The U.S. can stop working with Special: Serbia committed crimes, this court is ethnic

The House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee in the United States is considering Daniel Serwer's statement fair that the Special Court has jurisdiction for investigating Serbian war crimes authors from 1998-2000, but that such jurisdiction applies and is only following Albanians. This reaction [...]
The House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee in the United States is considering Daniel Serwer's statement fair that the Special Court has jurisdiction for investigating Serbian war crimes authors from 1998-2000, but that such jurisdiction applies and is only following Albanians.
This reaction comes after an authorial writing by Daniel Serwer, who comments on the first charges against KLA leaders, has said that this court is not an ethnic one and that it has jurisdiction for judging Serb crimes during 1998-2000.
The Special Court has jurisdiction over Serbian perpetrators of war crimes from 1998-2000, but has not exercised that jurisdiction despite the fact that most of the crimes were committed by Serbian forces”, Serwer has said.
This is why people call it an ethnic “court, writes further on the announcement published on social networks.
Eliot Engel, who is also chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee days ago, has asked the US Department of Justice to investigate the special work and for Washington to cut off co-operation if they find this court is pursuing only Albanians.
During the past two days, former Kosovo President Hashim Thaci, the two former prime ministers, Kadri Veselin, and Jakup Krasniqi have appeared before Special Court judges with headquarters in The Hague in the Netherlands.
.@DanielSerwer is right: The Special Court does have jurisdiction over Serbia perpecents of war crime from 1998-2000, but has not been justified that the jurisdiction observed the fact that most crime was transmitted by Serbian forces. That's why people call it an airtic court. ) https://t.co/UDK98DpT0F
) House Foreign Affairs Committee (@HouseFereign) November 10, 2020












