Ugljare mass grave explained

Ugljare mass grave
Location:Ugljare, Gjilan municipality, Kosovo, Yugoslavia
Target:Kosovo Serbs and possibly Albanians
Date:July 1999
Type:Mass killing
Fatalities:15

The Ugljare mass grave is a burial site in the village of Ugljare in the Kosovo municipality of Gjilan. Those buried include Kosovo Serbs and possibly Kosovo Albanians sometime around July 1999.[1] [2] At the time, it was the only case which involved in the Kosovo war crimes tribunal the investigation of a crime against civilians which was possibly committed by Albanians against Serbs. No perpetrators have been found. Kosovo leaders during the war, including former Prime Minister and the "George Washington of Kosovo", Hashim Thaci, are currently on trial for crimes against humanity, murder, forced deportation, kidnapping, and persecution of Serbs and other minorities in a specially commissioned court, The Kosovo Specialist Chambers, established to prosecute Albanian leaders for crimes during and after the Kosovo War.

Massacre

On 24 July 1999, U.S soldiers as part of KFOR discovered the bodies after local villagers reported the existence of a mass grave. According to one local villager, the mass grave was very shallow with one victim being that of a child, in addition to the site being littered with spent cartridges. The site was reported to the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia with investigations conducted between 8 and 11 August 1999. The bodies were exhumed and later taken to a nearby chapel.[3]

Aftermath

The burial sited was widely reported a month after it was discovered, prompting the Yugoslav government to accuse U.S. KFOR forces of trying to cover-up the massacre. In a letter to the President of the United Nations Security Council, the Yugoslav government claimed that the victims were all Serbs. The Yugoslav government claimed that three of them had been kidnapped "by the terrorists from the ranks of the so-called Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA)".[4]

A NATO spokesperson initially confirmed that four of the bodies were identified as Serbs, however the statement was later retracted. In a later statement NATO reported that they could not confirm if any of the bodies included Serbs or Albanians. The public affairs office of the American troops in the region issued a statement which designated the victims buried in the site as Serbs who were killed after the war and Albanians who were killed before the war. The spokesman of Hague war crimes tribunal reported that two of the bodies might belong to Kosovo Serbs who were kidnapped after war.[2]

An OSCE investigation shortly after the massacre reported that six of the bodies were identified as Serbs, kidnapped from nearby Livoci i Poshtem and Ranilug. Ugljare reportedly housed a KLA detention facility and further investigations by KFOR led to the arrest of a KLA member who denied any involvement in the killings.[5]

In August 2018, a UN team scanned the site and nearby fields during a research mission for potential mass grave sites in Kosovo.[6]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Herman . Edward . Hammond . Phil . Degraded Capability - The Media and the Kosovo Crisis . 2000 . Pluto Press . 9780745316314 . 129.
  2. News: Carlotta . Gall . Yugoslavs See Grave Site as Proof NATO Fails to Protect Serbs . 8 February 2022 . The New York Times . 27 August 1999.
  3. News: UPI Focus: U.S. soldiers accused of cover-up . 9 February 2022 . UPI . 26 August 1999.
  4. Web site: Letter dated 26 August 1999 from the Chargé d'affaires a.i. of the Permanent Mission of Yugoslavia to the United Nations addressed to the President of the Security Council . United National Digital Library . 26 August 1999 . United Nations . 9 February 2022.
  5. Web site: OSCE Report . OSCE.
  6. News: Haxhiaj . Serbeze . Radar-Aided Kosovo War Grave Search Yields No Results . Balkan Insight . 2019.