Gerjali: Mortore remains in Rudnica, Kizevac are Albanian from Kosovo

Legal Medicine Institute General Director Arsim Gerjaliu confirms that the mortore remains found in Rudnica and Kzhevak of Raska in Serbia are of Kosovo Albanians. The drill at Info Magazine from the scene said the team has been there for three weeks now, but that today it was fate they wanted to face [...]
Legal Medicine Institute General Director Arsim Gerjaliu confirms that the mortore remains found in Rudnica and Kzhevak of Raska in Serbia are of Kosovo Albanians.
The drill at Info Magazine from the scene said the team has been there for three weeks now, but that today it wanted luck to meet in mortore waste.
That's correct. We've met in mortar waste. The team is that three weeks there, each week has gone by a doctor at the Law Medicine Institute. Today he wanted the luck of encountering bone waste, and we were notified, and we were immediately sent off to the scene of the”.
“Mortories are for Albanians from Kosovo, and as far as the number and identifications are concerned, the whole process must be carried out then the samples and they are sent to the International Committee for the Unemployed, and after the return of tests the law allows transportation and return to their homeland”
There's a procedure that will last because the country is extremely difficult, but tomorrow we'll have precise” information.
Gerjaliu said that excavations with excavators have already been cut off and hand-work excavations will begin.
bone waste has been found and it has immediately been suspended because it has been widely worked with heavy escape machines and procedures are now to be passed on to hand tools. The place is covered in bags and actually has become the country's boxing”.
Serbia's “Procedures envision that now passes from the subject to the judge, and tomorrow a meeting will be held at the scene at 09:00 p.m. where decisions on further steps will be made”, Gerjaliu said.
The first piece of bone breaks down with heavy machinery and changes the labour procedure and then changes the legal procedure of the state of Serbia, and this now passes into the judges' hands by the prosecutor. Now permission is required for the work procedures where the team will be set up to work at the scene and tomorrow we have the meeting where we're going to decide for further procedures and continuation of the”.
approach Gerjaliu said he does not expect any blockade of the process from the Serbian side, while he said the area where the excavations are being made is very difficult.
I don't expect any blockades from the Serbian side because we are continuing to co-operate with working groups, and part of making the decision will be us”.
We need to look at the possibilities because the terrain is very difficult, and whether we have rainfall or snow, there's a possibility that a large amount of soil and stones will fall because for 16 years they've been throwing stones from the mine in that country”.
For five years working in this country, but thanks to satellite images from our international friends, the country proved accurate”, Gerjaliu said.












