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."
To stay alive in Kosovo, Albanians are resorting to ingenious measures, boring holes in the walls, scurrying into attics, and relying on the spirit of children. Still, many are lost.
A reluctant politician, Fehmi Agani emerged as a leading proponent of nonviolence and Albanian-Serb dialogue. Until his last train ride.
Tribunal Update 124: Last Week in The Hague (3-8 May, 1999)
Serbian political parties are united only in opposition to NATO. Their inability to elaborate any coherent alternative positions leaves Milosevic, as ever, in full control.
Links between the Sandzak and the rest of Serbia have been severed by NATO bombing, and its Muslims continue to leave.