PM meets with EULEX organ trade investigator

The Serbian government will offer its full support to the efforts to solve all crimes committed in Kosovo and Metohija, it was heard in Belgrade on Wednesday.

Izvor: Tanjug

Wednesday, 17.10.2012.

09:58

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BELGRADE The Serbian government will offer its full support to the efforts to solve all crimes committed in Kosovo and Metohija, it was heard in Belgrade on Wednesday. The statement came from PM Ivica Dacic, who met with American official Clint Williamson - head of a team set up by the EU mission in Kosovo, EULEX, to investigate the human organ trafficking allegations. PM meets with EULEX organ trade investigator Dacic also stressed that the Serbian government believes that determining the whole truth about the crimes represented a debt toward the victims, and an important condition for permanent stability. Williamson informed the Serbian prime minister about the investigation so far, and the problems investigators faced during the process, announcing at the same time that his team would in the coming months "start working in the territory of central Serbia as well". The government will encourage all potential witnesses to come forward, while the Interior Ministry will secure the highest level of their protection, Dacic added. The organ trafficking case concerns Serb and other civilians kidnapped in Kosovo in 1999 and 2000, who are believed to have been illegally imprisoned in northern Albania, where their body parts were removed to be sold in the international black market. A report filed by Council of Europe (CoE) Special Rapporteur Dick Marty implicated current Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci in the atrocities. Thaci is one of the former leaders of the ethnic Albanian KLA. (Beta) Tanjug

PM meets with EULEX organ trade investigator

Dačić also stressed that the Serbian government believes that determining the whole truth about the crimes represented a debt toward the victims, and an important condition for permanent stability.

Williamson informed the Serbian prime minister about the investigation so far, and the problems investigators faced during the process, announcing at the same time that his team would in the coming months "start working in the territory of central Serbia as well".

The government will encourage all potential witnesses to come forward, while the Interior Ministry will secure the highest level of their protection, Dačić added.

The organ trafficking case concerns Serb and other civilians kidnapped in Kosovo in 1999 and 2000, who are believed to have been illegally imprisoned in northern Albania, where their body parts were removed to be sold in the international black market.

A report filed by Council of Europe (CoE) Special Rapporteur Dick Marty implicated current Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci in the atrocities. Thaci is one of the former leaders of the ethnic Albanian KLA.

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