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April 23, 1998, Albanian–Yugoslav border ambush

April 23, 1998, Albanian–Yugoslav border ambush
Part of the Kosovo War

View of the mountains west of Deçan
DateApril 23, 1998
Location
Albanian–Yugoslav border
42°32′01″N 20°08′24″E / 42.533611°N 20.14°E / 42.533611; 20.14
Result Yugoslav victory
Belligerents
 FR Yugoslavia Kosovo Liberation Army
Commanders and leaders
Božidar Delić Unknown
Units involved
53rd Border Battalion Unknown
Strength
Unknown 150–200 militants
Casualties and losses
None 19 killed
1 wounded
2 captured
class=notpageimage|
Location of Mount Đeravica in Kosovo

On the morning of April 23, 1998, a band of Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) fighters was ambushed by a much smaller group of Yugoslav Army (VJ) border guards near the Košare outpost, just west of Dečani. The fighters had been trying to smuggle weapons and supplies into Kosovo via northern Albania. Nineteen were killed in the ensuing attack, and a further two were captured. The VJ did not sustain any casualties. Some of the militants retreated back to Albania, while others managed to break through the ambush and make it past the Yugoslav border, into Kosovo. Following the clash, the VJ confiscated a large quantity of arms that the militants had been transporting.

Villagers in northern Albania and western Kosovo reported hearing explosions in the vicinity of the ambush and seeing helicopters flying overhead for much of the following day. Albanian officials later alleged that two of these helicopters had violated the country's airspace, and Albania moved elite army units to the Yugoslav border in response. Yugoslav authorities accused Albania of backing the KLA. In response to the ambush, U.S. officials indicated that they would push for sanctions to be re-implemented against Yugoslavia, and said they would look to freeze the country's assets overseas. Some Albanian sources alleged that the men had not been ambushed, rather they were abducted and killed by Yugoslav security forces. Such claims could not be verified by Western journalists, and later that year, Amnesty International affirmed that the men were killed in an ambush while smuggling weapons across the border.

Background edit

Following World War II, Kosovo was given the status of an autonomous province within the Socialist Republic of Serbia, one of six constitutional republics of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.[1] After the death of Yugoslavia's long-time leader Josip Broz Tito in 1980, Yugoslavia's political system began to unravel.[2] In 1989, Belgrade revoked Kosovo's autonomy.[3] Kosovo, a province inhabited predominantly by ethnic Albanians, was of great historical and cultural significance to Serbs,[4] who had formed a majority there before the mid-19th century, but by 1990 represented only about 10 percent of the population.[5] Alarmed by their dwindling numbers, the province's Serbs began to fear that they were being "squeezed out" by the Albanians, and ethnic tensions worsened.[6] As soon as Kosovo's autonomy was abolished, a minority government run by Serbs and Montenegrins was appointed by Serbian President Slobodan Milošević to oversee the province, enforced by thousands of heavily armed paramilitaries from Serbia-proper. Albanian culture was systematically repressed and hundreds of thousands of Albanians working in state-owned companies lost their jobs.[3]

In 1996, a group of Albanian nationalists calling themselves the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) began attacking the Yugoslav Army (Serbo-Croatian: Vojska Jugoslavije; VJ) and the Serbian Ministry of Internal Affairs (Serbo-Croatian: Ministarstvo unutrašnjih poslova; MUP) in Kosovo. Their goal was to separate the province from the rest of Yugoslavia, which following the separation of Slovenia, Croatia, Macedonia and Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1991–92, was just a rump federation consisting of Serbia and Montenegro. At first, the KLA carried out hit-and-run attacks (31 in 1996, 55 in 1997, and 66 in January and February 1998 alone).[7] It quickly gained popularity among young Kosovo Albanians, many of whom rejected the non-violent resistance to Yugoslav authorities advocated by the politician Ibrahim Rugova and favoured a more aggressive approach.[8] The organization received a significant boost in 1997, when an armed uprising in neighbouring Albania led to thousands of weapons from the Albanian Army's depots being looted. Many of these weapons ended up in the hands of the KLA, which already had substantial resources due its involvement in the trafficking of drugs, weapons and people, as well as through donations from the Albanian diaspora.[9] Cross-border arms smuggling flourished; the unit charged with securing the Yugoslav border was the 549th Motorized Brigade, under the command of General Božidar Delić.[10]

