Saturday 1 November 2008

Kosovo: Lost To Sebia, So Lost To The West

John Laughland writes:

A few days spent in Belgrade feels like an age. Although I have been here more times than I can remember (albeit not for five years or so) the country remains almost insuperably foreign. There is something radically different about the Balkans, with respect to the rest of Europe, and there are few more quintessentially Balkan states than Serbia.

Where else, for instance, would you meet a man with the wonderful name of Slobodan Despot who smiles and hands you a copy of “The Road to Revolution” by Thomas Kaczynski, a.k.a. the Unabomber? Mr. Despot is a publisher previously worked for a conservative pro-Serb publishing house in Paris and the other titles in his own list now include a consolidated calendar of Orthodox and Western saints, and the memoirs of a woman who opened a sex shop in Paris in the early 1970s.

And where else would you find yourself on a sofa sipping wine and talking to a civilised young professor of medicine who was himself ethnically cleansed from his home town of Urosevac in Kosovo in June 1999, as NATO guards transported Albanian guerrillas in their Hummers across the province to commit their vicious and systematic arson, murder and rape? Where else – especially in Europe – would you meet a monk whose 25 parishioners (in one of the main towns of Kosovo) have to run the gauntlet every Sunday in order to avoid getting killed on the way to Mass?

All these things happened to me – and much more – in the space of a very short stay last week. Ever since the United Nations took over Kosovo in 1999, indeed, the province’s endemic corruption has exploded, as I was able to confirm by talking to two American policemen who work for the international administration there. “Every level of society is corrupt,” one of them said. “Every single aspect of the society is criminal.” This is largely because the Kosovo Liberation Army, the US-backed Contra-style guerrilla force which runs the province and which controls the government, the army and the police, is also notorious for its role as a powerful organisation running drugs, guns and sex slaves to Western Europe.

If organised crime is a way of life in Kosovo, so is the systematic destruction of churches: more than 150 churches and monasteries have been blown up on the UN’s watch in the last nine years, as Albanians seek not only to expel all Serbs from the province but also to eradicate any physical record of their ever having been their in the first place. Kosovo, one should never forget, is the original heartland of medieval Serbia, the Serbs having migrated North to Belgrade and the Pannonian plane beyond as a result of the Turkish invasions. Images of an angry mob pulling down crosses and stamping on them, such as were filmed on 17 March 2004, have not been seen since the early years of the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia; just under a century later they are now, once again, part of Europe’s present.

In spite of these atrocities, which include the pogrom conducted against Serbs in March 2004 – a killing spree which went largely unreported in the West and which is now completely forgotten about – the European Union and the United States have pushed Kosovo to proclaim its own independence unilaterally, even though international law clearly forbids such a step. In 1998, the Supreme Court of Canada rejected Quebec’s right unilaterally to secede from Canada, on the grounds that the inhabitants of Quebec had full civil and political rights within Canada. Since Kosovo has been governed by the UN since 1999, their proclamation of independence now can only mean that they did not have full political and civil rights under that administration – the very body thrust onto Serbia by the “international community” in the name of human rights and democracy.

In the remaining months of this year, the Western powers (the EU and the US) will try to finesse a way of transferring power from the UN administration to one run by the European Union. The main obstacle comes from Russia which has a veto in the UN Security Council, the only body which can relinquish authority over the province. For the time being, the Belgrade government says that it opposes EULEX because EULEX was created as a vehicle for the independence of Kosovo, and Russia has said it will support Serbia. In private, however, Serb ministers admit that they will do anything to get into the EU, including accepting the amputation of 15% of their state territory.

However the circle is squared, the likely fudge of authority between the EU and the UN will cause what little government there is in Kosovo to break down completely. As one of the American policemen said to me, “How can you arrest someone if the lines of authority are unclear?” This unclarity will of course again further benefit the gangsters, pimps and drug-runners who currently constitute the government of Kosovo, and who have been the West’s allies since 1998.

Kosovo is therefore now decisively lost to the Serbs, and therefore to Christian civilisation. A war waged in the name of human rights in 1999 has led to nothing less than genocide – the wholesale eradication both of the Serb population of Kosovo since then (the few remaining Serbs live in ghettos) and of the historical memory of that population. In 1999, to justify the attack on Yugoslavia, the US State Department published a document called “Erasing History” which documented the alleged genocide against the Albanians. Now we know that the bulk of that document was war propaganda, its claims unproven despite years spent trying to prove them at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague.

Yet “erasing history” is precisely what the Albanians have done in Kosovo since NATO occupied the province, and on its watch. They have also erased democracy, human rights, and all the basic tenets of common human decency. The history of the last ten years in Kosovo is nothing but tragedy and hypocrisy blended into one – a true death of the West and all it stands for.

6 comments:

  1. Are you kidding me?

    "they have erased democracy, human rights, and all the basic tenets of common human decency."

    Oh, we have erased... meaning something we had under Serbian rule? What, democracy, human rights? We had that?

    You learn something every day... You know as an Albanian (25% Serbian technically) who has lived in Kosovo for 22 years, I must have been in a secret mind-altering program... well fuck, a Brit is telling me we had it all good under the Serbs, he must be right.

    You know all these articles about Kosovo from some bigoted western bloggers try to hide this whole Christian vs. Muslim undertone in their posts ... but have to say yours was not that successful. Lets face it your view has nothing to do with Serbs and Albanians in particular.


    But as an atheist, I enjoy just seeing how much suppressed hate there is between various religions. (I guess articles proving me right just feed my ego... or hey I just might be the average Albanian scum as your article tries to portray us)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Please do not swear on my blog.

