Homepage
| Inhaltsverzeichnis - Contents
Background-Article :
It is as if we were Buried Alive
Increasingly Difficult Situation of Refugees
from Kosmet in Kragujevac Settlement Bresnica
Danas, Belgrade, FR Yugoslavia, December 27 1999
Link to detailed new map of
Kosova 197 KB
Link to new albanian map of Kosova
http://www.eGroups.com/group/decani/23834.html?
11:53 AM Wed 5 Jan
Danas [Today] is an opposition daily published
in Belgrade
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
On the spot
Increasingly Difficult Situation of Refugees
from Kosmet in Kragujevac Settlement Bresnica
"It is as if we were Buried
Alive"
by Zoran Radovanovic
Danas, Belgrade, FR Yugoslavia, December 27 1999
During the last few weeks and days the group
of 200 persons expelled from Metohija and now living in the collective
center in Bresnica has been freezing most of the time. Besides space heaters,
which are more frequently broken than working, they have no other source
of heat
Kragujevac - In the corner, next to a double
metal door, and right next to a TV set (a cartoon is on) and a space heater
which is blowing warm air, a crowd of children, 2-3 to 5-6 years old is
crouching, jostling, and from time to time, jumping. They are kept company
by several adult men, dressed as if they were about to go skiing. Women
are busily doing something a few steps away, while the cold is barging
in from everywhere: through half closed doors and large glass panes. The
snow on the tin roof is melting under the cold December sun and the water
is leaking through...
This was the scene a
few days ago in the collective center (a store owned by the supermarket
chain PKB) in the Kragujevac settlement Bresnica. There, a group of 200
refugees from Metohija has been trying to somehow survive for almost six
months. Among them there are 95 children of preschool and primary school
age. During the last few days this group of persons expelled from Metohija
has been freezing since, besides space heaters which are more frequently
broken than working, they have no other source of heat.
Children are Crying and Coughing
"It is the hardest at night. Children are crying
and coughing. There is a draft and water is leaking everywhere. Some sort
of wet cold is coming from the concrete floor... This is a tragedy. Two
hundred of us entered alive in a grave. And this shouldn't have happened
to us. My brothers and myself have been for months on the front in Metohija
and here we are, under a thin layer of tin, in the middle of a winter,"
says for Danas Milorad Ilic (37) from Djakovica. During the night between
Wednesday and Thursday, sometimes 'round midnight, he took his feverish
six-year-old son Nemanja to a friend's place so that he could be in warmth
for a while. Milorad wanted to avoid another family tragedy: in August
his niece Vesna (Ilic) found a tragic end in the bathroom of the nearby
soccer club Slavija.
He worries that the
refugees from Metohija could freeze to death in Bresnica or, in the best
possible case, fall ill en masse until their problems with heating and
(un)sanitary and inhuman living conditions in PKB's supermarket are sorted
out. He accuses the state and its government for the situation shared by
him and his fellow two hundred refugees. He testifies that the Serbian
police pillaged everything while it was in Metohija. "Full trucks of goods
and valuables were shipped by policemen from Djakovica and Pec to Montenegro.
We remained as poor as we were before the war," claims Ilic.
"We must bear our fate,
and it is a horrible fate. We are day and night on this concrete floor,
space heaters are getting broken and fuses burning all the time. The children
have it the worst. We adults can somehow pull through," adds Mila Petkovic
(45), also from Djakovica. She left in Djakovica a three-storied house
and memories of good life and good relations with Albanians. "Our first
neighbor, an Albanian, saw us off with tears in his eyes," she says and
claims that "all of this happened because of politicians".
It is President's Fault
Recently, says Mila Petkovic, she dialed her
phone number in Djakovica. A woman picked up the phone. An ethnic Albanian.
"I said 'Mirdita' [Good day], she said 'mirdita'. I asked 'A jeni mir?'
[How are you doing?], and she replied with the same words and asked who
I was and what I wanted. I said that that was my house and she responded
'No it isn't. Now it is mine'. I couldn't take it anymore so I hung up,"
says Mila Petkovic and claims that Albanians from Djakovica did not break
into her house because she knows them well and had good relations with
them. She claims that the new "tenants" in her house are farmers, most
likely from Albania.
In spite of all of that,
Mila Petkovic would like to return to Djakovica, since she does not consider
her current conditions worth living. "I would return with my family, if
only someone could guarantee peace. We can have one meal a day, but let
it be peace... We cannot take this anymore," she says and adds with resignation
that the fate of expelled individuals will be from now on "decided by others".
A young man, who introduces
himself as Zoran, would also return to his hometown of Suva Reka. He is
in exile with two small children and a wife. Zoran blames the president
of this country for his fate and the fate of other refugees from Metohija.
He believes that he (the president of this state) "should not end up in
the Hague, but should be crucified in the center of Belgrade".
Todor Djordjevic (57),
another inhabitant of Suva Reka, does not talk about return but he is also
having a horrible time in the collective center in Bresnica. Especially
at night when the temperature drops below zero, when children cry and cough,
and wet cold barges in from all sides...
wplarre@bndlg.de Mail
senden
Seite erstellt am 06.01.2000