The KLA's popularity skyrocketed after the VJ and MUP attacked the compound of KLA leader Adem Jashari in March 1998, killing him, his closest associates and most of his family. The attack motivated thousands of young Kosovo Albanians to join the ranks of the KLA, fueling the Kosovar uprising that eventually erupted in the spring of 1998.[11]

Timeline edit

Clash edit

According to Delić, at 05:45 on the morning of April 23, soldiers of the 53rd Border Battalion of the 549th Motorized Brigade encountered a group of 150–200 militants near the Košare outpost attempting to illegally enter Kosovo via northern Albania, just west of Dečani.[12] Rebels had been massing at the Albanian–Yugoslav border for some time in anticipation of a renewed VJ offensive.[13] Yugoslav authorities stated that the militants were "armed infiltrators" who had been undergoing training in military camps in Albania,[14][15] and were attempting to smuggle weapons into Kosovo.[16][17] According to Delić, the border patrol was greatly outnumbered by the militants.[12] Armed with howitzers and rocket launchers,[15] the patrol ambushed the armed group, sparking an intense exchange of fire.[12] Clashes reportedly lasted all night, and the Kosovo Albanian residents of the border village of Batuša reported artillery fire and helicopters flying overhead the following day.[18]

The VJ reported suffering no casualties in the clash.[13][15] Nineteen militants were killed,[17] one was wounded[15] and a further two were captured.[15][19] It was the single deadliest war-related incident in Kosovo since the attack against Jashari's compound the previous month.[18][20][21] Initial reports suggested that anywhere between 16 and 23 militants had been killed.[14][15][21] Nine of the fallen militants were from the village of Erec, near Dečani, about 9.7 kilometres (6.0 mi) from the Albanian border.[17] Delić identified the captured militants as Gazmend Tahiraj (an English professor from Erec; b. 1970) and Ibër Metaj (an agricultural technician from Erec; b. 1961). The remaining militants either managed to break through the ambush and reach Kosovo, or fled back to Albania, according to Delić.[12] Footage taken by the military, and later broadcast on Yugoslav television, showed a field strewn with guns, ammunition and the bodies of three militants.[19] The VJ reported seizing 4 tonnes (3.9 long tons; 4.4 short tons) of weapons and ammunition, including 120 cases of landmines.[22]

Aftermath edit

 
A sample of weapons confiscated from the KLA, July 1999

During Milošević's trial at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, Delić testified that an investigative judge from Niš visited the Košare outpost shortly after fighting had ceased, and conducted an on-site investigation.[12] Journalists were not allowed to visit the site due to "security concerns".[23] On April 24, Western reporters saw VJ personnel digging mortar positions south of Dečani, about 24 kilometres (15 mi) from the Albanian border. The troops said they had been exchanging gunfire with the rebels over the previous two days.[13]

The U.S. State Department acknowledged that it had received reports of "myriad deaths" along the Albanian border. State Department spokesman James Rubin called the situation in Kosovo "quite troubling, extremely dangerous."[24] U.S. officials said they would push for a freeze on Yugoslavia's overseas assets and an international ban on foreign trade with the country in response to the violence. In turn, the Yugoslav military issued a statement requesting that the West put pressure on Kosovo Albanian leaders "to give up and denounce terrorism if they truly wanted a peaceful and political solution to Kosovo's problems." The statement also accused Albania of "training, infiltrating and illegally arming the terrorists," and demanded that the West pressure the country to desist from such activities.[20] Albania denied supporting the KLA insurgency, and alleged that two Yugoslav helicopters had violated its airspace. Yugoslavia denied that there had been any violations. Consequently, the Albanian Army and police were placed on high alert, and the country stationed elite troops along its border.[24]

