US State Department cables from places I have served plus items from my time as a UN peacekeeper. To increase public awareness of how diplomacy and peacekeeping are (were) actually done. All cables cleared by USG FOIA procedure. Cables are mostly those sent under my name from my posts but also others in which I was directly involved. UN documents and other items will also include occasional notes and background. Most recent in series on top with cables under the new series of UN documents.
Showing posts with label violence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label violence. Show all posts
Friday, September 1, 2023
88 HARARE 3798: SECURITY ON THE EASTERN BORDER
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Tuesday, December 11, 2018
Kosovo: March 2007 -- property Issues in Bosniak Mahalla
On March 16, 2007, I had to call upon our police to stop illegal construction by a local Serb in Bosniak Mahalla, I don't remember the details but the person involved must have been trying to build a large dwelling in a mixed area which the local Albanians and/or others found threatening as well as illegal. (Legality was not a leading motif in the Mahalla.) Below is the complaint from the CCK (I don't speak Serbian and cannot remember what it said) and my reply.
On March 28, I sent this report to HQ:
Re following Police report of last night:
"On Tuesday 27th of March 2007 at approx. 19.45 hrs, an Unidentified Explosive Device exploded at the junction of "Oslobodena Str.' and "Nemanjina Str." in Little Bosnia - Mitrovica North.
Consequences: 03 individual cars slightly damages by parts of the explosive device. No people injured. "
This was apparently a "black grenade" (i.e., a fairly small device) and may have been thrown by a disgruntled young Albanian who had previously in the evening had a altercation with civpol on north side of Bridge. He reportedly threatened the police with further action. Police are still investigating but everyone at the scene -- Albanians and Serbs -- remained calm and apparently already attributed the attack to this "crazy Albanian" and not to inter-ethnic tensions. Nevertheless, police (including UNMIK-P) increased patrols in other mixed areas of north Mitrovica. UNMIK also informed CCK and Mitrovica CEO to assure that things were under control. We also drank tea with mixed group of locals at a small cafe at the scene. Everyone there was calm, including one of the damaged car owners.
Comment: The north shore and especially Bosniak Mahalla remains tense but there have been no more indications of conflict over ongoing construction. However, it is vital that UNMIK-P Enhancement Force be kept at full strength (at least 130) over the next months. We are in deep trouble if we lose control during any reaction to almost certain continued acts of isolated violence.
I should add that while I was drinking tea and smoking a cigar the owner gave me -- everyone was quite uncomfortable with my not smoking -- I heard the men joking in a mix of Serbian and Albanian. Not many places this happens in public in Kosovo. I joined in with the little common language we had and we all laughed in agreement that Kosovo is a crazy place and Bosniak Mahalla the craziest of all. When I got home and was reading in bed, I heard a prolonged burst of automatic weapon fire plus the firing of a pistol. Jumped out of bed and opened by door to the balcony. Scared a poor fellow across the street taking a piss. But I guess it was nothing. Took my heart a little time to slow down enough to permit sleep.
On March 28, I sent this report to HQ:
Re following Police report of last night:
"On Tuesday 27th of March 2007 at approx. 19.45 hrs, an Unidentified Explosive Device exploded at the junction of "Oslobodena Str.' and "Nemanjina Str." in Little Bosnia - Mitrovica North.
Consequences: 03 individual cars slightly damages by parts of the explosive device. No people injured. "
This was apparently a "black grenade" (i.e., a fairly small device) and may have been thrown by a disgruntled young Albanian who had previously in the evening had a altercation with civpol on north side of Bridge. He reportedly threatened the police with further action. Police are still investigating but everyone at the scene -- Albanians and Serbs -- remained calm and apparently already attributed the attack to this "crazy Albanian" and not to inter-ethnic tensions. Nevertheless, police (including UNMIK-P) increased patrols in other mixed areas of north Mitrovica. UNMIK also informed CCK and Mitrovica CEO to assure that things were under control. We also drank tea with mixed group of locals at a small cafe at the scene. Everyone there was calm, including one of the damaged car owners.
Comment: The north shore and especially Bosniak Mahalla remains tense but there have been no more indications of conflict over ongoing construction. However, it is vital that UNMIK-P Enhancement Force be kept at full strength (at least 130) over the next months. We are in deep trouble if we lose control during any reaction to almost certain continued acts of isolated violence.
I should add that while I was drinking tea and smoking a cigar the owner gave me -- everyone was quite uncomfortable with my not smoking -- I heard the men joking in a mix of Serbian and Albanian. Not many places this happens in public in Kosovo. I joined in with the little common language we had and we all laughed in agreement that Kosovo is a crazy place and Bosniak Mahalla the craziest of all. When I got home and was reading in bed, I heard a prolonged burst of automatic weapon fire plus the firing of a pistol. Jumped out of bed and opened by door to the balcony. Scared a poor fellow across the street taking a piss. But I guess it was nothing. Took my heart a little time to slow down enough to permit sleep.
Tuesday, December 4, 2018
Kosovo: An UNMIK Police Report on the March 17, 2008 Coutrthouse Debacle
The document below is an UNMIK Police report prepared on the events leading up to and on the day of March 17, 2008. It should be read in conjunction with the prior piece. I was kept in the dark about UNMIK HQ's planning for re-taking the Court. Suspecting something was afoot, I pressed for confirmation and was finally given a briefing the night before the action by the UNMIK Police Regional Command in Mitrovica. They had by then been superseded by UNMIK HQ. They joked that the entire plan was simply to go and arrest Serb thugs. Indeed, UNMIK HQ had disregarded our warnings about the likely violence that would surround any use of force against the Courthouse and UNMIK Police (and KFOR) was woefully unprepared for events that day. I later learned that the initial seizure of the Court appeared to have been allowed by UNMIK police sent by Pristina HQ to guard the building. I believe that the UNMIK Pristine leadership provoked the entire sad episode. None of this is reflected in the police report which apparently made it into my hands on May 5, 2008.
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