Peter Rebernik on Sun, 18 Apr 1999 16:37:31 +0200 |
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Syndicate: Dallas speaking |
Since I lived in Dallas, Texas, USA, when I was very young, occasionally I read the Dallas Morning News in the Web. I just stumbled over the following article, giving you an impression about the information the US gets about Makedonija. Peter Rebernik +-------------------------------------------------------------------- | PHAROS International - Bureau for Cultural Projects | Peter Rebernik, Dipl.-Ing. | Anton Baumgartner-Str. 44/C2/3/2 | A - 1230 Wien / AUSTRIA | Tel.: (+43 1) 667 7375 | Fax: (+43 1) 667 2984 | Mobiltel.: (+43 664) 230 2767 | Email: peter@rebernik.at / Web: www.rebernik.at +-------------------------------------------------------------------- --------- Refugee influx raises concerns in Macedonia Officials believe 100,000 trying to leave Kosovo 04/17/99 By Gregory Katz / The Dallas Morning News BLACE, Macedonia - Several thousand newly arrived refugees jammed border crossings Friday morning, raising Macedonians' concerns about the impact of another large wave of ethnic Albanians from Kosovo. The refugees are believed to be the first of an estimated 100,000 people trying to cross into Macedonia, which has already taken in more than 130,000 refugees. The border has reopened after it was closed by Yugoslav authorities for unspecified reasons late last week. Several thousand refugees arrived at the border by train Wednesday. Most of the refugees waiting to come to Macedonia are believed to be from the Urosevac region of Kosovo, which has been set afire by Serb forces trying to purge Kosovo of ethnic Albanians. Paula Ghedini, spokeswoman for the U.N. High Commission for Refugees, said that about 6,000 ethnic Albanian refugees entered Macedonia on Friday, the largest number in more than a week. She said roughly 3,000 came in at Blace and 3,000 used the second border crossing at Jazince. "Most of them seemed to be in good health and had ample supplies of food," she said. "They told us that it's the people who are still hiding in the woods in Kosovo who are going to be the worst off." She said the refugees told of a large number of people from Urosevac seeking to use the Jazince border station. The prospect of a new exodus from Kosovo sparked scare stories in the Macedonian press, which is largely opposed to the influx. The mood was summed up in the front page headline of Macedonia Today that read: "Urosevac is Moving to Macedonia." Macedonians are becoming angrier about the large numbers of ethnic Albanians who have arrived in recent weeks, said newspaper editor Vasko Arsovski. They are increasingly opposed to the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, which has threatened to engulf Macedonia in a regional war. He said many Slavs, who make up the majority in Macedonia, fear that the new arrivals will join forces with the ethnic Albanians already there and take up arms against the government of Macedonia with the goal of establishing a "Greater Albania" with Kosovo and Albania proper. "The United States has made a big mistake trying to solve this by bombs," he said. "It has made [Yugoslav President Slobodan] Milosevic stronger, and it has made Macedonia weaker. With all these Albanians here, in five years time, we will have a war, too. Macedonia will be just like Kosovo." He said the bombing had only served to unify the Serbs, who are proud of their fighting tradition and willing to stand up to the military might of the NATO countries. Other Macedonians simply shook their heads at the border situation and said their country was descending into chaos. Anti-NATO and anti-American sentiments led to violent demonstrations in Macedonia shortly after the bombing campaign started more than three weeks ago, and the government moved quickly to control the situation by banning protests. Nonetheless, supporters of Yugoslavia have announced plans to challenge this ban by calling for a mass rally Saturday evening in the main square of Skopje, the Macedonian capital. The resentment against the NATO attack has been fuelled by graphic television footage showing the loss of civilian life inside Yugoslavia and by the nearly constant sound of NATO jet fighters flying overhead on their bombing runs. These public sentiments have led Macedonia's leaders to publicly announce that they would not allow the country to be used as a staging ground for a possible NATO invasion of Kosovo should the airstrikes fail to convince Mr. Miloshevic to capitulate. This represents a blow to NATO contingency planners because Macedonia offers by far the best terrain for a possible land invasion of Kosovo, military analysts say. Unlike other countries bordering Kosovo, Macedonia has a modern highway that connects it to Pristina, the Kosovo capital, and is also close to Thessaloniki, a Greek port that could be used for bringing in troops and heavy equipment. The leaders of Albania have, by contrast, ceded control of their airports and seaports to NATO and made it clear they would allow an invasion to be launched from their soil. But the country's geography and location are far from ideal for the use of a large ground force. "If Macedonia doesn't want any part of it, NATO has real problems," said Paul Beaver, military analyst with Jane's Defense Weekly in London. "An invasion force from Albania would be very difficult. There are only two good roads and very few airfields." Albania would also pose a severe logistical challenge because the few existing road routes into Kosovo are at mountain passes that would slow the advance of infantry units. There are similar drawbacks to using other neighboring countries as the base for an invasion, making Macedonia the favored choice among NATO planners - but for the political situation. ------Syndicate mailinglist-------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/east/ to unsubscribe, write to <syndicate-request@aec.at> in the body of the msg: unsubscribe your@email.adress