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Abductions and Disappearances of non-Albanians in Kosovo
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DEČANI (DEÇAN)
1. Missing
2. Abducted
2.1. Killed
2.2. Free
2.2.1. Released by the KLA
DJAKOVICA
1. Missing
2. Abducted
2.2. Free
2.2.1. Released by the KLA
2.2.2. Escaped

DEČANI (DEÇAN)

1. Missing

Vukanić, Vlastimir (M, 80), Montenegrin, from Junik (Kalavaj (Mahalla e Kallavaj) neighborhood)), Dečani Municipality – disappeared on 12 June 1999 in Dečani; last seen by the Albanian family Sadiku.

Vukanić’s son recounted that his father remained in Dečani after he and his family fled to Serbia on 10 July. Albanian neighbors, the Sadiku family, who had moved in with the Vukanićs during the NATO intervention, stayed with him until 12 June when they returned to their home. These neighbors told the son they had agreed with his father that he would move to their house the next day. When he did not appear, they went to look for him and found the Vukanić house empty. KLA members torched the house that afternoon.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Krstić, Milija (M, 70), Serb, retired; his wife Krstić, Vilka (F, 60), Slovene, housewife, from Dečani (60 Cara Dušana St.) - disappeared on 11 July 1999.
Olga Krstić stated that she last saw her parents in mid-June when she fled Djakovica to Serbia. She had no contact with them after that date. At the end of July, a Serbian Orthodox priest from Dečani informed her that her parents were missing and said their neighbors had told him they were last seen on 11 July.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Markušić, Omer, (M), Montenegrin Muslim, from Plav - disappeared on the Peć (Pejë)-Dečani road in early December 1999.
According to the source, Markušić went missing in an area under the control of Besim Čeku (Besim Çeku), a local KLA commander.
Source: Slav Muslims from Plav, Montenegro, Protest in Peć, Kosovo, KOSOVO DAILY NEWS, 6 December 1999

Jovanović, Mile (M); Petrović, Boban (M) and two unidentified men, Serbs, from Dečani - disappeared in January 2000 in Dečani.
Source: Pet otetih u Dečanima [Five Abducted in Dečani], BLIC, 31 January 2000

2. Abducted

Pavlović, Borivoje (M, 65), Serb from Dečani, retired, resided in Peć - abducted between 15 and 17 June 1999 in Dečani.
Pavlović’s sister Angelina told the HLC that her brother was last seen when he left the Dečani Monastery to visit his other sister who lived in the town. Neighbors in this sister’s building told her that a group of KLA men followed Pavlović into the apartment and took him away.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Jolaja, Binak (Jollaj Binak) (M, 80); his son Jolaja, Muharem (23); and grandson Jolaja, Binak (13), Roma, from Glodjani (Glloxhan), Dečani Municipality – abducted from their home on 20 and 21 June 1999. The grandson was released while his father and grandfather were taken to the KLA prison in Piskote (Piskotë), Djakovica Municipality (Gjakovë).

A member of the Jolaja family recounted that four KLA members, three of whom he identified as Bug and Muharem Sadrija and Arben Neziraj, came to their house on 20 June. After verbally and physically abusing the whole family, they took away the 13-year-old Binak but released him on the road halfway to Piskote, ordering him to tell the rest of the family to leave Kosovo immediately.
Later that day, the same KLA men came again and led away Muharem Jolaja. The next day, 21 June, they came for the third time and took the witness’s father, Binak Jolaja.

The witness stated that the KLA headquarters at Piskote was at the time under the command of Ramus Haradinaj. Following the abductions, the Jolaja family fled Kosovo to Montenegro.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Sadula, Faredin (Sadullahu, Fahredin) (M, 68) Gorani, from Dečani (Edvarda Kardelja St.), retired - abducted on 15 July 1999 in Dečani.

Sadula’s daughter Ibiše (Ibishe) recounted that from mid-June her parents spent the nights with their Albanian neighbors because they were afraid of the KLA, and the days at their own house. When their son Fatmir, who was at the Dečani Monastery with his family, came to see his parents at about 7 a.m. on 15 July, he found that the house has been torched during the night. His mother was in the yard and told him that his father was at a neighbor’s house. After spending some time with his mother, Fatmir left to take care of some business in the town center. When his father returned about 9 a.m., Mrs Sadula told him Fatmir had been and had gone to the town center. Mr Sadula went to look for him and was not seen or heard from again.

Mrs Sadula was told by Albanian friends that her husband had been abducted and that two Albanians from the vicinity of Dečani, were among the abductors4.
Source: HLC, witness statement

4  Identities known to the HLC.
 

2.1. Killed

Nikovčević, Avdo (M, 65), Muslim, from Rastavica, Dečani Municipality; his brother Nikovčević, Zaim (63), Montenegrin Muslim, from Kruševo near Plav - disappeared on 4 July 1999. Their bodies were found on 18 August 1999.
The Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Sandžak reported that Avdo Nikovčević, who was staying with his family at his brother’s in Montenegro, returned to Rastavica with his brother Zaim to put the house in order for the family’s return. The two brothers disappeared after their first night in Rastavica.
Their bodies were found on 18 August in a woods near Košare (Koshare), a village on Mt Junik near the border with Albania.
Source: Izveštaj o položaju Muslimana-Bošnjaka na Kosovu nakon dolaska KFOR-a [Report on the Position of Bosniac-Muslims in Kosovo Following KFOR’s Deployment], Helsinški odbor za ljudska prava u Sandžaku [Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Sandžak], October 1999

2.2. Free

2.2.1. Released by the KLA

Dž.J. (M, 29), Roma, from Dečani, employee of municipal sanitation company, police reservist – abducted from his home by three KLA members on 17 June 1999.

Dž.J. was first taken to a barn behind the Čakor (Çakor) Restaurant where he was beaten and questioned about why he had been a reservist and what he did as an employee of the local sanitation company during the war. He was then led into the restaurant, in which the local KLA headquarters was located, questioned for several hours and released. Before letting him go, the KLA told him he had three days to leave his house. Dž.J. and his family immediately sought refuge at the Serbian Orthodox monastery in Dečani and on 3 July left for Montenegro under a KFOR escort. On the basis of his son’s story, Dž.J.’s father concluded that a local Albanian, Avdulj Muškolaj (Avdyl Mushkolaj), was among the KLA men who beat and questioned Dž.J.
Source: HLC, witness statement


DJAKOVICA

1. Missing

Hadri, Djevira (Hadri Xhevahira) (F, 37), Romani, from Djakovica - disappeared after 24 March in Djakovica.
Source: Roma in the Kosovo Conflict, ERRC, November 1999

Bojović, Predrag (M, 20) Serbian Serb, from Čačak, Yugoslav Army member - disappeared on 15 or 16 April 1999 at the Košare frontier post on the Albanian border.
Members of Bojović’s military unit told the family that he was wounded in the hip on 15 April before the unit pulled out of the area. Bojović gave them his papers and they left him under a tree, believing that he would be collected by the casualty evacuation unit.

