More than 10 mortore remains, allegedly belonging to Albanian civilians

In Kizevac, Serbia's Kizevac, more than 10 morto remains have been found, allegedly belonging to Albanian civilians killed during the recent war in Kosovo. Co-ordinating Council for Extinction and War Crimes Chairman Ahmeti Grejqevci at a media conference said the process in Kizevac is already closing, and doubts are [...]
The chairman of the Co-ordination Council for Missing and War Crimes, Ahmeti Grejqevci, at a media conference, said the process in Kizevac is already closing, and doubts are that morto remains belong to families missing from Rezalla.
Griqefci has asked Serbia to show the whereabouts of missing persons during the war.
That process, which is being closed there as it seems, is complete with the Rezalla family and 6 troops are missing and Serbia remains to show where they are. We from Serbia seek the journey of living people who have been taken from Kosovo, their whereabouts and their completion. Serbia knows everything very well and has it written and filmed and the main state institutions know the outcome of our family members' whereabouts. Serbia hopes one day it will tell citizens only have begun to show, even Serbia's most dominant people to show that it has been discussed mass cemetery in Serbia”, he said.
Haki Kasumi, the former co-ordinator of the Co-ordinatorial Council of the Kosovo Family Associations of Missing Persons, who had led the visit, said that so far, more than 10 morto remains whose DNA is expected to be sent to the labs of the International Commission of Missing Persons.
“ (Consequently) So far, some of the 10 morto remains of Albanian exclusively civilian troops killed during the recent war in Kosovo...09\26 based on traces about the body remains of victims in the country of Kizevac were also informed by experts that they relate to the Rezalla massacre. The troops have been treated professionally and in the planned location, and there continues the processing process, and there is a professional development of DNA from the newly found bone parts which will be forwarded to the labs of the International Commission of Missing Persons, which the commission has established and is a professional organisation and has done a 70-percent review of the remains of mortore identified so far from our geniuses...Process is ongoing but the traces found, the paper, the paper, then the clothes corresponded to the first hours of the May 1st, and then answered the May 1st massacres in 1999.
Excavations at Kizhevak in Serbia have started late last year and were later interrupted due to weather conditions, where excavations have now resumed on May 5th.
More than 1.640 people from Kosovo, mostly Albanians, are still considered missing.












