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DISPATCH FROM KOSOVO

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Barry Marjanovic

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Apr 23, 1999, 3:00:00 AM4/23/99
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DISPATCH FROM KOSOVO
Serbs Steer Many Refugees Toward Home
By PAUL WATSON, Times Staff Writer

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Paul Watson is one of the few western correspondents reporting from Kosovo.


AJKOVAC, Yugoslavia--More than 25,000 ethnic Albanians were on the move
again in northern Kosovo on Tuesday, but this time there was a difference to
the seemingly endless columns of tired, hungry and frightened people.
They were heading home.
The Kosovo Albanians, some in tractor-drawn wagons, on horseback or
trudging along the roadside, converged southeast of Podujevo. Well over half
were men of fighting age.
Many were out of food after living in the mountains for days on a
mixture of flour and water fried in oil, several refugees interviewed
Tuesday said. A few children had died in the cold, they added.
Then Serbian police on Monday suddenly opened a corridor for an
estimated 100,000 ethnic Albanians believed to be in this region of Kosovo,
the refugees said.
The northern refugees represent just a portion of the estimated 800,000
ethnic Albanians now believed to be displaced from their homes and on the
move within Kosovo, a province of Yugoslavia's dominant republic, Serbia.
The northern refugees on the move Tuesday jammed two muddy dirt tracks
leading into Sajkovac and nearby Ladovac, carrying what little they had
managed to take from their homes almost a month ago.
One wagon had a small kitchen stove roped to the back.
While dozens of the refugees lined up at a communal tap to fill plastic
soda bottles with water, others searched for a place to sleep. One group
found shelter in a half-built house.
Most of the refugees fled Podujevo and surrounding villages soon after
NATO began bombing March 24, some because they were too terrified to stay,
others because Serbian police ordered them to go.
Moving southeast from village to village, they spent some nights
sleeping out in the freezing cold and snow, huddled together in wagons, or
on the floors of schools or mosques.
When they weren't trying to escape Yugoslav forces, they were caught in
the cross-fire between Serbs and the separatist Kosovo Liberation Army, or
KLA, or bracing for NATO bombs.
Now they have come almost full circle.
"We want to go home," Subhija Cutaku, 56, of Bajcina village said as
she limped north along with one group of about 5,000 refugees on the road
that links Pristina and Podujevo. "We hope it's safe. We hope it's not
destroyed."
Ibrahimi Ferat, 63, said he left the village of Grdovac, about eight
miles southeast of Podujevo, because of ground fighting a day after NATO's
air war began.
"There were attacks between the police and the KLA in the hills, but
there was no shelling where we were--at least not as far as I know," said
Ferat. Like many of the refugees on the road, Ferat had little more than he
was wearing.
The interviews with several ethnic Albanians in columns returning to
Podujevo appeared to contradict NATO's charge Monday that Serbs were herding
them to Pristina, the capital of Kosovo province, to be loaded onto trains
and deported.
Even as Serbian police were steering thousands of Kosovo Albanians
north away from Pristina, NATO spokesman Jamie Shea said they were being
forced south toward neighboring Macedonia.
Shea told reporters that NATO had "increasing reports inside Kosovo
that the Serb forces are creating a kind of anti-humanitarian corridor from
the north down to Pristina, funneling about 150,000 internally displaced
people so that they can be put on trains and sent south" to Macedonia.
The ethnic Albanians--who spoke without police, soldiers or government
officials nearby--said that something had changed over the weekend and that
Serbian police were suddenly offering them help.
So like pawns on a worn chessboard, they were moving again.
Serbian authorities gave no official explanation for the mass movement
of refugees, first south toward Pristina and then north toward their homes
in and around Podujevo.
In mid-March, the area was a KLA bastion commanded by one of the
guerrilla organization's hard-liners, a former law student who fought under
the war name Remi. His whereabouts are unknown.
For months before the North Atlantic Treaty Organization launched its
airstrikes, the KLA and Yugoslav security forces were battling near
Podujevo. After NATO attacks began, looting, arson and bombs left much of
Podujevo empty and burned.
It doesn't sound like an ideal place for a homecoming for ethnic
Albanian refugees, so this turn--like many things in the war over Kosovo--is
difficult to explain.
It may be Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic's response to foreign
pressure to help refugees trapped in Kosovo without proper food or shelter.
Milosevic reportedly held secret negotiations over the weekend with foreign
envoys, discussing how to help ethnic Albanians, probably through a few
Greek relief agencies now operating in the province.
NATO has rejected airdrops of food, medicine and other supplies by the
alliance, largely because low-flying transport planes would be an easy
target for Yugoslav forces. There is also concern that the rations would be
intercepted by Yugoslav troops.
Meanwhile, here in Sajkovac, about five miles south of Podujevo, an
estimated 20,000 ethnic Albanians moving northward had arrived by
midafternoon Tuesday, and said many more were coming.
While the fighting-age men were eager to speak to a foreign reporter,
they refused to give their names out of fear of retribution by either side
in Kosovo's ground war.
A chemistry student, almost fluent in English, told of leaving the
village of Svetlje, about two miles southeast of Podujevo, with his wife and
two young children on the third day of NATO's bombing.
"Unusual things happened," he said. "It wasn't [regular] Serbian
forces, but special forces, and we waited for a confrontation with the KLA.
Then police and Serbian forces took us . . . and we ran away."
The refugees moved southeast to the village of Dumos, and then on to
Duz in the mountains, where they spent one night sleeping outside in the
snow, he said.
Serbian security forces began to attack Grdovac, another mile to the
southeast, so the refugees fled again, this time finding relative peace in
Kolic for two weeks.
"There were too many people who were hungry," he said. "We had no food,
just wheat flour and oil. Then Serbian forces began to attack us from all
sides."
As Serbian armor moved to encircle the village, the refugees fled to
Grastica, where they slept in schools, a mosque or outside.
By then, they had no food and continued south toward Pristina without
being attacked again by the Serbs, the man said.
At Lukare, on the northeast fringe of Pristina, Yugoslav forces on
Monday "made a corridor, a road for us to Pristina," he added.
After feeding the refugees tinned fish, the Serbs turned them north
toward a village just southeast of Podujevo, where they were ordered to stop
until receiving permission to move again.
"We have no problems now," the man said. "Something, we think, has
changed. But we don't know. But I appeal to all organizations to help us. We
are all hungry."
Asked if he wanted to leave Kosovo, as hundreds of thousands of
refugees have done, the man paused and said: "It's a difficult question.
Myself, I will go where there is peace."

* * *
All of Paul Watson's dispatches from Kosovo are available on The Times'
Web site at http://www.latimes.com/dispatch.


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