The Yugoslav Army first notified Bojović’s parents that he went missing between 15 and 16 April. Later, a Colonel Živanović sent a telegram saying that Predrag Bojović was presumed killed in action as, according to eyewitness accounts, there was only a one-percent chance that he survived. Predrag Bojović is therefore listed as killed in action. His body was never found.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Acić, Zlatko (M, 20), from Smederevo; Kostić, Dejan (M, 20), from Klenak, Šabac Municipality; Ivanković, Saša (M, 20), from Valjevo; and Mitić, Dejan (M), from Trupale, Niš Municipality, Serbian Serbs, Yugoslav Army members - disappeared on 16 April 1999 at Maja Glava near the Košare frontier post on the Albanian border.

Saša Ivanković’s father Milomir recounted that he last spoke with his son in the afternoon of 27 March when Saša told him he was in a schoolhouse.

The Yugoslav Army notified the Ivanković family that their son went missing in action at Maja Glava near the Košare frontier post. Lt. Col. Ljubinko Ljurković sent the families of the missing soldiers an official report according to which they were last seen about 11 a.m. on 16 April during combat operations.

The families later heard from other soldiers that Yugoslav Army troops fighting the KLA had entered 15 kilometers into Albanian territory, that some soldiers were wounded and their units were unable to take them when they pulled out or to return for them.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Mijatović, Zoran (M, 20), Serbian Serb, from Raška, Yugoslav Army member - disappeared on 16 April 1999.
Mijatović went missing on 16 April at the Košare frontier post near the Albanian border, west of Djakovica.
Source: "OZNA" Detective Agency website

Peković, Spasoje (M, 58), Serb, from Šeremet, Djakovica Municipality – last seen on 5 May 1999.
Source: Persons missing in relation to the events in Kosovo from January 1998, ICRC

Stanojević, Vladan (M, 25); Komatović, Saša (M, 27), Serbian Serbs, Yugoslav Army members - disappeared on 6 May 1999 at Košare frontier post near the Albanian border.

Stanojević and Komatović were wounded on 6 May and transferred to a hospital, after which all trace of them was lost.

The Peace and Tolerance Center reported that the Yugoslav Army notified Komatović’s father that Saša had been wounded between 8 and 9 a.m. on 6 May. On 27 May, however, the Army informed Mr Komatović that his son was listed as missing in action. Mr Komatović heard later that Saša was wounded in the head and his eyesight impaired.
Source: Zagrljeni otišli u misteriju [Together in Mysterious Disappearance], BLIC, 15 September 1999; "OZNA" Detective Agency website

Rokvić, Dragan (M, 27), Serbian Serb, from Zrenjanin – last seen on 23 May 1999 at Visa near Žabalj, Djakovica Municipality.
Source: "OZNA" Detective Agency website

Konović, Sreten, (M), Serb, from Djakovica – disappeared after 14 June 1999 in Djakovica.
Source: List of Serbs Kidnapped in Kosovo and Metohija (June-August), KOSOVO.COM

Soba, Vidosava (F, 69), Montenegrin, from Djakovica (Miloša Obilića St.) – last seen on 15 June 1999.

A neighbor recounted that she passed by Mrs. Soba’s house on 15 July and saw several KLA members beating the elderly woman. The KLA men, described by the neighbor as very young, left soon afterwards.

When the neighbor passed by the house again on 20 June, she noticed that the front door had been broken down. She investigated and found that the house had been ransacked and Mrs. Soba was no longer there.
Source: Church Committee, Kosovo, Kosovo

Biberdžić, Dragica (F,73), Serb, from Ćerim (Qerim), Djakovica Municipality – disappeared on 15 June 1999.
Source: Church Committee, Kosovo, Kosovo

Milić, Momčilo (M, 49), Serb, from Djakovica – last seen on 15 June 1999.
Source: "OZNA" Detective Agency website

Vukasović, Lazar (M, 64), Serb – last seen on 17 June 1999 in Djakovica.
Source: Persons missing in relation to the events in Kosovo from January 1998, ICRC

Ičević, Milka (F, 73), Serb – last seen on 19 June 1999 in Djakovica.
Source: Persons missing in relation to the events in Kosovo from January 1998, ICRC

Petković, Živko (M, 61), retired; his wife Petković, Desanka (58), housewife, Serbs, from Djakovica (13a Stanka Djordjevića St.) – disappeared after 26 June 1999.

Petković’s son related that he and his brother left Djakovica on 12 June. Their parents stayed in their house, together with an Albanian neighbor, Baškim Djoha (Bashkim Xhoka), who had moved in with them after Serbian forces torched his house during the NATO intervention. The sons were unable to call their parents from Serbia as telephone connections were cut.

In early January 2000, they telephoned Djoha’s sister in Prizren who told them their parents had decided to flee to Serbia as KLA members frequently came to their home and questioned them about their sons. They left for Serbia in their white Citroen car at 2.30 p.m. on 19 June, taking the road to Peć. Her brother had removed the license plates, believing that the Petkovićs would be safer without them.

An Albanian friend told Petković’s son it was not true that his parents left Djakovica on 19 June as claimed by Djoha, since she saw them every day from 12 to 26 June when she brought them food. She discontinued the visits when KLA members threatened her and her family with death for “cooperating” with Serbs.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Petričević, Dragica (F, 77), Serb, from Djakovica (147 Miloša Obilića St.) – disappeared on 5 July 1999.

Mrs Petričević’s daughter-in-law told the HLC she last saw Mrs Petričević when she visited her in the evening of 4 July. The next day, she saw traces of blood, Mrs. Petričević’s hair clip and dentures on the steps of the house next door. This house belonged to Mrs Petričević’s son and was occupied by an Albanian, Idriz Daci, a Djakovica lawyer, his wife and two sons, one of whom was a KLA member, when Mrs Petričević’s son fled Djakovica.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Radovanović, Milorad (M, 60); his wife, Radovanović, Zorka (54), Serbs, from Osek Hilija, Djakovica Municipality – disappeared on the night of 15/16 July 1999 in Osek Hilija.

