Before The Deluge: Agani's Last Interview
"An agreement will mean the end of all the Serbs' pretensions and illusions in Kosovo. But Albanians will only accept Yugoslav sovereignty if NATO really comes."
"An agreement will mean the end of all the Serbs' pretensions and illusions in Kosovo. But Albanians will only accept Yugoslav sovereignty if NATO really comes."
Pressure on the second republic grows as the Yugoslav Army moves against the Montenegrin economy.
Serbia is destroyed and its people are on the edge. By day Belgrade retains a semblance of normalcy. But at dusk the air-raid sirens wail, and reality sets in.
The indictment of Milosevic will only bring a solution to the crisis if Western leaders find the will to follow it through. That means troops in Serbia.
The indictment of Milosevic and other top Belgrade officials is not just about Kosovo. It should put all future tyrants on notice.
Journalists, human rights activists and opposition politicians in southern Serbia have been jailed or mobilised during NATO's bombing campaign - and the repression seems likely to continue.
The end of the war should mark the beginning of a decisive new policy for building democracy, development and real peace throughout the region.
Serbs in Kosovo are facing the hardest choice. With a final blaze, many are deciding to pack up and head "home" to Serbia.
The West's new-found commitment to war crimes investigations risks being perceived as "victors' justice".
Ecologists say the authorities in Serbia are concealing the extent of the ecological and health threats caused by NATO bombing.