Yugoslav Army chief Nebojsa Pavkovic had ordered the disappearance of Serbian war archives (Dokument)

Yugoslav Army chief Nebojsa Pavkovic had ordered the disappearance of Serbian war archives (Dokument)

Deputy Prime Minister Besnik Bislimi's statement that they have agreed with Serbia to open state archives, including those of the KLA, sparked harsh reactions in Kosovo. Most of the reactions concerned the fact that the KLA does not have archives because it has waged liberation wars. RTK, I'm sure you're an investigative show. ON THE 1610.20 ' s, he had [...]

RTK, I'm sure you're an investigative show. ON the 1610.20th evening, Yugoslav Army top secret documents and the order of the chief of this army, Nebojsa Pavkoviqi, for the extermination and disappearance of 1998-1999 war files in Kosovo. Surprisingly, none of the institutions of the Republic of Kosovo, whether political or security or justice, had said a single word about the matter. While the extermination and disappearance of all files to lose all traces of crimes committed in Kosovo by the Serbian state, according to international criminal law enforcement presents international crime. Next we will publish the entire article posted last year about this issue.

It was 2001 when the Serbian state faced great international pressure. The Hague Tribunal called on Serbia to hand over war criminals in charge of Milosevic, as well as open maps of mass cemetery from the Kosovo war. It must have been Slobodan Milosevic's arrest and handover to The Hague, the reason why even within the Yugoslav Army began an action to eliminate data for crimes committed during the war in Kosovo.

A Yugoslav Army document dating back to 18.10,2001 classified as “yna”, reveals a shocking fact. It's a command of then-prosecutor chief of “General Nebojsa Pavkovic, who ordered his subordinates to destroy all archive data (in original) of the Pristina Corps military command for the period from 01.01.1998 to 26.06. 1999. Pavkovi also ordered that, after all the original files were eliminated, other files were placed in their country so that no records were found in the archives.

In the document, described as strictly confidential with the number 1737-3, a military secret that is the order of Yugoslav Army Chief of Staff General Nebojsa Pavkovik says:

Photodocument 1: Nebojsa Pavkovic's ordinance sent his subordinates for the annihilation of Kosovo's war archives data, date: 18.10,201, Belgrade)

For this “emissions” Pavkoviqi had charged his military report, Goran Yeftovic, with instructing him on which files he should exactly be taken. The order also had a deadline to complete until 01.11,201 days when the in charge of Yeftevic had to report on its fulfillment.

So, as numbers such as 007, 0010, 1333, 015,022, 24,28,021, and so on in the document, the numbers are missing in the Yugoslav Army archive and copies of the same, possibly, have been destroyed or stored somewhere for the needs that the Serb state except the state knows.

Photodocument 2: List of file chart listings ordered to be destroyed or removed from the Yugoslav Army archive

But this intervention in archive data had apparently not gone unnoticed. A secret document issued directly from Vojsislav Kostunica's office at the time he was president of the Yugoslav Federation, dated 27.03,2002, reveals the fact that the Yugoslav Army command was in an unexpected crisis. Yugoslav Army Chief of General Staff Nebojsa Pavkovic addressed a secret letter to Kostunica, informing him of “Delines” of Military Security Directorate (Uprava Vojske Bezbednosti), Major General Aca Tomic. Pavkovi told Kostunica that a military team had investigated Tomik's activities for several months and had concluded that he, as stated in that letter “, had deviated from military and state responsibilities”.

It seems that this was exactly the first man Aca Tomic who had started to file for Pavkoviqi, starting with the reason for the intervention in Yugoslav Army archives. And, of course, that fact scared Pavkovic and demanded that Kostunica support him in his degradation and elimination.

Photodocument 3: Pavkovic's letter to Kostunica, where he denounced Aca Tomaj for disobeying orders, date: 27.03,202, Belgrade)

However, this issue is far more complicated than that, since a year later, Aca Tomic was released from military duty with the court's court's act of war in Belgrade (on the 2904.2002) date, Serbian media found that in the major conflict between Serbian President Vojislav Kostunica and Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic was just this Aca Tomic. Tomic was accused of holding Kostunica's arm and standing behind the so-called “Zemun Clan”, which would later be charged with killing Djindjic.

Photodocument 4: Document classified as “vojna tana” where the military body of the prosecution was denounced by Military Security Directorate chief Aca Tomic, date: 18.06. 2002, Belgrade)

Let's go back to the matter of hiding and destroying archive data. From a joint meeting held in Pristina Garnison's command at 29.05.1998, where Nebojsa Pavkovic, who was then commander of the Pristina Corps, at the end of the meeting, had set up several “ilime”: he had not known what to do with the slain, with the wounded and the prisoner, so he had asked for answers from <62>lart<3>. So this criminal enterprise and Pavkovitch were included: Radoslav Donovic, Colonel Slobodan Dimeni, Mileta Novakovovic as an officer with the ermin (name) Prljevic.

The chief of the regular Serbian Army apparently had plans for all killings, massacres, deportations, violations, kidnappings, burns, the murder of prisoners and hostages of war, as in Dubrava, etc. After he carried out all these crimes, it was time to eliminate the archive data, and that: operational plans, murder sites, cemetery sites, plans to conceal crimes, etc.

During research into Serbian war documentation, the name of a person as involved in the process of concealing crimes is very often found. That's Velko Ordreovitch. Although Milosevic's Socialist chief for Kosovo, his institutional activity never hid under party clothing. During wartime and especially on the eve of its completion, Odliovic has co-ordinated several state security segments for hiding and eliminating evidence of crimes that Serbian institutions had committed on Albanians. Odreovovic along with Zoran Agjellkovqi, former Milosevic's delegate to Kosovo, have co-ordinated affairs with David Gaijqi, Misko Lalkovijqi, Misa Vilotqi, Bosko Pericin, Bozidar Filicin, Momo Stojanovici etc., who secretly carried trucks with Albanian corpses killed, who in the first days of June 1999 from Kosovo were headed towards Serbia's territory. In the campaign to carry corpses from Kosovo to Batajnica Velko Odrekovovic had received orders from Vlastimir Djordjevic, while Novica Zdravkovqi had carried out the operation.

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