25 years from Massacre to Recak

Kosovo today commemorates the 25th anniversary of the massacre in Recak, where Serb forces killed over 45 innocent Albanian civilians. Former O Mission Chief The SEU in Kosovo, Ambassador William Walker, had named Masaka in Recak a crime against humanity. On January 15, 1999, 45 Albanians [...] were murdered and brutally slaughtered in the village of Recak.
Kosovo today commemorates the 25th anniversary of the massacre in Recak, where Serb forces killed over 45 innocent Albanian civilians. Former O Mission Chief The SEU in Kosovo, Ambassador William Walker, had named Masaka in Recak a crime against humanity.
On January 15, 1999, 45 unarmed Albanians were murdered and slaughtered in the village of Recak.
Early in the morning hours of January 15th, Recak woke up surrounded. According to witnesses, around 6:30 Serb forces with heavy artillery have begun bombing the village. After the bombing ended, Serbian forces have entered the village and the raids have begun.
The massacre in Recak terrified the world and awakened the conscience of world diplomacy by mobilizing for Kosovo. The horrors caused in the village of Recak brought to the attention the entire civilized world and revealed the truth about former criminal Slobodan Milosevic's genocide plan.
After Recak, the Kosovo issue will be at an international conference in Rambouillet and Paris, whose failure to succeed would influence NATO's intervention against Serbian military forces, their departure from Kosovo and the deployment of international administration in Kosovo, writes Kosova Prees.
Rezacking that world had taken place in the media and Chancellors of the most influential states in the world. Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright had heard the news and had woken up anxious about what the next few hours Kosovo would bring.
Meanwhile, O mission chief The SEU, William Walker had gone to the crime scene very quickly and had pointed his finger at the valley of the massacre by specifying the crime in three words: Crime against humanity.
After the massacre in Recak, 48-hour fighting resumed between the KLA and Serbian forces for the seizure of corpses. Serbia wanted to eliminate the crime trail, but their attempt failed. The world saw crime.
For the first time by the thrilling scenes and the barbarous massacres of Serb forces in the Albanian civilian population, missionaries and diplomats of the world had also been terrified.












