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Note: Each article shown below represents the opinion of the author, and not necessarily of anyone else.

Kosovo Work in Progress: Closing the Cycle of Violence Howard Clark, War Resisters International, January 2002
Latinka Perovic: Book Review and Interview Transitions On Line, 2000
Review: Serbia and Albania, by Dimitrije Tucovic, March 2000
Testaments Betrayed By Laura Secor, Linguafranca, September 1999
Balkan Physics By Michael Ignatieff, The New Yorker, May 10, 1999
Endgame in Kosovo By Mark Danner, New York Review of Books, May 6, 1999
Only in the Balkans By Misha Glenny, London Review of Books, April 29,1999
Kosovo War Crimes Chronology: January 1998 - April 1999
Human Rights Watch, April 28, 1999
The Politics of Pronunciation By Eve Gerber, Slate.com, April 2, 1999
Kosovo: The Beginning of the End By Bogdan Denitch, Dissent, March, 1999
Prospects for Peace in Kosova By Howard Clark, War Resisters International, Jan-Feb, 1999
The Serbian Occupation of Kosova, 1989-1995 By Peter Lippman, 1995
The Serbian Blueprint for Cleansing Kosovo By Voislav Seselj, Serbian deputy prime minister, October 14, 1995
The New York Times, Croatia and History By John Kraljic, March 1994
The curse of Kosovo By Branka Magas, New Internationalist, September 1993
Programme Declaration of the Serb Radical Party February 23, 1991
The Plight of Kosovo April 11, 1991

Summaries of articles listed above

Kosovo Work in Progress: Closing the Cycle of Violence (Section 3 includes useful historical background.) -- Howard Clark, War Resisters International, January 2002

Latinka Perovic: Book Review and Interview Perovic, a leading Serb intellectual, was invited by President Kostunica to join a discussion on organizing a truth commission on the wars in the former Yugoslavia. -- Transitions On Line, 2000.

Review: Serbia and Albania, by Dimitrije Tucovic, who was the leader of the left faction of the Social-democratic Party of Serbia before World War I. Together with the faction of the “narrows” in the Bulgarian SP and Lenin’s Russian Bolsheviks, this Serbian party was the only one to remain internationalist during World War I and to deny war credits to its own bourgeoisie. This Marxist position had also been defended by Tucovic in the two Balkan wars of 1912 and 1913, which immediately preceded the world war. March 2000

Testaments Betrayed Yugoslavian intellectuals and the road to war: the Praxis group's journey from Marxist humanism to ethnofascism. -- Laura Secor, Linguafranca, September 1999

Balkan Physics Five weeks ago, the bombing began. Now Europe is witnessing the worst conflict since 1945. How did so much happen so quickly? -- Michael Ignatieff, The New Yorker, May 10, 1999.

Endgame in Kosovo Across this near-exhausted century, imagery recurs. The knock at the door, the forced march, the mass evacuation - expressions now impossible to hear without their attendant echoes. -- Mark Danner, New York Review of Books, May 6, 1999.

Only in the Balkans That writing about the Balkans is a free-for-all, with no inhibitions about political correctness, is shown in a recent editorial in the Evening Standard which - following the news that Albania was to hold a referendum on the restoration of the monarchy - suggested that 'Lord Archer or Mrs. Camilla Parker-Bowles could be persuaded to take on the Albanian job . . . And if some bearded, wild-eyed, bomb-throwing Balkan anarchist brought their reign to a premature end - well, that is a blow that we, like their subjects, would have to bear with fortitude.' Why do so many Westerners shake their heads in laughter and despair at the Balkans? Why are the region's inhabitants seen either as congenitally irrational and bloodthirsty mobs, never happier than when they are slitting the throats of their neighbours, or as incompetent clowns in fanciful uniforms that mysteriously invoke a medieval past? It would be hard to find academics or Balkan specialists who take the view that the collapse of Yugoslavia was a product of ancient hatreds. But this belief is stubbornly held by the Western media and Western policy-makers, including many who have participated or are still participating in the crisis, and whose influence helps to perpetuate the myths. -- Misha Glenny (author of The Fall of Yugoslavia and The Rebirth of History), London Review of Books, April 29, 1999.

Kosovo War Crimes Chronology: January 1998 - April 1999 War crimes and crimes against humanity by the Yugoslav forces in Kosovo have been a focus of international attention since the NATO bombing began on March 24, 1999. However, civilians have been the targets of war crimes and other violations of humanitarian law since the Kosovo conflict began in early 1998. Human Rights Watch presents a chronology of the major war crimes it has documented from January 1998 to April 1999. Far from exhaustive, this list is meant only to provide a context for the serious abuses now being committed by Serbian and Yugoslav government forces. -- Human Rights Watch, April 28, 1999.

The Politics of Pronunciation Linguists explain the difference between "Kosovo" and Kosova." -- Eve Gerber, Slate.com, April 2, 1999.

Kosovo: The Beginning of the End Kosovo is Yugoslavia's West Bank, with Serb nationalism confronting the reality of a huge Albanian majority, by now over 85 percent. Serbian claims to Kosovo, much like Israeli claims to the West Bank, are based on a mixture of strategic considerations, historical assertions, and mystical religious themes. Ultimately the Serbs believe that the special historical suffering of their people gives their claims greater weight than those of the present inhabitants of Kosovo. -- Bogdan Denitch, Dissent, March, 1999.

Prospects for Peace in Kosova Concise history of the recent development of the struggle for self-determination. -- Howard Clark, War Resisters International, Jan-Feb, 1999.

The Serbian Occupation of Kosova Background: Serbian treatment of Kosovars after the 1989 revocation of their autonomous status. -- Peter Lippman, 1995.

The Serbian Blueprint for Cleansing Kosovo Voislav Seselj, Serbian deputy prime minister and leader of the Radical Party of Serbia, outlined this plan for the ethnic cleansing of Kosovo in 1995. It bears a close resemblance to what happened there in 1998-99.  October 14, 1995

The New York Times, Croatia and History A review of 'The New York Times' has shown that when reporting on the history of Croatia its correspondents have consistently presented Croatia's past in a simplistic manner. This is particularly true with respect to descriptions concerning Croatia's role in World War II. Almost without fail, Croatia and Croats have been portrayed as allies of the Nazis, ruled by the pro-fascist Ustashe who killed hundreds of thousands of Serbs, Gypsies and Jews.  By John Kraljic, March 1994

The curse of Kosovo The roots of Serbian racism in a myth about a battle fought 600 years ago. By Branka Magas, New Internationalist, September 1993

Programme Declaration of the Serb Radical Party  " ... to expel without delay all 360 thousand Albanian emigrants and their descendants," [along with specific steps for the complete annihilation of all Kosovar Albanian culture, society, social benefits, property benefits, educational benefits, employment, industry, domicile, and existence]. Adopted February 23, 1991

The Plight of Kosovo  A letter from numerous intellectuals and activists calling attention to the growing repression of Kosovo Albanians - a long series of measures which the Serbian government has taken to remove the autonomy of the province of Kosovo. New York Review of Books, April 11, 1991


Historical Background   Documents
   Commentary   Non-violent Solutions

Reports from the Area of Conflict   Kosovo Albanians in Serbian Prisons

Post-War Kosovo   Post-War Serbia

Croatia   Macedonia   Bosnia

Special compilation: the Racak Massacre

The Milosevic War-Crimes Trial

War-crimes Deniers
 


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