Serbia hunts down
rioters
SLOBODAN LEKIC
February 23, 2008 7:39 AM
BELGRADE, Serbia-Serbia's top state prosecutor said Saturday that authorities
are hunting for participants in riots that targeted the U.S. and other
embassies and Western commercial interests.
"We are collecting evidence and are identifying the culprits," Slobodan
Radovanovic said in a statement.
Police said they had arrested nearly 200 rioters Thursday night during
the worst anti-Western violence seen on Belgrade streets since the ouster
of former strongman Slobodan Milosevic in 2000.
Rioters protesting international recognition of Kosovo's independence
torched several offices of the U.S. Embassy's consular section and attacked
the missions of Germany, Belgium, Turkey, Croatia and other countries.
One person died and more than 150 were injured in the violence, in which
nearly 100 stores were looted.
The authorities said Saturday that the victim was 21-year-old Zoran
Vujovic, from the northern city of Novi Sad. Serbian media said Vujovic
was originally from the Kosovo town of Caglavica, but fled to central Serbia
in the wake of the 1998-99 war.
On Friday, the U.S. State Department ordered nonessential embassy employees
and families of American diplomats in Belgrade to leave Serbia.
"We are not sufficiently confident that they are safe here," U.S. Ambassador
Cameron Munter said in an interview.
The decision to implement what is known as an "ordered departure" will
affect some of the between 80 and 100 Americans who work at the embassy,
but it was not clear how many family members would be affected.
Current plans call for them to remain abroad for seven to 10 days, the
embassy said.
Other embassies said they had no plans to withdrawal dependents or staff
from the Serbian capital.
The United States and the European Union have warned Serbia to boost
protection of foreign diplomats and missions, and the U.N. Security Council
has unanimously condemned the attacks.
Serbia's leaders have appealed for calm and President Boris Tadic convened
the National Security Council to consider how to prevent further outbreaks
of violence.
"We are intensively engaged with a large number of personnel (in finding)
the culprits and expect the work to be completed soon," Radovanovic said.
But hard-line nationalist ministers continue to condemn the United States
and other nations that have recognized the independence of Kosovo, which
Serbs consider to be their historical heartland.
"The United States is the main culprit ... for all those violent acts,"
said Serbia's minister for Kosovo, Slobodan Samardzic.
Protests over the breakaway province's declaration of independence have
increased tensions throughout the region.
On Friday, angry demonstrators confronted U.N. police in Kosovska Mitrovica,
an ethnically divided town in northern Kosovo. Mobs chanting "Kosovo is
ours!" hurled stones, bottles and firecrackers at the U.N. forces, who
were protecting a bridge that divides Serbs from ethnic Albanians in the
town. No one appeared to be injured. |