Thaci: The act against us contains nothing with the charge of organ trafficking, even Clark said it was a Russian dezination campaign.

Former Kosovo President Hashim Thaci, in interview given The FAZ, it has said that the establishment of the Special Court, was meant to investigate the charges of organ trafficking mentioned in Dick Marty's report, but, the indictment filed against him and other former KLAIders, contains nothing about it. Thaci, [...]
Thaci, has stressed that the claims were false and that, apparently, they were considered unworthy of further investigation, reports FAZI follow Periscope.
I fully support the arguments my defence team presented in court after consulting me. The Kosovo Specialised Chambers (DSO) are indeed the fourth mechanism led by the international community, after the ICTY (the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia), the ICTY courts (the UN Transitional Mission to Kosovo) and EULEX (EU Mission to Rule of Law). Each of these institutions has conducted extensive investigations into issues related to 1998 and 1999 in Kosovo and has drawn conclusions about who is responsible for the abuses. The aim of the DSO's creation was to investigate the charges in Dick Marty's report, particularly charges of organ trafficking made by Russian representatives at the Council of Europe. This is what the EU presented to Kosovo, and this is what the Kosovo Parliament voted for when it decided to join the creation of this tribunal. By contrast, our indictment and the case of the Special Prosecutor's Office contain nothing about any such charge. Not a mention. The claims were false and were apparently deemed unworthy of further investigation by DSO, he said among other things, reports Express.
Thaci, also mentioned General Clark, remembering that the latter, in his testimony, described the charges in Dick Marty's report as a Russian dezination campaign.
Even General Clark, in his testimony, described the charges in Dick Marty's report as a Russian deinformation campaign. As it is well known, the Russians later made similar charges against Ukraine as part of their aggression scheme. Some time ago, Professor Daniel Cerwer visited me in The Hague. He later wrote that he too had supported establishing a court to deal with Dick Marty's report and that, according to him, the situation had some kind of bait: The Kosovo Parliament believed, like him, that the court's focus would be primarily on charges of organ trafficking. He went on to say that courts of this kind should provide justice, not convictions based on fraud, and that no future liberation movement would ever agree to such a court. Our hope now is to contribute to truth, justice, and dignity. I am convinced that the judges have heard and seen the truth. The only question left is what they're going to do with him, Thaci said.












