HLC
HUMANITARIAN LAW CENTER
date : 18/01/2001
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The Greek Human Rights Web Pages
SUBJECT : Amnesty law does not contribute to reconciliation with embattled Kosovo
Judging by the reaction of the Serbian public, including the
media and non-governmental human rights organizations which participated in
drafting the new Amnesty Law, the Federal Ministry of Justice has come out with
a legal act that places Serbia and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia among
states in which the rule of law prevails.
The law would be just if Serbia were known only for its “draft-dodgers.” The
general amnesty of all the men who fled Serbia to avoid military duty will
certainly help to shed light on the resistance of individuals to the militant
policy and practice of the previous government. However, there are still some
600 Kosovo Albanian political prisoners in Serbia and most of them are not
covered by the law. Only about 200, who are due to be released in May or June
this year, will be amnestied. The majority will continue to languish in Serbian
prisons, with only the hope of the Supreme Court’s clemency or being pardoned
by the FR Yugoslavia President as Flora Brovina was.
Who are the Kosovo Albanians who are to remain imprisoned in keeping with the
Ministry’s perception of justice: prisoners in the Dubrava Penitentiary in
Kosovo who were injured during the NATO bombing of the institution on 19 and 21
May 1999, or wounded by Serbian police and paramilitaries who killed over 100
prisoners with hand launchers, grenades and small arms fire just after the air
raids; civilians from Djakovica who were first separated from their families and
then taken into custody solely because they were of military age; men tried
before Kosovo courts in 1998 against whom proceedings have not yet been
concluded; Belgrade University students who have been in solitary confinement
for over one and a half years now; members or supporters of the Kosovo
Liberation Army who were convicted of smuggling weapons into FR Yugoslavia
territory, and ordinary criminals. There is not a single one among them who has
been charged with or convicted of a war crime or killing of non-Albanian
civilians.
Redzep Musaku i Bujar Himaj were among the Albanian prisoners transferred to
Serbia from Kosovo on 10 June 1999. The amnesty is meaningless for them for they
both died on 11 June 1999 as the result of the beating they were subjected to.
Virtually all the Albanian prisoners were beaten, including the sick, the
wounded and minors. During the riots in Serbian prisons last year, convicts
openly said that Albanians received smaller portions of food and slept for
months on bare concrete floors. To this day, prisoners transferred to the
Belgrade Central Prison from the penitentiary in Sremska Mitrovica on October
2000 have to bed down on the floor.
That Kosovo Albanians were arrested arbitrarily by police, the Yugoslav Army and
paramilitary groups during the NATO bombing is evident from the fact that the
previous government released about 1,350 of them, including those accused of
terrorism. Had their trials been fair, they would have been acquitted. But the
practice of the courts was to find them guilty and sentence them to terms
equaling the time they had spent in custody and then release them. In this way,
the courts denied them the possibility of filing actions for unlawful arrest and
custody and seeking damages. A great many Albanians paid some judges,
prosecutors and lawyers in Kosovo who promised them their freedom. Nor is it a
secret that some people in the Ministry of Justice were involved in such
fraudulent practices and deception of Albanian prisoners and their families.
Momcilo Grubac, the Federal Minister of Justice, said recently that he had
information that “proceedings against Kosovo Albanians were improperly
conducted and, in many cases, the charges were of terrorism although other
criminal offenses were involved.” On 11 January, Minister Grubac told a news
conference that he would go to the Serbian Supreme Court and seek information
from its acting President about appeals which have not been considered.
The Minister of Justice should have gone to the Supreme Court before submitting
the Amnesty Law for adoption. The cause of justice and truth required him to
study each individual case in order to be sure that he was making the right
decision. As it is, he gave precedence to his political conviction that caution
is necessary in dealing with Albanian prisoners. He, who has spoken so often of
truth commissions, failed to take this opportunity to demonstrate that the new
government is morally, politically and legally prepared for a process of
reconciliation. A commission that does not know the truth about what happened in
Djakovica or the Dubrava Penitentiary will not bring about reconciliation. The
right to know the truth about the past leads to reconciliation, and the
Albanians prisoners have part of that truth. It is evident that the sentencing
of the Djakovica group to a total of 1,632 years in prison was the response of
the previous regime to the indictment of Slobodan Milosevic by The Hague
Tribunal and the accusation that he is responsible for the disappearance of 500
Albanians from the Djakovica area during the NATO intervention. Djakovica has
gone through more than enough adversity and misfortune. The rule of law cannot
be built on the backs of the Djakovica hostages.
Natasa Kandic
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