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  1. #81
    Konservatore Maska e Dita
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    Hani i Hotit, posta kufitare. Refugjate nga Kosova te ardhur nga Mali i Zi ne pritje per t'u transferuar ne kamp
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  2. #82
    Konservatore Maska e Dita
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    Shkoder, Telefonet satelitore e vene ne dispozicion nga Komiteti Nderkombetar i Kryqit te Kuq
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  3. #83
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    Kukes, Ne pritje te nje evakuimi mjekesor me helikopter
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  4. #84
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    Kukes, ne pritje te nje evakuimi me helikopter
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  5. #85
    Konservatore Maska e Dita
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    Refugjate te Kosoves duke degjuar lajmet
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  6. #86
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    Kukes, Shperndarja e bukes per refugjatet
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  7. #87
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    Kthimi (nga faqja e KFOR)



  8. #88
    Konservatore Maska e Dita
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    Gjakove 1999








    1. Serbian Property This wedding boutique survived unscathed, local people say, because the building is state owned.

    2. An Execution The owner of this bedding store, Sadik Boshnjaku, survived its torching and is now living somewhere in town. His son, Megzon, 30, was executed.

    3. Shot on His Sofa One of the first targets, this furniture store was managed by Kujtim Shasivari, who lived on a street nearby with his wife, Elida, an actress and producer of comedy videos, and two children. On March 24, the police broke into the house, ordered everyone but Kujtim outside and then executed him on his sofa. Elida and the children left for Albania, but have since returned.

    4. No Reason to Return Bajrush Caka owned this mini-market for 20 years. It was looted and burned on March 24. Caka stayed in town for 15 days before fleeing on foot to Albania, where he remains.

    5. Hunting for Gold Besnik Rizvanolli did a lively business in gold jewelry and coins until his shop was looted and then demolished by Serbs, who broke down the walls searching for hidden safes. Rizvanolli fled to Pristina, Kosovo's capital.

    6. Left for Albania Nevzat Komoni, who owned this shoe store, went to Albania in April and hasn't returned. Upstairs, he employed people to make uniforms for municipal workers.

    7. Obliterated Wedged between two buildings and owned by the Nushi family, this coffee shop was incinerated on March 25.

    8. A Family Is Shattered The apartment on the left was owned by the oldest of the three Nushi brothers, Gezim, 51, who is seen picking through the rubble, trying to salvage a China tea set. On the right is the apartment of Besim, 46. The third brother, Mohamed, 39, lived in a house behind the main building.

    Each brother had a shop on the ground floor. Gezim ran the Ping-Pong Cafe. Next to that was Restaurant Eris, run by Mohamed. The third was a mini-market, run by Besim. Immediately after the building burned in March, the families moved to different places in Gjakova. From that point on, the men stayed inside while the women and children ventured out to do the shopping. Although most of the city's population had either fled or been deported after the first week of bombing, there were still daylong lines at the sole, state-owned, shop open to ethnic Albanians. (The small Serb population had a couple of shops.) Eventually, Mohamed and his family went to Albania, and from there to Canada.

    9. One Place of Refuge On March 24, 150 women, children and the elderly took shelter for eight days in the almshouse of the Hadumi mosque, which the Serbs never entered. On March 25, Serb forces launched grenades at the mosque, but missed. Sometime in April, they damaged the top of the minaret and knocked a hole in the tower. Fire charred a large wooden porch used for prayers, but the flames did not get inside the mosque. The imam's house and a small school were looted, then burned.
    Ndryshuar për herë të fundit nga StterollA : 10-06-2003 më 20:01

  9. #89
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    Gjakove 1999









    1. The Serbs Knew Where They Lived Negjmedin Varaku, a physics instructor, lived here with his brother Esati and worked in the "parallel state" set up in 1991 by Albanians after Serbs threw them out of state jobs and the government. This state consisted of separate schools, universities and medical clinics, together with an administrative and financial system, paid for in large part by money contributed by the Albanian diaspora in Europe and America. As natural targets of the Serbs' wrath, the brothers and their families ran from the house when the March assault began.

    Esati's family moved to another part of Gjakova; Esati went to live with two cousins in Old Town. On March 30, police officers chasing someone else through the backstreets raided this house, took Esati and his two male cousins outside and shot them in the front yard. On May 10, Negjmedin was arrested in a Serb sweep and is now among the 405 men missing.

    2. Political Lightning Rod Njazi Morina, also called Xia, housed a series of ethnic Albanian political parties, among them the League of Human Rights (allied to the main ethnic Albanian party) and the Democratic League of Kosovo (the party of Ibrahim Rugova, the former Kosovar political leader). It was looted and burned in March.