They were the only Serbs left in the village and their family has no further information on them.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Gunga, Musa (M, 60), Rom, from Djakovica – disappeared on 25 July 1999 on the road from Brekovac (Brekovc) to his home in Sadika Požege St. (Sadik Pozhegu).

Following the return of Albanian refugees and displaced to Djakovica, KLA members on several occasions stormed into Gunga’s home and stole the family’s valuables. Gunga’s son Hisen reported the theft to KFOR and was beaten up by the KLA. On another occasion, his son Arif was taken to the KLA headquarters in the Paštrik (Pashtriku) Hotel. He was held for two days, questioned about events during the war and beaten.

When Arif returned, the Gungas moved to Brekovac where other Roma had also sought refuge. Musa Gunga went missing on 25 July when he went to check up on his house in Djakovica. The family reported his disappearance to KFOR.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Stolić, Goran (M, 25), Serb, from Djakovica – disappeared on 29 October 1999.
Source: Persons missing in relation to the events in Kosovo from January 1998, ICRC

2. Abducted

Lazarević, Jovan (M, 87); his wife Lazarević, Ljubica (75), Serbs, from Djakovica – abducted by KLA members from their apartment on the night of 13/14 June 1999.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Kostić, Marko (M, 57), Serb, retired, from Djakovica (25 Dunavska Kolonija St.) – abducted by the KLA from his home on 15 June 1999.

A friend of the family recounted that a group of masked KLA members stormed into the Petković house, led him out, pushed him into a car and drove away.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Beća, Halid (Beqa, Halid), (M, 32), Rom, from Crmljane (Crmjane), Djakovica Municipality – abducted by the KLA from his father’s house in Piskote, Djakovica Municipality on 16 June 1999. His father Beća, Miftar (Beqa, Myftar) (55), was taken by the KLA on 17 June, beaten, questioned and released later that day.

Relatives of the family stated that Halid Beća was visiting his father in Piskote district when Arif Šalja (Arif Shala), the KLA commander in Crmljane, Jah Bušati (Jahë Bushati) and another KLA member came to the house. All three were in KLA uniforms and armed. They led Halid Beća out of the house, pushed him into a Lada car and drove him away.

The next morning, the same KLA members returned and took Miftar Beća to a woods in Rakovina (Rakovinë) village. They questioned and beat him until midnight and then drove him home. The elder Beća told the family he had not seen his son.

The Bećas fled Kosovo to Belgium shortly afterwards.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Beljulji, Fadilj (Behluli, Fadil) (M,23), Rom, from Djakovica, staying at the refugee facility in Brekovac, Djakovica Municipality – abducted by the KLA from the Djakovica hospital on 17 June 1999.

Beljulji’s father recounted that Djakovica Roma were frequently attacked by the KLA, owing to which KFOR on 13 June placed them in the refugee facility in Brekovac just outside the town. On 16 June, doctors came to the facility to examine the Roma. Fadilj Beljulji’s son Vedat was ill and was taken to the Djakovica hospital, accompanied by his father. When they arrived at the hospital, some ten KLA members attempted to seize Beljulji but he managed to get away and reach Brekovac. After receiving medical attention, his son was returned to Brekovac and doctors told the family he had to be brought back to the hospital the next day.

When Beljulji came to the hospital on 17 June with Vedat and his friend Lazo Zećiri (Lazo Zeqiri) they were again attacked by the same KLA men. Beljulji was taken away while Zećiri escaped. Vedat was returned to Brekovac by KFOR two hours later.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Dedić, Marjan (M, 44), Serb, from Djakovica, trucker - abducted by KLA members from his home on the night of 17/18 June 1999.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Janjić, Slobodan (M, 53), Serb, from Djakovica (13 Dimitrija Tucovića St.), fireman – abducted by the KLA on 18 June 1999.

Janjić’s sister-in-law told the HLC that Mrs Janjić and her children left Djakovica on 12 June 1999. Neighbors last saw Janjić between 10 and 11 a.m. on 18 June when four men forced him out of the building, pushed him into a car and drove him away.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Tafaj (first name unknown), (F, under 18), Roma, from Djakovica – held in the KLA prison at the Paštrik Hotel from where she was taken to an unknown destination on 18 June 1999.

A witness who was also held at the hotel stated that the Roma girl was taken away by a KLA man known by the nickname “Džifa” (Xhifa). A Roma woman,
Afijete Zećiri (Afijete Zeqiri), 10 Roma men and an Albanian man were among
those imprisoned at the hotel. Four of the Roma men were shot5  while the remaining six were released.
Source: HLC, witness statement

5  Witness statement on the shooting of the four Roma: Djakovica, 2.1. Killed.
 

Imeri, Baškim (Ymeri, Bashkim) (M, 50), Rom, from Paljabard (Palabardh), Djakovica Municipality – abducted by the KLA from his home on 23 June 1999.

Imeri was visiting with his sister in Piskote, Djakovica Municipality, on 20 June when Miftar Elezi and another three KLA members came into the house about 1 p.m. They took Imeri to their headquarters in the village where he was questioned by Alija Met (Alija Metё) and Esad Ljuma (Esad Luma). He was asked if he had looted Albanian houses and slapped, kicked and punched during the questioning. He was released four hours later and returned to Paljabard.

Three days later, on 23 June, Ramuš Haradinaj, Alija Met, Uka Derviš (Uka Dervish), Martin Ndrecaj, Prek Ndrecaj, Uke Ndrecaj (Ukё Ndrecaj) and Sandi Binak, all KLA members, came to his house, said they were taking him to their commander, Rustem Beriša (Rustem Berisha), at the KLA headquarters in Junik, Dečani Municipality, and drove him away.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Kuzmanović, Djordjije (M, 42), Serb, from Djakovica (42 Srpska St.), post office employee – abducted by the KLA on 21 June 1999.6
Source: HLC, witness statement

6  Witness statement on Kuzmanović’s abduction: Djakovica, 2.2. 2. Escaped.
 

Antonijević, Zoran (M, 32), Serb, from Djakovica (227 Cara Dušana St.) - abducted on 23 June 1999 in Djakovica.

