Belgrade gives permission, next week the exhumation of Albanian troops in Kizevac

Next week, work will begin for the extraction of mortore remains that were found in the mass cemetery in Kizevac, Serbia, which is suspected of being killed by Albanian civilians killed in Kosovo in 1999. The Supreme Court in Belgrade has granted permission for excavations. Even there Wednesday [...]
The Supreme Court in Belgrade has granted permission for excavations.
Even on Wednesday, a delegation from Kosovo traveled to see the site of the event closely.
This has been confirmed for the newspaper Objective, head of the Kosovo delegation, in the task force for the missing, Ibrahim Makolli.
The trial in Serbia has given permission, we believe that from next week we will begin the process of extracting mortar waste. Our officials have been invited to be at the scene, have traveled, there are three officials there, and when they return, they will announce to us developments in preparation for the continuing location of the research”, Makolli stressed.
Makolli expects Serbia's institutions to continue to be more co-operative to identify other locations of the mass cemetery, as according to him, they have knowledge of it.
We don't have a big note in paper and word, but in practice the field notes there are obstacles behind. We are unique that they possess information about the possible location of mortar waste in Serbia and Kosovo. If there was a willingness and will to deliver this information through which we could find these people, Mahcoli added.
The atmospheric conditions according to Makoli can also be an obstacle to extracting mortore remains from the mass cemetery in Chizevac.
And we're just afraid of the atmospheric conditions because of the terrain that is also why we have to consult with our forensic experts working on the ground, there's another reason to delay the continuation of research”, the Maccoli potential.
The target also contacted the Director of Legal Medicine, Education Gerjaliu, who confirmed that it is at the mass cemetery in Kizevac in preparation for the logistics location for the beginning of excavations.
Although more than 22 years have passed since the armed war in Kosovo, the families of 1643 missing persons are still waiting for answers to the fate and whereabouts of their most loved ones.












