The Guardian (USA)

Ex-army leader is first suspect arrested by Kosovo war crimes tribunal

- AP in Pristina

An internatio­nal tribunal investigat­ing war crimes committed during Kosovo’s 1998-99 independen­ce war has arrested its first suspect, a former commander of separatist fighters.

The Kosovo Specialist Chambers, based in The Hague, said the former Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) commander Salih Mustafa was arrested based on a “warrant, transfer order and confirmed indictment issued by a pretrial judge”. The court’s statement did not identify the charges on which he was indicted.

The court said Mustafa would be transferre­d to its detention facilities in The Hague and “appear before the pretrial judge without undue delay”. He is the first ethnic Albanian to be arrested by the tribunal on war crimes charges arising from the conflict.

The KLA was made up of ethnic Albanian rebels who wanted Kosovo’s independen­ce from Serbia. Mustafa oversaw fighters in the Llapi area, 20 miles (35km) north of the capital, Pristina.

He later served as intelligen­ce chief of the Kosovo Security Force, military troops created in 2009 as a transition­al unit before becoming a regular army. The Kosovo Specialist Chambers and a companion prosecutor­s’ office was establishe­d five years ago to look into allegation­s that KLA members committed war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Its prosecutor­s also have indicted Kosovo’s president, Hashim Thaçi, the former parliament­ary speaker Kadri Veseli, and others with crimes that include murder, enforced disappeara­nces, persecutio­n and torture. Both men have denied committing any crimes.

The 1998-99 war left more than 10,000 people dead, most of them ethnic Albanians from Kosovo. More than 1,600 people remain unaccounte­d

for. The fighting ended after a 78day Nato air campaign against Serbian troops.

Kosovo, which is dominated by ethnic Albanians, declared independen­ce from Serbia in 2008, a move recognised by many western nations but not Serbia or its allies Russia and China.

 ?? Photograph: Eva Plevier/Reuters ?? The Kosovo Specialist Chambers in The Hague, where Mustafa will be transferre­d to.
Photograph: Eva Plevier/Reuters The Kosovo Specialist Chambers in The Hague, where Mustafa will be transferre­d to.

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