A friend of the family related that Antonijević was leaving his apartment building in the afternoon of 23 June when he was stopped by men in KLA uniforms waiting outside and taken away by force.

Antonijević had a brain tumor and his family doubts that he could have lived without his medication. The day after his abduction, a group of KLA members came to the Antonijević apartment and ordered the family to leave Djakovica or be killed. The Antonijevićs went to the KFOR headquarters from where they were escorted to the Patriarchate building. They fled to Montenegro on 25 June.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Kabaš, Milenko (Kabash, Milenko) (M, 41), mixed Albanian/Serb parentage, from Djakovica – abducted by the KLA on 25 June 1999 from his sister’s apartment in Djakovica.

Kabaš’s sister recounted that KLA members came to the apartment of her neighbors on 25 June and started searching it. She went to see what was going on. The KLA men, who were in civilian clothes, seized the neighbor’s weapons and left. While she was still with the neighbors, she heard a noise from her own fifth floor. She returned to her apartment and saw that the door was open and her brother was no longer there. Through the window, she saw three KLA members in camouflage uniforms leading away her brother, who was holding a bloody towel to the left side of his face. She identified one of the KLA men as Faton. At gunpoint, the KLA men forced Kabaš to put his hands against the wall, searched him, bundled him into a car and drove away. When she went downstairs, an Albanian neighbor told her that her brother had resisted the KLA men and was wounded in the left ear, and that he had tossed him a towel to staunch the heavy bleeding. Kabaš’s sister immediately reported the abduction to KFOR.

On 13 June, the same KLA men came to the building again, and encountered Kabaš’s sister at the entrance. Obviously not recognizing her as the woman they were looking for, they asked if she knew where the “Shkija” (Shkija)7  from the fifth floor was. She escaped being taken herself by replying in Albanian that the woman they wanted had just gone into the neighboring building. As soon as the KLA men left, she sought refuge with neighbors from where she called an Albanian friend who came for her and took her to her own apartment on the other side of town. She fled Kosovo to Serbia two days later.
Source: HLC, witness statement

7   Derogatory for Serb.
 

Staletović, Milan (M, 73); his wife Staletović, Marica (68), Serbs, from Djakovica (Building C, fourth floor, Cara Dušan St.) – abducted from their apartment by the KLA on the night of 26/27 June 1999.

The Staletovićs daughter, Stanka, related that her parents lived alone as she resided in Serbia and her sister Radojka with her family fled Djakovica in May 1999. They lost touch with their parents at that time as telephone communications with Djakovica were cut.

In late May, Stanka asked a friend who was going to Djakovica to take a parcel of food to her parents and to tell them to leave the town and come to her as soon as possible. The elderly couple, however, refused to leave their home.

By mid-June most Serbs had left the town. Stanka’s friend returned to Djakovica at the end of June to pick up some belongings. She went to see Stanka’s parents but did not find them in their apartment. When she returned to Serbia, she gave Stanka a telephone number in Rožaje (Montenegro) at which she could reach Iljir (Ilir), an Albanian neighbor of her parents who frequently traveled from Djakovica to Rožaje. When Stanka called this Albanian, he said he knew what had happened to her parents. He added that Mrs Staletović had been a good woman but was killed because of her husband who insisted on saying that Djakovica was a Serb town. The Albanian refused to give any more details.
Stanka then reported her parents’ disappearance to KFOR who interviewed residents of her parents’ building, who stated they last saw Marica and Milan Staletović on 26 June and believed they had left for Serbia.

A Muslim friend of the Staletović family, who also fled Djakovica to Serbia, told Stanka that she frequently went to see her parents and shopped for them because they were afraid to leave their apartment. Unidentified Albanians came several times and threatened to kill them unless they moved out. Mrs Staletović, who spoke fluent Italian, on several occasions requested protection from KFOR who, however, were not able to provide it. This was confirmed to their daughter by KFOR.

On 23 and 24 June, KLA members took Mrs Staletović to their headquarters in the local driving school. She was questioned for long periods by the KLA commander who, on 24 June, issued her a permit allowing her freedom of movement in the town.

At 1 a.m. on 27 June, armed and uniformed KLA members came to the Staletović building. A friend of theirs, who was visiting another resident in the building at the time, saw them lead the couple, gagged and their hands bound, from their apartment, push them into a car parked outside the building and drive away.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Ljalja, Bekim (Lala, Bekim) (M, 27), Rom, from Djakovica – abducted by the KLA in central Djakovica on 27 June 1999.

Mrs Ljalja last saw her son when he to left home to go to work in the morning of 27 June. That evening, a man came to tell the family that Ljalja had been stopped by KLA members on the way to his workplace and taken away. Two days after his disappearance, another two men told the family they had seen Ljalja in the KLA prison in the Junik building in central Djakovica where they too were held. One of the men said there were other Roma besides Ljalja in the prison and that they were beaten there.
Source: Roma in the Kosovo Conflict, ERRC, November 1999

Vekić, Milica (F, 59), Serb – abducted by the KLA from her apartment in the evening of 1 July 1999.

A neighbor told the HLC that Mrs. Vekić was led by KLA men into a butcher’s shop owned by one Agimi.
Source: HLC, witness statement

T.F. (M, 27), Rom, from Djakovica – abducted before 6 July 1999.
Friends of T.F. saw when a group of KLA members stopped him in the town center and took him away to an unknown destination.
Source: The Current Situation of Roma in Kosovo, KOSOVO DAILY NEWS, 12 September 1999

Jovanović, Ilija "Ilja" (M, 71), Serb, from Djakovica (Maršala Tita St.), retired – abducted by the KLA from his apartment on 7 July 1999.
A neighbor stated that Jovanović was taken by KLA men from his apartment in the Paštrik Hotel late on 7 July. Shortly before the abduction, KLA members threatened to kill Jovanović and his family.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Jevrić, Darinka (F, 60); and her three sons, Serbs, from Djakovica (Block 3, entrance 19, Miloša Obilića St.) – abducted on 7 July 1999.

The family’s neighbor recounted hearing the voices of unknown men, screaming and other loud noises from the Jevrić apartment on the night of 7 July. She then heard Mrs Jevrić weeping and pleading,” Kill me but leave my children alone!” The neighbors were afraid to go to the help of the Jevrićs. When the noise stopped after a time, Mrs Jevrić and her sons had disappeared.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Petrović, Mića (M, 61), lay judge with the Municipal Court in Djakovica, retired police officer; his wife Petrović, Radmila (56), Serbs, from Djakovica (Block 3, entrance 19, Miloša Obilića St.) – abducted from their apartment on 11 July 1999.

