Next time we'll drop bigger bombs

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  • KinKyJ
    Platinum Poser
    • Jun 2004
    • 13438

    Next time we'll drop bigger bombs

    Are these people actually too dumb to understand or didn't NATO drop enough bombs on Serbia?

    Ongoing shit: Mladic and Karadcic, two war criminals wanted for genocide and ethnic cleansings are still "at large", but protected by the government and army.

    And now this:

    Serbia rejects Kosovo trade-off

    Serbia's Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica has insisted that Kosovo will remain part of Serbia - even if that means delaying EU membership.

    Mr Kostunica told the Belgrade daily Danas that EU membership conditions did not include "territorial concessions".

    "Therefore, Serbia cannot be asked to do anything of the kind," he said.

    Some parts of the international community had linked the two issues, he said. Kosovo has been UN-administered since Nato's 1999 air raids on Serbia.

    Mr Kostunica's comments come a week after ethnic Albanian and Serbian leaders held their first face-to-face meeting since 1999 on the long-term future of the breakaway Serbian province. No breakthrough was achieved.

    The United Nations special envoy for Kosovo, Martti Ahtisaari, said Serbia was willing to give everything but independence, while the majority ethnic Albanians in Kosovo wanted nothing but independence.

    Full story

    EU membership? YEAH RIGHT!
  • KinKyJ
    Platinum Poser
    • Jun 2004
    • 13438

    #2
    Re: Next time we'll drop bigger bombs

    A bit later...

    KAMENICA, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) -- The bodies of more than 1,000 victims of the 1995 Srebrenica massacre have been exhumed from Bosnia's biggest mass grave, forensic experts said Thursday.
    Experts began digging in June in the vicinity of the eastern Bosnian village of Kamenica, near the border with Serbia, where they previously had found eight other mass graves. From this grave, the team exhumed 144 complete and 1,009 partial skeletons.
    "This is the largest mass grave so far found in Bosnia-Herzegovina," said Murat Hurtic, head of the forensics team.
    The remains were heavily damaged as is typical of "secondary" mass graves in which victims' bodies are moved by the perpetrators from the original burial site in an attempt to hide the crime. This often was done by with bulldozers, which complicates the identification process because parts of the same body are found in two or even three different mass graves.
    Along with the remains, experts found 14 documents indicating the victims were killed in the Srebrenica massacre, Europe's worst mass execution since World War II.
    In 1995, Serb troops overran the eastern Bosnian enclave of Srebrenica, which the United Nations had declared a safe zone. Serb troops killed as many as 8,000 Muslim men and boys.

    Full story: http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/europe....ap/index.html

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