    "What, democracy, human rights? We had that?"

    You would have done under "Serbian rule", as they have in the rest of Serbia. But you didn't under UN non-rule. And you don't and won't under KLA rule.

    "try to hide this whole Christian vs. Muslim undertone"

    It is not an "undertone", and I make no attempt to hide it.

    "Lets face it your view has nothing to do with Serbs and Albanians in particular"

    No, it hasn't. And I never said that it did.

    "But as an atheist"

    I hope that you enjoy living under Sharia law in the very near future, if not already.

    "Albanian scum as your article tries to portray us"

    I do not regard Blessed Teresa of Calcutta as scum. I do, however, regard the black-shirted, Nazi-nostalgic, Holocaust-denying, heroin-trafficking, women-trafficking Wahhabi of the KLA as scum. Don't you? If not, why not?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Because the KLA are nothing like that (Wahhabi?), and never were?

    KLA was never an 'islamic' movement, but an Albanian one. Can't you differentiate between religion and nationality?

    How come when there is a conflict between Georgia and Russia, its a conflict about territory, national interest etc. But when Albanians or Bosniaks are involved... its not for their national interests but spreading Islam in Europe or some similar bullshit? Like it or not there has been an islamic presence in the Balkans for centuries... there has not been any noticeable increase or decrease of religious influence over here (compared to a century ago, probably decreased Islamic influence). The same cannot be said for Western Europe.

    I'm sure the Serbs you seem to admire so much would have you believe our grudge with them is/was religiously motivated, but that is simply not the case. Its pure old-fashioned conflict for national interests.

    "Nazi-nostalgic"
    I wouldn't call it that... but (kosovar) Albanians in general think very highly of Germans, and some might be apologetic of their past... just because there are so many living there, and some feel nostalgic (maybe) of the time when Albanians were given the right to using their language (etc.) during the brief Nazi occupation.

    But that is not some kind of irrational pattern among Albanians.

    In contrast, Serbia is known as one of the places with the most active Neo-Nazi groups.


    "Holocaust-denying"
    uhmmm what? Which major player in KLA or the whole Albanian political scene is "holocaust-denying"? I bet there are a lot more of those in UK than here.

    In fact people here can be considered Israel apologists, if anything.

    There is more anti-Israel sentiment in Western Europe than in Kosovo, or Albania.

    In contrast, Serbia (by Jewish sources) is considered as one of the most anti-Semite places in Europe. (anti-catholic, anti-protestant as well)

    "heroin-trafficking"
    yes, Albanians are major players in organized crime in Europe... and that is unacceptable.
    However, there are some rational explanations to this too (Albania abruptly transitioning from communism, isolationism to ... some form of capitalism, and unlawfulness). Most of the criminals from Kosovo made a breakthrough during the mid90s during the intended 'freedom of activity' given to organized crime by the Milosevic regime (this was basically how the economy kept going). And you'll find that these criminals are not Albanian nationalists in particular, most of their businesses are dependent on cooperation with criminals on Serbia's side of the border. Most illegal trafficking that goes on in Kosovo is through Albanian/Serb collaboration, who seem to be very cooperative when it comes to crime.

    "And you don't and won't under KLA rule."
    We are not under 'KLA rule'. Some politicians are former KLA heads, and they are somewhat popular with people... the same thing happens practically everywhere. In a post-war period, military people usually are the most popular in elections.

    You think Hashim Thaqi is religious in any sense of the word, or has an islamic agenda? The guy would convert to chatholicism in national TV if he was asked to from his european buddies.

    " I hope that you enjoy living under Sharia law in the very near future, if not already. "
    That is more likely to happen in some parts of the UK than here, sorry to tell you. Things may change of course, but they may go any way from here, just like anywhere else. "Freedom of religion" will obviously make it easy for various groups, saudi funds (wahhabi) etc, to increase their influence by throwing cash to further their religious agenda... but the same applies to other groups. There has been an increase in Christian Protestanism here lately (a group which was never present in Kosovo, most of the Albanian christians were catholic here), which will benefit from the same freedom given to islamic groups.

    The fact of the matter is that currently, about 95% of those who declare themselves muslims here, are non-practising muslims who don't give a shit about religion. They are Muslims by label or tradition basically, as most christians in Europe can be considered christians by label (except Portugal,Italy,Poland etc).

    There is a increase in religious fundamentalism everywhere in the world currently, from the Middle East, to USA, to China, doubt that an increase of it in Kosovo in the future will be a standout case. If this will be a problem in the future, it will be a global one.

    But Sharia law in Kosovo? That is not happening, and there have absolutely been no indicators or trends towards this, as much as it would please some of you. Islamic fundamentalists here are a tiny, tiny minority. You would be more right to worry about that for some parts of the UK.

    ReplyDelete
  4. "KLA was never an 'islamic' movement, but an Albanian one."

    I stopped reading at that point. Why bother to go on?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Honestly! The KLA are neither Nazi-nostalgic nor are they Wahhabite. They're the Marxist leftovers of Communist Albania - one of very few countries in the world where religion of any kind was comprehensively stamped out.

    What is it abot the Left that they automatically assume that anything they don't like is somehow fascist?

    And why on earth would any sane person deliberately post up other people's comments on his blog without reading them first?

    ReplyDelete
  6. What is it about the Right (insofar as that is what you are), that they automatically assume that anything they don't like is somehow Marxist?

    You really are on your own here.

    ReplyDelete