A neighbor stated that KLA members in civilian clothes came to the Petrović apartment for the first time on 25 June, searched it, seized the weapons they found and left. Around 3 a.m. on 11 July, the KLA came again, led out Mr and Mrs Petrović and took them away.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Cigani, Elmir (M, 35), Rom, from Erić (Hereq), Djakovica Municipality – abducted on 17 July 1999.

Mrs Cigani recounted that five Albanians, among whom she recognized Džavid (Xhavid) and Fljamor (Flamur) from Jasići (Jasiq) village, Djakovica Municipality, came to her house on 15 July. They beat her son, saying he had betrayed the Albanians by working for the Serbian police. Before leaving, they warned Elmir not to leave the house.

Two days later, on 17 July, three other Albanians came and led Elmir away. They said he would be brought back shortly, and that the family had to leave Kosovo. Elmir Cigani never returned home.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Imeraj, Avdulj (Ymeraj Avdyl) (M, 22), Rom, from Djakovica, laborer – abducted by the KLA in Brekovac, Djakovica Municipality, in July 1999.

Mrs. Imeraj recounted that three masked KLA members came for her husband, saying they needed some information from him. She recognized among the abductors the son of Isuf Smajljilji (Isuf Smajlili), a Djakovica Albanian. Her husband did not return home and she and the rest of the family fled to Montenegro in August 1999.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Ziberaj, Gen (Zyberaj, Gen), (M), Rom, from Djakovica – abducted in late July 1999. Ziberaj was taken from his home by KLA members to their headquarters in Piskote, Djakovica Municipality.

When his wife and son went to look for him there, the KLA beat the son and drove them away.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Račić, Radovan (M, 61), Serb, from Djakovica (2/15 Dimitrija Tucovića St.) – abducted in August 1999.

Mrs Račić and her children fled Djakovica to Montenegro in mid-July. A neighbor from Djakovica informed her in September that KLA members had taken her husband from their apartment. The neighbor said she first heard a noise and, looking through the window, saw several KLA men lead Račić out of the building, push him into a car and drive him away.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Mojsić, Zvezdan (M, 27), Baljošević, Budimir (M, 55), director of Orahovac kindergarten; Dedić, Negovan (M, 33), secretary of Orahovac Automobile Club; Milenković, Staniša (M, 43), director of Orahovac Sanitation Company; Jakić, Goran (M, 23), employee of Orvin Winery in Orahovac, Serbs – abducted on 29 October 1999.

The families of these five men stated that they paid Negovan Vitošević, a Serb, 1,200 deutsche marks each for passage to Montenegro. The families later heard from Agron Avduljija (Agron Avdyli), a Roma man who organized these departures from Orahovac, that Vitošević gave him 800 marks per man and kept the remaining 400 marks for himself.

The five left the Serb quarter of Orahovac at about 11 p.m. on 28 October. Mojsić and Dedić were carrying ID cards in the names of Nebojša Kujundžić and Sreten Vitošević respectively, while the other three had their own. Avduljija drove them to Djakovica in a Yugo Florida car and stopped by to see a relative, one Bujar there. He went into the house while the five Serbs waited in the car. A few minutes later, Avduljija heard calls for help. He was afraid to go out and see what was going on, and does not know who abducted the five Serb men.

The families were subsequently told that their men were being held by Hekuran Hoda, a local KLA commander, that they were imprisoned in the building of the Kosovo Protection Corps and later transferred to Piskote district, Djakovica Municipality. In late November, UNMIK said an investigation had been launched but has not publicized any results.
Source: HLC, witness statement

2.1. Killed

Bećiri, Ibiš (Beqiri Ibish) (M, 59), Rom, from Hereć, Djakovica Municipality – abducted on 18 June 1999; his body was found in Jasić, Dečani Municipality.
Bećiri’s daughter told the HLC that she had been a member of the Serbian police force. She and her father were taken by the KLA for the first time on 28 May 1998. Among their abductors, she recognized Džosaj Buca (Xhocaj Buca) and Ali Riza (a.k.a. Rezak). Father and daughter were held in the woods on Mt Djerovica near the Albanian border where they were questioned and beaten for two days before they managed to escape.

When the Serbian police and Yugoslav Army withdrew from Kosovo, Bećiri’s daughter left Djakovica for Montenegro on 12 June. Bećiri remained in the village. On 18 June, he went to see his sister and check up on his daughter’s house. A group of KLA members intercepted him near his sister’s house. His sister-in-law Zenija Bećiri was with them and pointed him out to the KLA men. The men led Bećiri away, saying they were taking him to Jasić village to say goodbye to his daughter for the last time. Bećiri’s niece observed the incident and identified one of the abductors as Ali Riza, the KLA commander in Ponoševac, Djakovica Municipality, who had abducted Bećiri and his daughter in 1998.

A few days later, Bećiri’s mother, sister and friends searched for him and found his body, bearing signs of violence, in Jasić.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Ramoci, Besim (M, 23), Rom, from Djakovica (171 Bore Stankovića St.) – taken to the local KLA headquarters on 17 June, questioned for eight hours and released. KLA members came again the next day, 18 June 1999, and abducted him.

Ramoci’s uncle stated that three KLA members, Mark Mikuši (Mark Mikushi), Hoda Hekuran, and Besim Vokši (Besim Vokshi) came for Ramoci on 17 June. They did not find him as he was hiding in the attic and took away his young brother Ćamilj (Qamil), telling the family the boy would be killed if Ramoci did not turn himself in. With others members of the family, Ramoci went to the KLA headquarters at the Paštrik Hotel. The KLA released Ćamil and detained Ramoci. He was beaten, asked if he had assisted Serbs or stolen, and released eight hours later.

At about 6 p.m. the next day, 18 June, the same KLA members came and took Ramoci to the hotel again. He was physically abused and reportedly shot in front of the local abattoir on 25 June. His body was not found.8
Source: HLC, witness statement

8  Witness statement on the shooting of Ramoci: Djakovica, 2.1. Killed.
 

Gagović, Rade (M, 48), Montenegrin, from Djakovica (209 Njegoševa St.), waiter - disappeared on 18 June 1999.

