Serb victims of massacre in Kosovo remembered

Tuesday marks 14 years since 14 Serb farmers were ambushed and murdered while working in their fields in the village of Staro Gracko in Kosovo.

Izvor: Beta

Tuesday, 23.07.2013.

09:23

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BELGRADE Tuesday marks 14 years since 14 Serb farmers were ambushed and murdered while working in their fields in the village of Staro Gracko in Kosovo. SPC Bishop of Raska-Prizren Teodosije led a religious service in their memory, followed by a gathering in front of a memorial plaque in the center of the village. Serb victims of massacre in Kosovo remembered Government Office for Kosovo and Metohija Director Aleksandar Vulin attended. A 17-year-old was the youngest of the victims killed on July 23, 1999 in this village south of the Ibar River - one of the gravest crimes targetting Serbs since the deployment of international missions in Kosovo after the war. The victims were Milovan Jovanovic, Jovica and Rade Zivic, Andrija Odalovic, Slobodan, Mile, Novica and Momcilo Janicijevic, Stanimir and Bosko Djekic, Sasa and Ljubisa Cvejic, Nikola Stojanovic, and Miodrag Tepsic. In 2007, UNMIK police arrested an ethnic Albanian, Malzum Bytyqi, on suspicion of involvement in the murders, but he was freed after two months for a lack of evidence. Aleksandar Vulin was in Leposavic in northern Kosovo on Monday, when he asked what authority the international community had when it could not "answer" about any of the crimes committed against Serbs in Kosovo and Metohija. EU mission representative Irine Gudeljevic told Beta that the Special Prosecution of Kosovo "recently received new information about the murders," and that an EULEX prosecutor was "considering them." (Tanjug) Beta Tanjug

Serb victims of massacre in Kosovo remembered

Government Office for Kosovo and Metohija Director Aleksandar Vulin attended.

A 17-year-old was the youngest of the victims killed on July 23, 1999 in this village south of the Ibar River - one of the gravest crimes targetting Serbs since the deployment of international missions in Kosovo after the war.

The victims were Milovan Jovanović, Jovica and Rade Živić, Andrija Odalović, Slobodan, Mile, Novica and Momčilo Janićijević, Stanimir and Boško Đekić, Saša and Ljubiša Cvejić, Nikola Stojanović, and Miodrag Tepšić.

In 2007, UNMIK police arrested an ethnic Albanian, Malzum Bytyqi, on suspicion of involvement in the murders, but he was freed after two months for a lack of evidence.

Aleksandar Vulin was in Leposavić in northern Kosovo on Monday, when he asked what authority the international community had when it could not "answer" about any of the crimes committed against Serbs in Kosovo and Metohija.

EU mission representative Irine Gudeljevic told Beta that the Special Prosecution of Kosovo "recently received new information about the murders," and that an EULEX prosecutor was "considering them."

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