For Kosovo's Political Prisoners, The War Continues
While most Kosovo Albanians celebrate an end to the war, the agony goes on for more than 2,000 Kosovo Albanians held in Serbian jails.
While most Kosovo Albanians celebrate an end to the war, the agony goes on for more than 2,000 Kosovo Albanians held in Serbian jails.
A succession of foreign visitors have being turning up the heat on Zagreb over war crimes. And things look set to get hotter still.
Muslims who fled Yugoslavia's Sandzak region are not returning, and little else is functioning except for factories starting once again to make 'Original' Levi's 501 jeans and other bogus brand names.
Bucharest is determined to ingratiate itself with the West and integrate itself in European institutions. But Romanians are sceptical about talk of a Stability Pact for south-eastern Europe.
Most of Pristina's remaining Serbs are elderly women. Yet they are still targets for "revenge" attacks.
Foreign soldiers, aid workers and journalists are settling in Pristina, expecting a long stay in a post-war land where only the NGOs' acronyms are in order.
While the UN recruits staff to govern Kosovo, the KLA has appointed its own local administrations throughout the province.
In the aftermath of the Sarajevo summit, there is hope that the international community will finally take a regional approach to the Balkans.
Podgorica's stark offer to Serbia on Thursday to abandon the federal structure or accept the results of a Montenegrin referendum on independence, came just days after it signalled its intention to launch its own currency.
A succession of foreign visitors have being turning up the heat on Zagreb over war crimes. And things look set to get hotter still.