Gagović’s son told the HLC that he and his family fled Djakovica to Montenegro on 18 June. His father refused to leave his home. KLA members came for his father later that day, took him to the basement of the Paštrik Hotel where he was physically abused for a week. He was reportedly shot outside the Djakovica abattoir on 25 June; his body was not found.9
Source: HLC, witness statement

9  Witness statement on the shooting of Gagović: Djakovica, 2.1. Killed.
 

Šalja, Redža (Shala, Rexhë) (M, 23); Krasnići, Bajram (Krasniqi, Bajram) (M, 45); Rulji (Ruli), first name unknown (M,23), Roma, from Djakovica – imprisoned by the KLA for seven days and shot on 25 June 1999.

The HLC witness, the brother of Redža Šalja, recounted that he and Bajram Krasnići; Šalja, Beriša (Shala, Berisha); Ljušaj, Zvezdan (Lushaj, Zvezdan) Zećiri, Gzim (Gëzim, Zeqiri), his sister Zećiri, Afijete; Rulji; Šaban Baljaj (Shaban Balaj); and Hasan Tafaj were in a wedding party bringing the daughter of Hamza Tafaj, his brother’s bride, to her new home. They were returning with the bride when they were stopped by some ten armed and uniformed KLA members near the textile factory. The witness identified four of the KLA men as Kujtim, Azemi, “Pinça” and “Džifa,” all from Djakovica. Being Albanian, Beriša was allowed to go while all the others were taken first to the department store and then to the Paštrik Hotel. They were locked in the basement together with Rade Gagović (48), a Montenegrin, and Besim Ramoci (23), a Roma man, who had been brought in earlier.

The men were beaten every day, denied food and water, and forced to drink their own urine. The witness said the worst abuse was meted out by Džifa, who slashed his cheek with a knife, stubbed out cigarettes on his body and beat him with a metal bar. Džifa also inflicted knife cuts on Gagović and Gzim Zećiri, while another KLA man severed the tip of Zećiri’s index finger with a pair of pliers.
Afijete Zećiri was released on the second or third day. The bride was taken out of the basement and repeatedly raped until a KLA commander called “Besa” came, chastised the KLA men and said they would answer to him if they did it again. He allegedly told them they were not allowed to kidnap and rape Serb women but had a free rein with Serb men. Džifa nonetheless took away the bride one day and she was not seen or heard from afterwards.

The KLA released Gzim Zećiri, Beriša Šalja, Zvezdan Ljušaj, Šaban Baljaj and Hasan Tafaj four days later. On 25 June, Džifa and another two KLA members took Redža and his brother to the local abattoir. Rulji, Bajram Krasnići, Besim Ramoci and Rade Gagović had been brought there earlier. Džifa ordered them to line up and raise their hands, and fired a burst of shots from his automatic rifle. All the captives were hit except the witness who managed to escape. He hid in Djakovica until he was able to flee to Montenegro on 24 August 1999.
Source: HLC, witness statement

2.2. Free

2.2.1. Released by the KLA

Beća, Miftar (Beqa, Myftar) (M, 55), Rom, from Crmljane, Djakovica Municipality – taken from his home by the KLA on 17 June 1999, beaten and questioned and released later that day.10
Source: HLC, witness statement

10  Witness statement on the release of Beća: Djakovica, 2.2. Abducted.
 

H.A. (M, 24), Rom, from Djakovica, laborer – abducted on 20 June 1999 by the KLA, held for five days at different locations and severely beaten.

H.A. recounted that five KLA members, among whom he recognized Emin Sofija of Djakovica and one Fatmir of Drenica, came to his home on 20 June and ordered him to go with them to be questioned. They took him to the cellar of a house owned by Viktor Duši (Viktor Dushi) where there were six KLA members, four men and two young women, none of whom he knew. He was beaten with wooden clubs on the back and face and asked if he had killed or raped Albanians, or worked with Serbs against Albanians. His captors denied him water.

That same evening, H.A. was moved to Ćafa Pruš (Qafa Prush), a village close to the Albanian border, probably because his father had reported to KFOR that Emin Sofija had abducted his son. He was held in a stone house in which about 15 KLA members, none of whom he knew, beat him all night. The next morning, he was blindfolded, put on a tractor and taken to the cellar of a house in Dolj (Dal) village. The KLA men threatened to cut off his leg with a chain saw unless he confessed what he did to Albanians during the war. An elderly man with a gray beard who said his name was Adem Jašari (Adem Jashari) beat him with a wooden club. The next morning, H.A. was taken to the village graveyard in Grečina (Greqina) and forced to trample on the graves. The KLA men told him he would end up the same way as the people buried there. After some time, he was led to a house in which there were dozens of KLA members who tied him up, beat him with iron bars, placed a noose around his neck, fired shots close to him and threatened to kill him if he did not admit whom he had killed and what he had stolen. He was also forced to drink heavily salted water. When he begged to be killed, a KLA man struck him with a wooden club and broke his nose.
In the morning of 25 June, H.A. was untied, given some food and a cigarette, and told that he would be returned to Djakovica. He was thrown out of a car half-way to Djakovica and lay beside the road until a KLA member from Peć found him. When he recounted what had happened to him, the KLA man said it was criminal and drove him to Emin Sofija in Djakovica. Sofija told H.A. that he had been beaten by his men, who spared his life at his order. He gave him a KLA uniform to put on and took him home in the dark. He came for several nights to dress H.M.’s wounds but did not allow him to see a doctor. Some ten days later, when Sofija stopped coming, H.A. went to a doctor and was hospitalized. During the four days he was in hospital, KLA members threatened to kill his family unless he left the hospital. Fearing for the lives of his family, H.A. ran away from the hospital on the fifth day and fled Djakovica. He returned ten days later when KFOR provided protection for Roma in nearby Brekovac. H.A. and his family fled to Montenegro on 24 August 1999.
Source: HLC, witness statement

Zećiri, Gzim (M, 38); his sister Zećiri, Afijete (30); Baljaj, Šaban (M), Tafaj, Hasan (M); Ljušaj, Zvezdan (M), all Roma, from Djakovica; and Šalja, Beriša (M), Albanian, from Djakovica – detained on 18 June 1999 in Djakovica and taken to the KLA headquarters at the Paštrik Hotel.

