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Peace Plan Highlights | Photo Gallery | Strike Assessment | News Video Archive | Strike at a Glance | Who's Who | Roots of the Conflict | Story Archive | Links | Discussion Yugoslav forces appear to meet first withdrawal deadline
June 15, 1999
PRISTINA, Yugoslavia (CNN) -- As thousands of Kosovar refugees swarmed into Kosovo on the heels of NATO forces Tuesday, retreating Yugoslav forces appeared to meet a critical NATO deadline to withdraw from southern Kosovo. NATO had given Yugoslavia until midnight (2200 GMT) Tuesday to pull out of "Zone One," a sector stretching across Kosovo's southern border that also juts north to include the provincial capital, Pristina. Long columns of civilian and military vehicles could be seen on the roads leading north out of Pristina throughout the day. "There appears to be full compliance (by the Serbs)," NATO spokesman Lt. Col. Robin Clifford said early Wednesday. Pristina was tense but quiet after midnight. Several shots rang out on darkened, deserted streets a few minutes before the deadline, but NATO officers dismissed it as parting shots fired into the air by departing Yugoslav forces. Although the first requirement seemed to have been met, NATO spokesman Jamie Shea warned that equipment problems may cause the Yugoslav forces to miss the deadline for complete withdrawal. The Serbs are facing logistical and maintenance problems, he said. Yugoslav forces have until June 20 to leave the province completely. NATO finds more horrorsNATO peacekeepers reported Tuesday finding at least 20 burned bodies in the ruins of a Kosovo house near the Albanian border. German soldiers with the NATO-led KFOR mission cordoned off the gruesome scene in Mala Krusa, called Krushe Emadi by Albanians. The town in the Serb province of Kosovo is located near where some of the heaviest fighting took place between the Kosovo Liberation Army and Serb forces. The deserted area is marked by signs of the recent war -- burned houses, bombed factories and dead animals. The KLA said Serbian paramilitary forces had gathered 50 to 60 people in the house and set it ablaze. Those who tried to jump from windows to escape were shot, a KLA officer said. The KLA said the massacre occurred on March 26, shortly after NATO began bombing Yugoslavia. Eyewitnesses reported similar accounts as they crossed days later into Kukes, Albania. Near the Macedonia border, residents in Stari Kacanik took CNN reporters to the site of possibly 16 graves, not far from where a suspected mass grave was found Monday in Kacanik. The residents said about 150 people were killed by Serb forces and buried at Kacanik and Stari Kacanik. U.S. troops are guarding the graves at Kacanik. KFOR said forensic investigators were being sent to examine the sites. Russians may accept NATO command
A contingent of about 15 vehicles carrying 29 Russian troops brought relief supplies from their base in Bosnia to a small force of Russian troops that has occupied the Pristina airfield for four days. Russian troops arrived unexpectedly ahead of NATO forces early Saturday and took control of the airport. They are denying NATO access until a deal is worked out on Russia's role in the peacekeeping operation. Senior U.S. administration officials told CNN Tuesday that Russian military leaders in Kosovo appear close to accepting an arrangement with NATO's KFOR commander, Lt. Gen. Mike Jackson. But the officials warned that several critical details must still be worked out, including how many Russian troops will participate in the force, in which sector they will be located and the specific command structure. Officials said one possibility under consideration was allowing the Russians to report to a non-NATO general, perhaps from Finland, who in turn would report to Jackson. British Rear Adm. Simon Moore described talks Tuesday between Jackson and Gen. Viktor Zavarin, commander of the Russian forces at the airport, as "amicable and constructive." But he said a number of issues remain to be resolved. In Moscow, Russian officials said Tuesday they feared the troops at the airport may be attacked by KLA fighters operating in the area. Serbian church demands that Milosevic resign
Meanwhile, Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic on Tuesday received rare but blistering public criticism from Belgrade for the Kosovo situation. The Serbian Orthodox Church demanded that Milosevic and his Cabinet resign. "The isolation of our country on the international scene cannot be solved or overcome with this kind of leadership," church leaders said in statement. "Faced with the tragic situation in our nation and our country, convinced that the final justice is with our Lord and not in the hands of an instrumentalized court in The Hague, we demand that the current president of the country and his government resign in the interest of the people and its salvation," the statement said. Also, the ultranationalist Radical Party attempted to resign from the Yugoslav government. But Serbian President Milan Milutinovic said it couldn't because the country was still in a state of emergency. Radical Party leader Vojislav Seselj said his party was leaving the government because Milosevic was "betraying" Kosovo. In a public speech in central Serbia Tuesday, Milosevic dodged the criticism and urged Yugoslavs to look to the future. "By reconstructing our country, we will renew ties with the whole world ... by correcting an image which for the whole decade had been created by those who were dissatisfied with our resistance to colonization of the Balkans," he said in the town of Aleksinac. Land mine on border kills 2 refugeesYugoslavia signed a peace accord last week to halt more than two months of NATO bombing. The alliance began the air campaign March 24 when Belgrade refused to sign an agreement designed to end fighting between Yugoslav forces and ethnic Albanian rebels in Kosovo. In other developments: British troops said they arrested five suspected ethnic Albanian guerrillas who fired on them. No one was reported hurt. The British suspected the five killed a Serb man earlier in the day. Paul Risely of the international war crimes tribunal at The Hague, Netherlands, which has indicted Milosevic and others, said the tribunal is coordinating with KFOR to investigate sites of reported atrocities. KFOR spokesman Lt. Col. Robin Clifford said he had no information on reports of the launch of a rocket grenade near the Pristina airport, other than no NATO personnel were involved. On the Macedonia border, between 1,500 and 2,000 refugees - - ignoring warnings that it may not be safe for them to return home -- went across the border into Kosovo. Three people hit land mines, a U.N. spokesman said. Two were killed, and the third was seriously injured. Correspondents Jim Clancy, Mike Boettcher, Christiane Amanpour, Matthew Chance, Moscow Bureau Chief Jill Dougherty, and Reuters contributed to this report. RELATED STORIES: More U.S. troops enter Kosovo RELATED SITES: Yugoslavia:
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