Persecuted Talk About Hideting Serbian Crimes in Kosovo

Serbian human rights activist Natasa Ka persecuted, founder of the Humanitarian Law Fund, has called on civil society and Mothers' calls never to silence the fate of missing persons from the time the war ended in Kosovo. Persecuted has he said that the mirror must be [...]
Serbian human rights activist Natasa Ka persecuted, founder of the Humanitarian Law Fund, has called on civil society and Mothers' calls never to silence the fate of missing persons from the time the war ended in Kosovo.
Persecuted has said it should become the mirror of all data on the circumstances of the disappearance of persons or troops and on the basis of an accurate analysis to verify the facts of where they are found.
Public accession only contributes to the situation. It is accurate that during this period the victims were mentioned much, before all, those whose mortar remains were found in Batajnica, this is because the humanitarian Fund is available with all this data and names. We, too, have forwarded the encryptions to both Batajnica and Petrovo Selo and have data on what has been found. Has there been an obsession, has the causes of death been identified? No, as in most cases in Batajnica objection has not been carried out to confirm the cause of death. According to our assessment, this has been one of the ways to avoid being told that what the mortore remains have witnessed, and that is that it is a violent death and, in most cases, even to death, has been the result of gunfire from near”, he said.
By contrast, Natasa Ka exactly persecuted has received a large number of international recognitions for her work. In 2003 it was also listed as 36 European heroes, published in the magazine „Time”.
In 2005 an honorary citizen of Sarajevo was declared and a person of the year in Bosnia and Herzegovina, according to „magazine. Slobodna Bosna” In 2013 it was awarded the Hrant Dink Award in Turkey, while American congressers Eliot Engel and Roger Vicker proposed Natasa had been persecuting her in 2018 for the Nobel Peace Prize.










