Baba and son committed crimes against Albanians, who were the people who mentioned Nasim Haradinaj?

Muharrem Ibraj and Mushek Jakupi father and son from the village of Orek Hile i Gjakova had committed crimes against Albanians in Serbian police uniform. At the trial hearing in The Hague against former OVL-KLA leaders has witnessed former Deputy Chairman Nasim Haradinaj. He mentioned Albanians who have served in Serbia's police who committed crimes in [...]
At the trial hearing in The Hague against former OVL-KLA leaders has witnessed former Deputy Chairman Nasim Haradinaj. He mentioned Albanians who have served in Serbia's police who committed crimes in the recent war in Kosovo. Haradinaj said Muharrem Ibraj along with his father, who come from the village of Orek Hile i Gjakova in the Serbian police uniform, had killed their Albanian neighbour.
Responding to his defence lawyer's questions, Toby Cedman, Haradinaj said that in Kosovo, Albanians have also committed crimes.
“Crime has also made Albanians, like it's Muharrem Ibra with his father and brother, who in Serbian uniforms have killed Koashi... We are for uncovering all crimes, no matter who committed them. But there is no discrimination”, he said.
In 2005, Muharrem Ibraj had also testified in The Hague in defense of Slobodan Milosevic.
“I went to The Hague, didn't want to betray Serbia. I was born in Serbia, Yugoslavia, and I told the truth”, he said.
Ibraj was part of the Serbian police and now lives with a pension in Serbia.
The former chief of local “security from the Gjakova area denied crimes committed against Albanian civilians by Serbian forces, saying there was no information about any crimes committed by the Serbian military and police against Albanian civilians in 1999.
Muharem Ibraj was appointed by Serbian mayor Momcilo Stanojevic, chief of local “security”. In June 1999, he fled Kosovo with Serb forces. When asked by a judge why he had not supported him KLA, Ibraj answered:
“U n The CK was against the state. ”
The testimony of Muharrem Ibright, who was charged with killing an Albanian in early March 1999, was published by Serbian state television radio.
Ibraj was the only Albanian on a list of 18 people wanted by Interpol for war crimes committed in Kosovo.











