What did the people in The Hague say about the KLA's KLA's military and is he in the KSF?

Kosovo government agreed to open archive The KLA, though it is not believed, exists. What did the detainees in The Hague say about this? Kosovo Deputy Prime Minister Besnik Bislimi indicated yesterday that Serbia had agreed to open the state archive for the Kosovo war. [...]
Kosovo Deputy Prime Minister Besnik Bislimi indicated yesterday that Serbia had agreed to open the state archive for the Kosovo war while agreeing to open Kosovo's state archive for the KLA as well.
Serbia has insisted on such a thing in order to strengthen its tertiaries for the Serb community as the victim of organised war crimes by our Liberation Army.
“Albanians have demanded that all police and military archives be opened, and we have been told, as far as missing and displaced persons, there is no problem, but you have to open the archives of the so-called U n CK, to see where Serbs and other non-Albanian citizens were killed,” President of Serbia Aleksandar Vuciq had declared.
Nasim Haradinaj, who was deputy chairman of O VL KLA, in August last year, had declared that the KLA had no archive in a pronomation for BIRN, Periscope follows.
On the other hand, Jakup Krasniqi, who had committed the KLA spokesman's post and who is today also located in The Hague for war crimes and crimes against humanity, had made a similar statement.
“I am convinced that the KLA does not have any written or organised archives, except what has already been written or said about it,” he had declared.
He had added that domestic communications between the General Staff of the KLA and the operational areas of this guerrilla force may have been handed over to the Kosovo Protection Corps. [Getty Images] KPC, which was KSF's predecessor.
But they had denied that there was something like an archive The KLA, since the KLA was a guerrilla formation. /Periscope











