Who's In Charge Here?
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.
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.
As the UN struggles to build its presence in Kosovo, the problems it faces mount by the day.
Members of Kosovo's provisional government are angry over the international community's refusal to accord them even temporary legitimacy.
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.
Their confidence broken, Serbs are looking increasingly to the paranormal for comfort.
Members of Kosovo's provisional government are angry over the international community's refusal to accord them even temporary legitimacy.
As Macedonia's veteran president Kiro Gligorov prepares to bow out of politics, would-be successors are jockeying for position in what is an increasingly open race.
By Fron Nazi in Kukes, on the Kosovo-Albanian border (BCR No 15, 4-Apr-99)
Kosovo refugees streaming over the Albanian border near Kukes in their thousands are being met by two aid workers distributing biscuits and two Italian Jehovah’s Witnesses handing out fliers urging them to love each other.