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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, March 27, 2001 |
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Fighting rages in Macedonia
By Vaiju Naravane
PARIS, MARCH 26. There is heightened tension in the tiny Balkan
Republic of Macedonia with violence continuing around Tetovo, the
country's second largest city.
The Macedonian army has used T-55 tanks sent in specially by
Russia as well as helicopter gunships in a bid to dislodge
Albanian rebels who have captured several villages in a large
swathe of territory in the mountains surrounding Tetovo. At least
one policeman, a soldier and four ethnic Albanians were wounded
in Sunday's fighting. (Agency reports said the army had pushed
back the rebels from six villages).
The Macedonian Government claims it has taken several guerillas
prisoner. Tetovo lies on a plain at the foot of a chain of
mountains marking the border with Kosovo. The last straggling
houses of the town cling to the hillsides. Macedonian forces have
encircled the villages of Gajre and Shipkovica near the Pena
river.
The use of heavy artillery by the Macedonian army may well lead
to a political crisis within the country. Roughly 30 per cent of
Macedonia's population of 2.3 million people is made up of ethnic
Albanians who say they are treated like second class citizens.
Mr. Imer Imeri, president of the Party for Democracy and
Prosperity, the dominant Albanian party in Macedonia's
Parliament, told The Hindu that he and his supporters would
boycott Parliament and suspend dealings with the Government till
the attacks against unarmed civilians and the guerillas was
halted. The NATO General Secretary, Lord George Robertson, is now
in Skopje to hold talks with Macedonian leaders including
representatives of the Albanian community.
In Kosovo, the three major Albanian parties warned of disastrous
consequences and escalating violence. ``Skopje's failure to cease
its offensive will lead to a war with terrible consequences for
the entire region,'' Mr. Skender Hyseni, spokesman for the
moderate Kosovo Democratic League said.
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