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Refugee tide resumes as Albanians flee homes
TABANOVCE (MACEDONIA), MAY 26. Thousands of dirty, hungry and
weary ethnic Albanians who have spent three weeks living in
cellars in northern Macedonian villages began to flee their homes
on Friday.
The exodus came as the Macedonian Government intensified
artillery and helicopter attacks, promising a policy of ``no
mercy'' to ethnic Albanian rebels. More than 1,000 men, women and
children from the battered village of Vaksince arrived on Friday
near a railway station after walking terrified for hours through
the fields. As a storm broke above their heads, they were
separated into groups of men and women by Macedonian special
police wearing bullet-proof jackets.
The men, who had several days' stubble on their unwashed faces,
told of desperate weeks huddled together in basements as shells
and mortars crashed into their village. ``We didn't know anything
about what was happening outside our cellar,'' said Hasan, a 50-
year-old farmer. ``For the last two weeks we have been surviving
on a little flour each day.''
Fifty yards away women wearing traditional head- scarves sat with
babies and young children as the downpour began. One held a
large, dirty blanket over her children to try to shield them.
Later they were loaded on to buses and taken to the regional
capital, Kumanovo, where they were given mineral water and food.
As the buses pulled out of the station husbands and wives waved
desperately to each other and children cried.
The police assured the men that they would not be harmed, but few
ethnic Albanians trust the promises of what they see as a hostile
government. ``There is nothing left of our village now,'' one man
said sadly. ``We didn't want to leave, we had to leave everything
behind - our cattle, our parents and our homes. But the shelling
was so bad we had no choice.'' The military hardware used with
punishing effect against the villages was in action once again on
Friday. Russian-built helicopters swooped low over cornfields
dotted with poppies, firing salvoes of rockets. Heavy mortar
positions lobbed shells across the main regional railway line
into houses in the villages. From closer in, tanks pounded
individual houses. The attacks made an incongruous impression in
a country which to all appearances is settling into a lazy Balkan
summer. - FTelegraph Group Limited, London, 2001.
Rebel leader surrenders
AP reports from Pristina:
A top commander of ethnic Albanian rebels in southern Serbia has
surrendered to NATO-led peacekeepers and handed over a large
cache of weapons, U.S. military officials said today.
Shefket Musliu surrendered yesterday while returning from the
funeral of another rebel commander, Ridvan Qazimi, who was killed
on Thursday by Yugoslav troops. Musliu and two top associates
were released after they promised not to fight anymore, said a
statement from the U.S. peacekeepers in Kosovo.
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