Berisha was released immediately. Afijete Zećiri was allowed to go three days later and informed her brother's friends that he was being held by the KLA. These friends, including two Albanian nationals, went to the hotel and asked the KLA to release Gzim Zećiri because he had helped Albanians during the war. They threatened to kill the family members of some of the KLA men, who were still in Albania after fleeing Kosovo. The KLA then released Zećiri, Baljaj, Ljušaj, and Tafaj.11
Source: HLC, witness statement

11  Witness statement on the abduction and release of these persons: Djakovica, 2.1. Killed.
 

Gunga, Arif (M, 27), Rom, from Djakovica – detained for two days at the KLA headquarters in the Paštrik Hotel in Djakovica, questioned and beaten.

Gunga was questioned about Roma crimes against Albanians and cooperation with Serb forces. He was beaten and sustained serious injuries to his head and body. He fled Kosovo after the incident to Montenegro.
Source: HLC, witness statement

D.Dj. (M, 40), Rom, from Djakovica – abducted by the KLA on 30 June 1999, questioned and beaten, released in the evening.
D. Dj. recounted that KLA members came to his house at 11 a.m. on 30 June and ordered him to go with them. He was taken to the fruit juice plant in Piskote district where the local KLA headquarters was located.

D.Dj. described what happened then:
“As they led me into one of the rooms at the headquarters, I saw a man from Piskote, with his hands tied, in the corridor. They asked me if I had killed and robbed Albanians. Then they began to beat me with clubs and punched me all over the body until I blacked out. I came to about 6 p.m. They ordered me and my whole family to leave the village by the next morning and said they would burn me alive in my house if we didn’t. Then they let me go.”

D. Dj. identified the KLA man in charge at the KLA headquarters and prison in Piskote as one Esat from Smonica village, Djakovica Municipality.
Source: HLC, witness statement

M.M. (M), Rom, from Djakovica – abducted by the KLA from his home at 4 p.m. on 5 July 1999, imprisoned in the building of the Sara Driving School in Djakovica, beaten and questioned for four days, handed over to KFOR.

M.M. recounted what happened while he was held by the KLA:
“They locked me in a room at the driving school. They gave me no food or water. Every hour, different KLA members came in and beat me. They said my Albanian neighbor, Benan Morina, had reported to them that I was in the Yugoslav Army and had committed some war crimes. They demanded I admit what crimes I had committed. On the third day, the KLA men cut me with a knife on my upper lip and back. On the fourth day, in the morning, they took me to the Italian members of KFOR and handed me over to them, saying I was a war criminal. The KFOR men gave me first aid, took me to their prison in Peć and kept me there for the next 12 days, until a Tribunal investigator came to question me. Five days after I talked with the investigator, they let me go.”

M.M. returned to Djakovica and immediately fled Kosovo to Serbia with his family.
Source: HLC, witness statement

M.K. (M, 31); his wife Dj.K., Roma, from Piskote, Djakovica Municipality, abducted by the KLA on two occasions in August 1999, questioned and beaten, released.

M.K. stated that KLA members came almost daily to his house in July, searched it for weapons, demanded that that family admit to robbing Albanians and collaborating with the Yugoslav Army and Serbian police, and threatened to kill them. The KLA members included a Roma man they knew, one Rudži. Scared by these incidents, M.K. moved in with relatives in Djakovica. His wife stayed in the village and went to see him occasionally.

When she was returning from Djakovica to Piskote one day in August, Dj. K. was stopped on the road by armed and uniformed KLA members. They dragged her into a Lada car and drove her to the KLA headquarters in Djakovica. She described the physical abuse to which she was subjected there:
“I was questioned by Esad Ljuma (Esad Luma), a KLA member. He asked where my husband was, what kind of weapons we had and where we had hidden them, if we had looted Albanian houses and dug trenches for the Yugoslav Army. After three hours of this questioning, another KLA man began to beat me. He punched and kicked me for half an hour and then took a wooden club and beat me with it. Then he said I could go home but that I had to come back to their headquarters tomorrow and confess what my husband and I had done or they would kill us both.”

After this incident, Dj.K. went to Djakovica for her husband. They returned to Piskote together to pack and leave the district. Her husband recounted what happened next:
“That night, about 2 a.m., while we were still packing, four uniformed KLA men came. Two had automatic rifles and the other two had pistols. Three of them led me out of the house, and one stayed inside with my wife. Outside, one of them aimed a pistol at my head and the other two beat me on the back and head with their rifles. Then they grabbed me and began banging my head against the wall of the house. Twenty minutes later, they dragged me into their car. There was a man already inside. He put his hand over his face, probably so I wouldn’t recognize him. They drove me to the refugee settlement in Babaloč village at Dečani, and took me into a private house, into a dark room. KLA commander Ramuš Hardinaj was in this room. He started questioning me. He asked where I was hiding weapons. He yelled at me and threatened to kill me and my wife. He questioned me some more and then ordered the KLA men to take me back home.”

The next morning, M.K. and his wife left their village and fled to Montenegro.
Source: HLC, witness statement

I.V. (M, 20); M.C. (M, 23); and four friends (M), Roma, from Djakovica – taken by the KLA in August 1999 on the road to Smolice village, beaten for several hours and released.

A relative of the two men, who was displaced to Montenegro, told the HLC that I.V., M.C. and four of their friends were on the way to Smolice village with an Albanian who had hired them to do some work. Travelling in the Albanian’s horse-drawn cart, they were stopped on the road by a KLA member who took the Roma into a woods where there were another seven KLA men, including Esat Kurtaj of Smolica. The Roma were physically abused and made to collect the carcasses of dead livestock and bury them. They were then taken into the cellar of a house in Smolice where the KLA men continued to beat and question them, demanding the names of Roma who had allegedly killed Albanians during the war. Shots were fired close to them and they were threatened with death. They were allowed to return to Djakovica in the evening.
Source: HLC, witness statement

2.2.2. Escaped

V.Š. (M, 71), Serb, from Djakovica Municipality, retired; Kuzmanović, Djordjije (M, 42), Serb, from Djakovica (42 Srpska St.), post office employee - abducted by the KLA on 21 June 1999. V.Š. was held for several hours until he managed to escape. The whereabouts of Djordjije Kuzmanović remain unknown.
Kuzmanović’s sister stated that two armed KLA members wearing military blouses and civilian trousers came to the apartment in which her mother and brother lived at about 5 p.m. on 21 June. They demanded that her brother hand over his weapons, to which he replied that he had none. They searched the apartment, handcuffed Kuzmanović and led him away.

