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B92 News Crime & War crimes Crime & War crimes
Suspects, victims identified in organ case
26 February 2009 | 09:26 | Source: Beta, Tanjug
BELGRADE -- The Serbian War Crimes Prosecution has so far identified 10 members of the so-called Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) suspected of killing kidnapped Serb civilians.

The prosecution is working on a case to investigate the disappearance of hundreds of Serbs and other non-Albanians from the province during and after the 1999 war there.

It is believed KLA kidnapped the victims, then secretly transported them to camps in northern Albania, where their vital organs were removed to be sold in the black market.

Those suspects identified, prosecution spokesman Bruno Vekarić said in Belgrade on Wednesday, are linked with the case of decapitated soldiers, "which has been publicized by the news media".

But he refused to reveal their names in the interest of the ongoing investigation.

But War Crimes Prosecutor said earlier that there was evidence that former Kosovo prime minister Ramush Haradinaj – charged and acquitted by the Hague Tribunal on a different indictment – took part in "removing the evidence".

Some media reported that Daut Haradinaj, Sami Lustaku and Jakup Krasnici in charge of transferring the kidnapped victims to Albania.

Vekarić was meeting with members of the Association of Families of the Kidnapped and Missing Kosovo Serbs. They told him they would be assisting in the identification of victims and perpetrators of these crimes.

The prosecution has also contacted the Association of the Victims from Montenegro and established that there are 86 points of importance for making progress in the investigation, the spokesman said.

Deputy prosecutors requested assistance of the families in identification of the victims and crime perpetrators and in locating witnesses, eye witnesses of kidnappings and murders of their loved ones.

Vekarić announced that the new evidence the Serbian War Crimes Prosecution has will be forwarded to colleagues in Albania, underscoring that he expects them to start an investigation based on the latest evidence.

In late March 2008, the Serbian War Crimes Prosecution launched the investigation on trafficking of human organs removed from about 300 Serbs kidnapped from Kosovo.

The Prosecutor's Office on Wednesday also presented the association of with a list of names of 11 persons which are believed to have been the victims of organ trafficking in northern Albania.

Representatives of the association asked to be given information about fresh evidence recently obtained by the prosecution, they said after the meetings yesterday.

They were interested in the progress made in the identification of persons on photos of the victims and the perpetrators, recently made public, and in the investigation the KLA members of the so-called Gnjilane Group, arrested last December in southern Serbia.
Crime & War crimes - Most relevant news Thursday, 26 February 2009

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15:16 | Source:Beta

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All news for 26. February 2009


 
Archive: Thursday, 26 February 2009
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Archive

 In focus
Kosovo status
Koštunica: Government is inept
Anniversary of Štrpci massacre
Clinton: U.S. support to Kosovo
Serbian, Greek defense chiefs urge better ties
Haradinaj slams Thaci performance
"Human rights respected, problems remain"
Russian, Montenegrin presidents to meet
Explosion near Priština court
Daily: Consultations on six points
Some Serbs return to Kosovo villages
   
Corruption & organized crime
"New talks in Kovačević case"
Bogdanović cracks down on rogue Serb municipality
Police chief on organized crime law
25 arrests in Montenegrin drug bust
Ex-vice consul speaks out over Kovačević case
Gunmen rob post office in Belgrade
Ulemek replica remains mystery
EULEX prosecutor to discuss organ case
Belgrade: Ten prison guards suspended
U.S. still after Kovačević extradition
   
 More...
Economic crisis in Serbia
Hague cooperation
Euro-Atlantic integration
Srebrenica resolution
Patriarch Pavle dies; new patriarch elected
Croatia, Serbia in genocide lawsuits
Vojvodina statute
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