On April 27, nine of the fallen militants were buried in Erec. Some 400 ethnic Albanians attended their funerals.[16] The dead ranged in age from seventeen to forty-five years old.[25] Villagers claimed that some of the dead had been arrested days before their deaths and thus could not have been ambushed, as the Yugoslav authorities claimed. Such claims could not be independently verified by Western reporters.[17] In a 1998 report, Amnesty International affirmed that the 19 men had been killed in an ambush while trying to smuggle weapons into Kosovo.[26]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Judah, Tim (2002). Kosovo: War and Revenge. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-300-09725-2.
  2. ^ Judah, pp. 38–9
  3. ^ a b Adam LeBor (2002). Milosevic: A Biography. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. p. 276. ISBN 978-0-300-10317-5.
  4. ^ Miranda Vickers (1999). The Albanians: A Modern History. New York: I.B.Tauris. p. 97. ISBN 978-1-86064-541-9.
  5. ^ James Summers (2011). "Kosovo: From Yugoslav Province to Disputed Independence". In James Summers (ed.). Kosovo: A Precedent?. Leiden, Netherlands: BRILL. p. 5. ISBN 978-90-474-2943-2.
  6. ^ Jasminka Udovički; James Ridgeway (October 31, 2000). Burn This House: The Making and Unmaking of Yugoslavia. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. p. 322. ISBN 978-0-8223-2590-1.
  7. ^ Judah, p. 137
  8. ^ Dušan Janjić (2012). "Kosovo under the Milošević Regime". In Charles W. Ingrao; Thomas A. Emmert (eds.). Confronting the Yugoslav Controversies: A Scholars' Initiative (2nd ed.). West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press. p. 293. ISBN 978-1-55753-617-4.
  9. ^ Judah, pp. x, 127–30
  10. ^ "549th Motorized Brigade of the Yugoslav Army" (PDF). Belgrade: Humanitarian Law Center. p. 6.
  11. ^ Judah, pp. 138–41
  12. ^ a b c d e "The Prosecutor vs. Slobodan Milošević — Božidar Delić Testimony". ICTY. June 22, 2005. pp. 9377–91. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  13. ^ a b c Guy Dinmore (April 24, 1998). . Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  14. ^ a b "Serb 'no' to foreign mediation in Kosovo". BBC. April 24, 1998. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  15. ^ a b c d e f . CNN. April 24, 1998. Archived from the original on November 9, 2005. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  16. ^ a b "EU imposes new arms sanctions on Yugoslavia". CNN. April 27, 1998. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  17. ^ a b c d Guy Dinmore (April 28, 1998). "Albanians Bury 9 As Clashes Rage In Kosovo". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  18. ^ a b "23 Albanians Killed in Clashes With Yugoslav Troops in Kosovo". The New York Times. April 24, 1998. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  19. ^ a b Yugoslavia warns of war, Associated Press, April 24, 1998
  20. ^ a b "Yugoslav Army Warns West Over Kosovo". Los Angeles Times. April 25, 1998. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  21. ^ a b "Up to 23 Ethnic Albanians Slain, Serb Officials Say". Los Angeles Times. April 24, 1998. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  22. ^ "Yugoslav army ambush keeps armed Albanians from Kosovo". Detroit Free Press. April 27, 1998. Retrieved March 19, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. (subscription required)
  23. ^ "19 or 23 Albanians Killed by 'Yugoslav' Army, According to Serb Military Sources". Kosovo Information Center. April 24, 1998. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  24. ^ a b Philip Shenon (April 24, 1998). "U.S. Eyes Curbs on Belgrade As Albanian Deaths Mount". The New York Times. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  25. ^ "Ethnic Albanians mourn for 9 killed by Serb army". Arizona Republic. April 27, 1998. p. 4. Retrieved March 19, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. (subscription required)
  26. ^ Amnesty International (1998). Kosovo: The Evidence. London: Amnesty International. p. 90. ISBN 9781873328316.

