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Macedonia border battle rages
TETOVO, Macedonia -- Fierce fighting has continued in the border hills of Macedonia as ethnic Albanians clash with army and police units. Soldiers using mortar and heavy machine-gun rounds attempted to force the rebels out of the mountainous region in a battle that raged throughout Friday. U.N. Balkans envoy Carl Bildt described the violence of the last few days as "one of the most alarming events in the Balkans during the last 10 years."
Five civilians were injured -- three of them needing hospital treatment -- in the fighting on Friday around Tetovo, Macedonia's second largest city. The injuries occurred as Macedonian police units, dug-in in the town's predominantly Macedonian Kotluk district and exchanged fire with Albanian rebels occupying positions on the slopes of Baltepe mountain, on the outskirts of Tetovo. More than 2,000 civilians have fled Tetovo since hostilities began, according to the Macedonian Interior Ministry. NATO Secretary-General George Robertson has announced an increase in alliance troops along the Kosovo-Macedonia border in order to try and control the situation.. "Extra troops and equipment and surveillance have already been put there," he told reporters during an official visit to Athens on Friday. The clashes have not been limited to Tetovo. Fighting has also been reported around Kicevo, about 120 kilometres (70 miles) southwest of Skopje, and Zajas, near the Albanian border, where a police station was targeted. In the northern part of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, fighting broke out around the village of Lipkovo, 20 kilometres (12 miles) northeast of the capital, police said. The predominantly ethnic Albanian village is located just south of a border area where troops and ethnic Albanian rebels clashed in the past two weeks around the village of Tanusevci on Macedonia's northern borders with Kosovo. The Macedonian Interior Ministry blamed the Tetovo fighting on 200 heavily armed rebels from Kosovo who crossed into Macedonia and occupied several border villages. "What we are witnessing, in effect, is an armed aggression from abroad, from Kosovo," Macedonia's U.N. Ambassador Naste Calovski told a meeting of the U.N. Security Council. "It is urgent that the extremists are isolated and unable to proceed with their agenda and terrorist activities." The fighting comes as Macedonia, KFOR, and Yugoslav forces have all initiated operations near the Kosovo, southern Serbian, and Macedonian borders in the hope of driving Albanian rebels out of the area after restrictions were lifted from the Balkan armies. Russia's Foreign Ministry said it fully backed Macedonian efforts, but expressed concerns the former Yugoslav republic could turn into another Kosovo. There was panic buying of petrol and food both in Tetovo and in the capital Skopje. Local gas stations in Tetovo are now out of petrol, CNN's Chris Burns said. Ethnic Albanians account for at least a quarter of Macedonia's two million people, dominating western regions of the country and a large section of the capital. The NATO alliance insisted on Thursday it stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the government in Macedonia, but said it would not send any combat troops to help the Macedonian authorities in their fight against ethnic-Albanian rebels. German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer said on Friday the West would not allow Balkan borders to be altered by force, referring to fears that the Albanian guerrillas wanted to join their communities in Kosovo, Macedonia and Albania in one country. He added: "We are not ready to accept any violent changing of borders. Such a thing is out of the question." The Associated Press & Reuters contributed to this report. RELATED STORIES:
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