The next day, one of the KLA men returned. He beat Mrs Kuzmanović and demanded that she give him a pistol she had supposedly concealed. An Albanian friend of the family was in the apartment at the time. He told the KLA man to stop mistreating Mrs Kuzmanović and he left. Mrs Kuzmanović fled Djakovica to Serbia after this incident.

V.Š. stated that his family left Breskovac village on 12 June. Although he was the only remaining Serb, he decided to stay. On 16 June, about a dozen Albanians stormed into his house, began looting it and ordered him to leave the village. Albanian neighbors called KFOR but the attackers had left by the time a patrol arrived. The patrol took V.Š. to Djakovica where he moved in with Djordjije Kuzmanović. Both men were abducted by the KLA at about 10 a.m. on

21 June. V.Š. described what happened next:
“It was about 10 in the morning that day when two uniformed KLA men barged in. I knew one of them. It was Ibiš Redžepi (Ibish Rexhepi) from Ponoševac (Ponoshec) village near Djakovica. Our families had close ties. They searched the place, supposedly looking for guns. Then they forced me and Djordjije into their car – it was a white Fiat, I believe – and drove us to the driving school. I saw about 30 KLA members in the building. They took me into the lobby and hit me about the head, asking if I preferred to be hanged or have my eyes gouged out. Then they took me down to the basement, into a room with a toilet. A man and a woman, both in KLA uniforms, ordered me to lie face down. The man beat me with a nightstick, and then they carved UÇK [Albanian acronym for Kosovo Liberation Army] in the flesh on my back and stabbed me in the right side with the same knife. They took off my shoes and the woman beat me on the soles of my feet with the nightstick. Another man came into the room and tried to get me up on my feet. I couldn’t stand up straight because of the beating I’d been given. The man and the woman had called him because, so far as I understood, more people had been brought in. The woman asked again if I preferred to have my throat slit or be shot. I didn’t say anything and she left the basement. I took advantage of a moment when they weren’t watching, went down the corridor and kicked open a door which was unlocked, and went into a garage. I walked calmly by the cars and some KLA men who were sitting in the yard outside, climbed over the wire fence and hid in a garden near the transformer substation. I spent the night there, covering myself with nettles and with my feet in water.”

After running and hiding in several different houses, V.Š. found refuge with Albanian neighbors in his village who called KFOR. When he told the KFOR patrol what had happened, they suggested that he accompany them to the driving school and identify the persons who had detained and beaten him. Frightened of the consequences, V.Š. refused but informed the patrol that Djordjije Kuzmanović was being held in the prison. The KFOR patrol went to the driving school but did not find Kuzmanović there. V.Š. was taken to the Serbian Orthodox church in Djakovica, where some 30 Serbs, mainly women, were sheltering. On 25 June, together with Father Savo Janjić and about nine other Serbs, Kuzmanović left for Dečani and fled to Montenegro a week later.
Source: HLC, witness statement
 


DEČANI (DEÇAN)
1. Missing
2. Abducted
2.1. Killed
2.2. Free
2.2.1. Released by the KLA
DJAKOVICA
1. Missing
2. Abducted
2.2. Free
2.2.1. Released by the KLA
2.2.2. Escaped

GLOGOVAC
1. Missing
GNJILANE
1. Missing
2. Abducted
2.1. Killed
2.2. Free
2.2.1. Released by the KLA
2.2.3. Set free

ISTOK
1. Missing
2. Abducted
2.2. Released
KAČANIK (KAÇANIK)
1. Missing
2. Abducted
2.1 Killed
KOSOVSKA KAMENICA
1. Missing
2. Abducted
1.1. Killed
2.2. Free
2.2.1. Released by the KLA
KLINA (KLINE)
1. Missing
2. Abducted
KOSOVO POLJE (FUSHE E KOSOVËS)
1. Missing
2. Abducted
2.1. Killed
1.2. Free
1.2.1. Released by the KLA
KOSOVSKA MITROVICA (MITROVICE)
1. Missing
2. Abducted
1.1. Killed
1.2. Free
1.1.1. Released by the KLA
LIPLJAN
1. Missing
2. Abducted
1.1. Killed
1.2. Free
2.1.1. Escaped

NOVO BRDO
1. Missing
3. Abducted
2.1 Free
2.1.1. Released by the KLA
2.1.1. Escaped
2.2. Detained
OBILIĆ (OBILIQ)
1. Missing
2. Abducted
1.1. Killed
ORAHOVAC (RRAHOVEC)
1. Missing
2. Abducted
1.1. Killed
1.2. Free
1.2.1. Released by the KLA
1.1.2. Escaped
1.1.3. Set free
PEĆ
1. Missing
2. Abducted
2.1. Killed
1.2. Free
1.2.1. Released by the KLA
1.2.2. Escaped
3. Detained
PODUJEVO (PODUJEVË)
1. Missing
2. Abducted
1.1. Killed

PRIŠTINA (PRISHTINË)
1. Missing
1.1. Killed
1.2. Free
2.2.1. Released by the KLA
2.2.2. Escaped
2.2.3 Set free
3. Detained

PRIZREN
1. Missing
2. Abducted
1.1. Killed
1.2. Free
2.2.1. Released by the KLA
2.2.2. Escaped
2.2.3. Set free

SRBICA
1. Missing
2. Abducted
1.1. Free
1.1.1. Escaped
ŠTIMLJE
1. Missing
2. Abducted
ŠTRPCE
1. Missing
2. Abducted
1.1. Killed
1.2. Free
1.2.1. Escaped
SUVA REKA
1. Missing
2. Abducted
2.1. Killed
1.3. Free
1.2.1. Released by the KLA
UROŠEVAC
1. Missing
3. Abducted
1.1. Free
1.1.1. Released by the KLA
1.1.2. Escaped
VITINA
1. Missing
2.Abducted
2.1. Killed
2.2. Free
2.2.1. Released by the KLA
VUČITRN (VUSHTRRI)
1. Missing
2. Abducted
1.1. Free
1.1.1. Released by the KLA
1.1.1. Escaped
ZVEČAN
1. Missing
2. Abducted
HLC - Humanitarian Law Center   -   http://www.hlc.org.yu/english/reports.htm
Abductions and Disappearances of non-Albanians in Kosovo
download report in Word 97 doc format.
http://www.hlc.org.yu/english/reports/Abductions.doc
[ The report has 227 pages.]


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