    3. K.L.A. Headquarters After the March conflagration, 30 local K.L.A. guerrillas moved into this house, owned by a surgeon who supported the rebels. Neighboring houses filled up with residents of Old Town whose homes had been ransacked.

    On May 7, Serb forces swept through Old Town, passing left to right in the picture, and attacked the K.L.A. base. In the ensuing battle, one police officer was killed and another wounded. A rocket-propelled grenade blew off a section of the roof. Most of the K.L.A. guerrillas ran out the back, with seven remaining as a rear guard. One, Genc Kepuska, was killed. When the first floor caught fire, the rest ran out the back. One soldier, Visar Juniku, was killed outside, and another, Bujar Roka, gunned down as he ran up the hill. He is buried where he fell, his boots still visible, in an unmarked grave. The last man out was the commander, whose name is unknown. He jumped from a second-floor window and hurt his back but managed to escape into the trees.

    4. A Young Poet Is Silenced This was the house of Afrim Domi, 50, his wife, two sons and 17-year-old daughter, Yllka. The granddaughter of the late Kosovo writer Kasim Domi, Yllka was already an accomplished writer and poet, but most of her work was lost when the house was burned. One surviving poem, written this year, is called ''Song of the Spring.'' This is the last stanza:

    We will not be together/Our lives are coming to an end We will not know each other We will miss each other Maybe there will be some tears for me But you have to know that there is no more hope You will understand that I loved your soul more than my own I wrote this memory for you to find peace.

    After the March rampage, Yllka's father dug a bunker for his wife and children in the back garden. It had a plastic-sheet lining and a wooden trapdoor concealed by dead branches.

    When the May offensive began, Yllka, who earlier had barely escaped rape by Serb police officers and soldiers, fled with her father and a group of men into the bushes and trees of Qabrati Hill. She died there, killed by machine-gun fire that the Serbs sprayed randomly on the hillside. Her body, collected by Gypsies who had been sent to the hill by the Serbs, was dumped into a mass grave and then moved again -- presumably to destroy evidence of war crimes. It has not been found.

    The men stayed there for five days, during which time women living below the hill took them food and water. Several of the women -- no one yet knows how many -- were killed by machine-gun fire.

    5. Dodging Bullets -- and Serbs Afrim's cousin Arsim Domi, 40, lives directly behind his house. At 9 A.M. on May 7, as the police flooded Old Town, Arsim joined about 50 men -- and Yllka Domi -- in the bushes. Two were killed, and two, including Arsim, were wounded.

    After two days, about 30 men left for Albania. Arsim went to the bunker dug by Afrim, now empty, then barely escaped a Serb police officer who stepped on the trapdoor. He ran into the next house but decided to head back to Qabrati Hill. When he was spotted, he retreated to the house he had fled, where he opened the back door but decided not to go in.

    Minutes later, the police arrived and, seeing the open door, pulled back. Immediately, Serb soldiers on top of the hill fired rocket-propelled grenades, demolishing the house. Arsim counted 60 explosions.

    After a spooky night on the hill and back in a blacked-out Old Town, nearly tripping over Serb police officers and soldiers, Arsim ended up in a house backing up to the hillside. At 12:30 A.M. on May 10, the police opened fire on the house. Three men and a woman were killed. Arsim ran house to house back to his own house, arriving at 3:30 A.M. to find it abandoned. At about 5, he saw soldiers in his front yard firing antitank rockets into Old Town. Thinking they were the K.L.A., he went to sleep. Only later did he realize they were Serb police officers. They stopped firing shortly after 10 and left an hour later. Arsim went to the balcony, looked down and saw a friend, Bardhyl Qaushi, a law professor, and a cousin, Bashkim Domi, running from some soldiers. Neither has been seen since.

    That night, he made it to a cousin's house. He stayed in the house for a few days, then spent the following month moving among the houses of friends and cousins. He continues to walk with a slight limp.
    Ndryshuar për herë të fundit nga StterollA : 10-06-2003 më 20:01

  10. #90
    Ulerime Maska e Jola
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    28-09-2002
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    Ja dhe disa imazhe te tjera
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    L'amore e' come la febbre, si guarisce a letto.

  11. #91
    Ulerime Maska e Jola
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    .
    Fotografitë e Bashkëngjitura Fotografitë e Bashkëngjitura  
    L'amore e' come la febbre, si guarisce a letto.

Faqja 5 prej 5 FillimFillim ... 345

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