april, 1998, albanian, yugoslav, border, ambush, part, kosovo, warview, mountains, west, deçandateapril, 1998locationalbanian, yugoslav, border42, 533611, 533611, 14resultyugoslav, victorybelligerents, yugoslaviakosovo, liberation, armycommanders, leadersbožid. April 23 1998 Albanian Yugoslav border ambushPart of the Kosovo WarView of the mountains west of DecanDateApril 23 1998LocationAlbanian Yugoslav border42 32 01 N 20 08 24 E 42 533611 N 20 14 E 42 533611 20 14ResultYugoslav victoryBelligerents FR YugoslaviaKosovo Liberation ArmyCommanders and leadersBozidar DelicUnknownUnits involved53rd Border BattalionUnknownStrengthUnknown150 200 militantsCasualties and lossesNone19 killed 1 wounded 2 capturedMount Đeravicaclass notpageimage Location of Mount Đeravica in Kosovo On the morning of April 23 1998 a band of Kosovo Liberation Army KLA fighters was ambushed by a much smaller group of Yugoslav Army VJ border guards near the Kosare outpost just west of Decani The fighters had been trying to smuggle weapons and supplies into Kosovo via northern Albania Nineteen were killed in the ensuing attack and a further two were captured The VJ did not sustain any casualties Some of the militants retreated back to Albania while others managed to break through the ambush and make it past the Yugoslav border into Kosovo Following the clash the VJ confiscated a large quantity of arms that the militants had been transporting Villagers in northern Albania and western Kosovo reported hearing explosions in the vicinity of the ambush and seeing helicopters flying overhead for much of the following day Albanian officials later alleged that two of these helicopters had violated the country s airspace and Albania moved elite army units to the Yugoslav border in response Yugoslav authorities accused Albania of backing the KLA In response to the ambush U S officials indicated that they would push for sanctions to be re implemented against Yugoslavia and said they would look to freeze the country s assets overseas Some Albanian sources alleged that the men had not been ambushed rather they were abducted and killed by Yugoslav security forces Such claims could not be verified by Western journalists and later that year Amnesty International affirmed that the men were killed in an ambush while smuggling weapons across the border Contents 1 Background 2 Timeline 2 1 Clash 2 2 Aftermath 3 See also 4 NotesBackground editFollowing World War II Kosovo was given the status of an autonomous province within the Socialist Republic of Serbia one of six constitutional republics of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1 After the death of Yugoslavia s long time leader Josip Broz Tito in 1980 Yugoslavia s political system began to unravel 2 In 1989 Belgrade revoked Kosovo s autonomy 3 Kosovo a province inhabited predominantly by ethnic Albanians was of great historical and cultural significance to Serbs 4 who had formed a majority there before the mid 19th century but by 1990 represented only about 10 percent of the population 5 Alarmed by their dwindling numbers the province s Serbs began to fear that they were being squeezed out by the Albanians and ethnic tensions worsened 6 As soon as Kosovo s autonomy was abolished a minority government run by Serbs and Montenegrins was appointed by Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic to oversee the province enforced by thousands of heavily armed paramilitaries from Serbia proper Albanian culture was systematically repressed and hundreds of thousands of Albanians working in state owned companies lost their jobs 3 In 1996 a group of Albanian nationalists calling themselves the Kosovo Liberation Army KLA began attacking the Yugoslav Army Serbo Croatian Vojska Jugoslavije VJ and the Serbian Ministry of Internal Affairs Serbo Croatian Ministarstvo unutrasnjih poslova MUP in Kosovo Their goal was to separate the province from the rest of Yugoslavia which following the separation of Slovenia Croatia Macedonia and Bosnia Herzegovina in 1991 92 was just a rump federation consisting of Serbia and Montenegro At first the KLA carried out hit and run attacks 31 in 1996 55 in 1997 and 66 in January and February 1998 alone 7 It quickly gained popularity among young Kosovo Albanians many of whom