“The 11th VE was found in Lutoglava in the mass grave”, the witness testifies to how he was killed by his 16-year-old brother and the torture he experienced when he was stopped by Serb forces

At the Constitutional Court in Pristina, in the trial of Milorad Djokovic for war crimes in the village of Ozdrim on Wednesday in the quality of the witness before the court was heard the Union Gashi, who confessed the persecutions he had experienced when he was detained by Serb forces. He also testified about the murder of his brother, of [...]
The Witness Gashi widely downplayed what she had experienced on May 7, 1999, in Ozdrim, and also described the suffering she experienced when she moved to Leskovc. Among other things, he said about thirty persons were in a room, which had been beaten and tortured all night, reports the “Justice Battle”.
We're in a room in Leskovc all night, they've been taking them out, they've been beating me, they've got me in a basement, they've got a medic, they've got a doctor, they've taken me to sleep with 3-4 meters... I've been picked up as if I've had football, I'm caught in boom, the other guy says hibernation knows better... how I'm alive”, Gashi said.
Asked by the special prosecutor, Kastriot Memaj if he had managed to identify someone on the critical day of the event, the witness said he had identified some, even though they were based on a siege. Among the people he identified, Mumo Vukotic said it was.
For accused Djokovic, however, he said he was a civilian, but armed and vested in bulletproof.
“Civils have this...necessors have their backs, ours have arming”, said witness Gashi.
Also, the witness indicated that his 16-year-old brother was initially injured and sent to Peja Hospital, but years later his remains were found in a mass grave in Lutoglava.
The brother's brother has been robbed of daggers, and I've been told if he wants to go to the hospital or go to the hospital, he said he'd go to the hospital, even if we're there, he said he'd be taken to the hospital. But when NATO leads the barracks in Pec, they have been taken, the 11th was found in Lutoglava in the mass grave”, Gashi said.
According to the planning of this court, in line to hear was witness Mentor Gashi, but recommended that his statement only be read, with the reasoning that he only confessed to the event and given the inappropriate conditions in the courtroom because of the high fever, demanded from the court that his proposal be approved.
The trial panel, headed by Judge Valon Kurtaj, with the consent of the parties in the procedure approved prosecutor Memaj's proposal and interrupted today's session, while next set for another date.
According to the indictment compiled on 23 June 2023, Milorad Djokovic is charged with applying the murder measures, raids, beatings, torture, cruel and inhuman treatment, housing, deportation and deportation of dozens of Albanian civilians. It is also accused of robbing, burning and destroying the homes of the Albanian civilian population.
The indictment said that the northern side of the village of Ozdrimm along the region's Peja Mitrovica route had entered and at the end of the western part of the village of Ozdrimica, which borders on the village of Vitormirica, including members of special military units, began firing weapons in the direction of the civilian population with whom six Albanian national groups were killed: I.C. St. K, E. M, R. Sh, Mr. S and M.H., while three civilians were wounded by these shots: A. G, H.G. and M.G. were first transported to the Peja hospital and then executed and buried in the village of Lutoglava, as well as five civilians of Albanian nationality: R.K., Mr.K., A.K., A. K, A. They were killed during the offensive, but their bodies were never found, so they still figure they're missing.
In this regard, Djokovic is charged with conducting co-ordination the criminal work “wage war against the civilian population”, sanctioned by Article 142 concerning Article 22 of the Criminal Law of the former Socialist Republic of Yugoslavia (now <x2). RSFJ's LP” as the law in force at the time of the criminal offence. /Periscope/












