various hotels and organisations, which marked International Day of the Missing. There are many two decades that are being searched for the remains of the found, who were killed and disappeared in the recent war in Kosovo by Slobodan Milosevic's regime. Leader of the Source Center [...]
There are many two decades that are being searched for the remains of the found, who were killed and disappeared in the recent war in Kosovo by Slobodan Milosevic's regime.
The head of the Burimore Centre for Missing Persons, Bajram Cerkini, who himself seeks to clear the truth for his son, says the pain of family members of the missing persons is not extinguished, but their expectations are waned, as well as the work of institutions to search out at least the remains of over 1600 people still missing.
He says Serbia knows where the cemetery is but that it does not want to show, until the International Community's intervention is necessary.
According to Cerkini, the International Community has political and economic powers and can condition Serbia until the dawn of the rich's fate.
And we're told we don't know where we left them. Serbia knows, but does not want to show without making an extremely large condition that the International Community has political and power, but also has economic power to block it until our loved ones are returned to us, Cerkini said.
He said it is being trumpeted that about 70% of the work has been carried out on the issue of the undiscovered, but according to him, not even 40% has been done and that such statements have made him feel bad.
The “It is said that 70% is the work done in Kosovo of people not found, this extremely hurts my ear. Nothing has been secreted in Kosovo. Nothing in Kosovo is known where they are. After the war we found hundreds of people on earth, hundreds of dead people we found in the mosque, in the courtyards, in the fields, and it's said that 70% is not normal. We haven't done enough. There are 2,000 people with no DNA buried and when they come up before the opinion, we've worked hard, we've got bo 70% is very vulnerable to me. Neither has it been made 70%, nor 40% because of some family items have been found in houses, courtyards, mosques and buried without any analysis of DNA”, he said.
Cherkin said he never thought 20 years would pass and his son would not be found.
The new guys born during the war, with their tools being given, and with them there's 150 euros they can give us in coffee, they've dug it up and found it so far, and let the state, let the institutions dig it for 20 years”, Cerkin said.
Cerkini himself reports he was in Belgrade several times at various meetings at Serbian embassies and institutions where he was interested and even visited the locations suspected of mass graves.