rejected the non violent resistance to Yugoslav authorities advocated by the politician Ibrahim Rugova and favoured a more aggressive approach 8 The organization received a significant boost in 1997 when an armed uprising in neighbouring Albania led to thousands of weapons from the Albanian Army s depots being looted Many of these weapons ended up in the hands of the KLA which already had substantial resources due its involvement in the trafficking of drugs weapons and people as well as through donations from the Albanian diaspora 9 Cross border arms smuggling flourished the unit charged with securing the Yugoslav border was the 549th Motorized Brigade under the command of General Bozidar Delic 10 The KLA s popularity skyrocketed after the VJ and MUP attacked the compound of KLA leader Adem Jashari in March 1998 killing him his closest associates and most of his family The attack motivated thousands of young Kosovo Albanians to join the ranks of the KLA fueling the Kosovar uprising that eventually erupted in the spring of 1998 11 Timeline editClash edit According to Delic at 05 45 on the morning of April 23 soldiers of the 53rd Border Battalion of the 549th Motorized Brigade encountered a group of 150 200 militants near the Kosare outpost attempting to illegally enter Kosovo via northern Albania just west of Decani 12 Rebels had been massing at the Albanian Yugoslav border for some time in anticipation of a renewed VJ offensive 13 Yugoslav authorities stated that the militants were armed infiltrators who had been undergoing training in military camps in Albania 14 15 and were attempting to smuggle weapons into Kosovo 16 17 According to Delic the border patrol was greatly outnumbered by the militants 12 Armed with howitzers and rocket launchers 15 the patrol ambushed the armed group sparking an intense exchange of fire 12 Clashes reportedly lasted all night and the Kosovo Albanian residents of the border village of Batusa reported artillery fire and helicopters flying overhead the following day 18 The VJ reported suffering no casualties in the clash 13 15 Nineteen militants were killed 17 one was wounded 15 and a further two were captured 15 19 It was the single deadliest war related incident in Kosovo since the attack against Jashari s compound the previous month 18 20 21 Initial reports suggested that anywhere between 16 and 23 militants had been killed 14 15 21 Nine of the fallen militants were from the village of Erec near Decani about 9 7 kilometres 6 0 mi from the Albanian border 17 Delic identified the captured militants as Gazmend Tahiraj an English professor from Erec b 1970 and Iber Metaj an agricultural technician from Erec b 1961 The remaining militants either managed to break through the ambush and reach Kosovo or fled back to Albania according to Delic 12 Footage taken by the military and later broadcast on Yugoslav television showed a field strewn with guns ammunition and the bodies of three militants 19 The VJ reported seizing 4 tonnes 3 9 long tons 4 4 short tons of weapons and ammunition including 120 cases of landmines 22 Aftermath edit nbsp A sample of weapons confiscated from the KLA July 1999During Milosevic s trial at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia Delic testified that an investigative judge from Nis visited the Kosare outpost shortly after fighting had ceased and conducted an on site investigation 12 Journalists were not allowed to visit the site due to security concerns 23 On April 24 Western reporters saw VJ personnel digging mortar positions south of Decani about 24 kilometres 15 mi from the Albanian border The troops said they had been exchanging gunfire with the rebels over the previous two days 13 The U S State Department acknowledged that it had received reports of myriad deaths along the Albanian border State Department spokesman James Rubin called the situation in Kosovo quite troubling extremely dangerous 24 U S officials said they would push for a freeze on Yugoslavia s overseas assets and an international ban on foreign trade with the country in response to the violence In turn the Yugoslav military issued a statement requesting that the West put pressure on Kosovo Albanian leaders to give up and denounce terrorism if they truly wanted a peaceful and political