Sunday, April 10, 2005

U.N. cars set on fire in Kosovo

Two marked U.N. cars were set on fire by unknown suspects in Kosovo, police said Sunday.

The vehicles were in different locations when they were set ablaze Saturday night, the police said. One of the fires was put out by a U.N. policeman.

Kosovo has been administered by the United Nations and patrolled by NATO peacekeepers since 1999.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Either Albanian mafia or Serb nationalists--they are the two groups trying to sabotage progress.

Anonymous said...

There are no Serbs there... Especially no Serbs nationlists...
Things in Kosovo are organized and this is warning to UN and civilized world... UN and NATO should leave their mouse holes and confront violance of ex-KLA militants and nationalists...

Anonymous said...

There are still about 100,000 Serbs left in Kosovo. And they run their own parallel government structures. The chain of authority and funding goes directly between the Serbs in Kosovo and Belgrade.

Anonymous said...

Actually, there are less than 100,000 Serbs in Kosovo. More importantly, I was speaking about the place of the UN attack - Prishtina. In Prishtina from beleive more than 30,000 of Serbs in Prishtina in 1990's there are about 50 left. No one with any trace of clear mind can think that anyone of them could done such. Serbs can't be walk out of their houses and this is clearly planned attack from criminal KLA-miltant elements and Albanian nationalists.

Anonymous said...
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