“Czech students weren't in Yellow House”

Three Czech students who went missing in 2001 in northern Albania were not victims of illegal human organ trafficking crimes, Czech police stated.

Izvor: Beta

Sunday, 04.04.2010.

10:06

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Three Czech students who went missing in 2001 in northern Albania were not victims of illegal human organ trafficking crimes, Czech police stated. “We checked all possibilities, we compared information and samples we have, and we did not confirm that the three students were any of the people in question,” Czech criminal police chief Jan Noga told the CTK news agency. “Czech students weren't in Yellow House” Czech police started checking the facts with police in Albania and Kosovo after media claims surfaced from statements made by Serbian War Crimes Prosecutor Vladimir Vukcevic late last year that the three students were victims of the infamous “yellow house,” in which it is believed people had their organs harvested and then sold on the black market. The students, however, were in the region much later than the Kosovo Serbs, about 500 total, who were believed to have been abducted by Kosovo Albanians and taken to Albania for the harvesting operations. The Serbian prosecution requested an investigation into the case from the Council of Europe last year as well. Albanian police reopened the case of the three students following the request of the Czech police and even offered awards for information, but police officials believe that the students were probably attacked and robbed. The first person to give public statements regarding the possibility that Kosovo Serbs were taken to northern Albania to have their organs harvested was former Hague chief prosecutor Carla Del Ponte.

“Czech students weren't in Yellow House”

Czech police started checking the facts with police in Albania and Kosovo after media claims surfaced from statements made by Serbian War Crimes Prosecutor Vladimir Vukčević late last year that the three students were victims of the infamous “yellow house,” in which it is believed people had their organs harvested and then sold on the black market.

The students, however, were in the region much later than the Kosovo Serbs, about 500 total, who were believed to have been abducted by Kosovo Albanians and taken to Albania for the harvesting operations.

The Serbian prosecution requested an investigation into the case from the Council of Europe last year as well.

Albanian police reopened the case of the three students following the request of the Czech police and even offered awards for information, but police officials believe that the students were probably attacked and robbed.

The first person to give public statements regarding the possibility that Kosovo Serbs were taken to northern Albania to have their organs harvested was former Hague chief prosecutor Carla Del Ponte.

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