solution to Kosovo s problems The statement also accused Albania of training infiltrating and illegally arming the terrorists and demanded that the West pressure the country to desist from such activities 20 Albania denied supporting the KLA insurgency and alleged that two Yugoslav helicopters had violated its airspace Yugoslavia denied that there had been any violations Consequently the Albanian Army and police were placed on high alert and the country stationed elite troops along its border 24 On April 27 nine of the fallen militants were buried in Erec Some 400 ethnic Albanians attended their funerals 16 The dead ranged in age from seventeen to forty five years old 25 Villagers claimed that some of the dead had been arrested days before their deaths and thus could not have been ambushed as the Yugoslav authorities claimed Such claims could not be independently verified by Western reporters 17 In a 1998 report Amnesty International affirmed that the 19 men had been killed in an ambush while trying to smuggle weapons into Kosovo 26 See also editJuly 18 1998 Albanian Yugoslav border clashes December 14 1998 Albanian Yugoslav border ambushNotes edit Judah Tim 2002 Kosovo War and Revenge New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press p 34 ISBN 978 0 300 09725 2 Judah pp 38 9 a b Adam LeBor 2002 Milosevic A Biography New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press p 276 ISBN 978 0 300 10317 5 Miranda Vickers 1999 The Albanians A Modern History New York I B Tauris p 97 ISBN 978 1 86064 541 9 James Summers 2011 Kosovo From Yugoslav Province to Disputed Independence In James Summers ed Kosovo A Precedent Leiden Netherlands BRILL p 5 ISBN 978 90 474 2943 2 Jasminka Udovicki James Ridgeway October 31 2000 Burn This House The Making and Unmaking of Yugoslavia Durham North Carolina Duke University Press p 322 ISBN 978 0 8223 2590 1 Judah p 137 Dusan Janjic 2012 Kosovo under the Milosevic Regime In Charles W Ingrao Thomas A Emmert eds Confronting the Yugoslav Controversies A Scholars Initiative 2nd ed West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Press p 293 ISBN 978 1 55753 617 4 Judah pp x 127 30 549th Motorized Brigade of the Yugoslav Army PDF Belgrade Humanitarian Law Center p 6 Judah pp 138 41 a b c d e The Prosecutor vs Slobodan Milosevic Bozidar Delic Testimony ICTY June 22 2005 pp 9377 91 Retrieved August 13 2015 a b c Guy Dinmore April 24 1998 New Fighting Breaks Out As Serbs Vote On Kosovo Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved August 13 2015 a b Serb no to foreign mediation in Kosovo BBC April 24 1998 Retrieved August 13 2015 a b c d e f 16 reported killed in clashes as Serbs vote on Kosovo CNN April 24 1998 Archived from the original on November 9 2005 Retrieved August 13 2015 a b EU imposes new arms sanctions on Yugoslavia CNN April 27 1998 Retrieved August 13 2015 a b c d Guy Dinmore April 28 1998 Albanians Bury 9 As Clashes Rage In Kosovo Chicago Tribune Retrieved August 13 2015 a b 23 Albanians Killed in Clashes With Yugoslav Troops in Kosovo The New York Times April 24 1998 Retrieved August 13 2015 a b Yugoslavia warns of war Associated Press April 24 1998 a b Yugoslav Army Warns West Over Kosovo Los Angeles Times April 25 1998 Retrieved August 13 2015 a b Up to 23 Ethnic Albanians Slain Serb Officials Say Los Angeles Times April 24 1998 Retrieved August 13 2015 Yugoslav army ambush keeps armed Albanians from Kosovo Detroit Free Press April 27 1998 Retrieved March 19 2016 via Newspapers com subscription required 19 or 23 Albanians Killed by Yugoslav Army According to Serb Military Sources Kosovo Information Center April 24 1998 Retrieved August 13 2015 a b Philip Shenon April 24 1998 U S Eyes Curbs on Belgrade As Albanian Deaths Mount The New York Times Retrieved August 13 2015 Ethnic Albanians mourn for 9 killed by Serb army Arizona Republic April 27 1998 p 4 Retrieved March 19 2016 via Newspapers com subscription required Amnesty International 1998 Kosovo The Evidence London Amnesty International p 90 ISBN 9781873328316 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title April 23 1998 Albanian Yugoslav border ambush amp oldid 1186848596, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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