View Full Version : When skopians lose the history game...
Flipper
07-17-2006, 03:48 PM
They start talking about the human rights and stuff. They speak like if we woke up one day saying "Lets kick out the slavs". They ignore the fact that they were the ones to intrude us during the Byzantine period + the fact that they joined Bulgaria when they broke the alliance with Serbia and Greece back in the Balcan Wars.
Anyway, do you have any nice info about this matter?
Ptolemy
07-17-2006, 04:41 PM
http://www.hrw.org/campaigns/macedonia/
Police Abuse Against Albanians Continues in Macedonia
"Persistent police abuse in Macedonia is simply shocking. Macedonia must urgently address the violence in its police stations. Ethnic Albanians are being severely abused, and in some cases beaten to death, without the slightest prospect of accountability. "
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2001/08/22/macedo1477.htm
Macedonian Troops Commit Grave Abuses
"The Macedonian government must answer to the people of Ljuboten. It is deeply disturbing that the Minister of Interior appears to have been so intimately involved in one of the worst abuses of the war. We demand an immediate and impartial investigation."
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2001/09/05/macedo2019.htm
Macedonian Police Abuses Documented
Ethnic Albanian Men Separated, Tortured at Police Stations
"Ethnic Albanian men fleeing the fighting in Macedonia face severe ill-treatment by the police. We have documented serious beatings and torture of ethnic Albanians at the Kumanovo and Skopje police stations in the last week. The victims we interviewed have the bruises and injuries to back up their claims of abuse"
http://www.hrw.org/press/2001/05/macedonia0530.htm
Macedonia: Rioters Burn Albanian Homes in Bitola
"The anti-Albanian riots in Bitola present a dangerous escalation of the crisis in Macedonia. The local police must fulfill their responsibility to stop the violence, not exacerbate it"
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2001/06/08/macedo192.htm
"Ethnic Albanians allege that the constitution reduces them to second-class citizens and must be amended. They argue that the Albanian language should be a second official language in the country.
Albanians say the authorities consistently deny them the right to "feel Albanian" and to display national symbols."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/europe/newsid_1224000/1224776.stm
"Despite government promises to reform Macedonia's overly exclusive 1992 citizenship law in line with Council of Europe standards, the law remained unchanged. Drafted at the time of its independence from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Macedonia's citizenship law never adequately resolved the status of the significant number of Yugoslav citizens who were long-term residents in Macedonia but who were neither born in Macedonia nor ethnic Macedonian. Large numbers of ethnic Albanians, Turks, and Roma who knew no other home than Macedonia remained effectively stateless as a result of the law."
http://www.hrw.org/wr2k1/europe/macedonia.html
Human Rights Watch (New York, June 25, 2001):
Excerpt from the "MACEDONIA PARAMILITARY 2000 ORDER":
"We order all Shiptars [derogatory term for ethnic Albanians-tr.] who have objects for sale-shopkeepers here and around the Kwantaskhi bazaar-to leave within three days, and for those Shiptars from Aracinovo, the deadline is 24 hours. After this deadline, all the shops will be burned, and if someone tries to protect [them], the same will be killed without warning."
"We inform Shiptars of the Macedonian republic that for every killed police officer or soldier 100 Shiptars who do not have citizenship or who took citizenship after 1994 will be killed. For every police officer or soldier disabled, 50 Shiptars will be killed. For every wounded police officer or soldier wounded, 10 Shiptars will be killed, no matter what gender or age."
"We inform Shiptars who do not have citizenship or got it after 1994 to leave Macedonia before June 25 this year, at midnight. After this deadline, we will start with the cleansing-- "The Longest Night" courtesy of Macedonia Paramilitary 2000.
"This pamphlet is exactly the kind of thing that could lead to widespread ethnic violence. The government and international community have to stop it now."
[Holly Cartner, HRW Executive director Europe and Central Asia division]
http://www.hrw.org/press/2001/06/macedon0625.htm
AP (Jun 16h, 2001): "It was not the cracked bones or the painful back injuries that made Nazim Bushi's teeth clutch with anger.""It was disappointment that the people who caused those injuries were fellow men in uniform, who he says turned against him solely because he belonged to the wrong ethnic group."
"Supporters of Bushi, an ethnic Albanian officer serving with the Macedonian police at the military airport in Skopje, say he is a victim of police brutality that has proliferated since ethnic Albanian militants took up arms in February, demanding broader rights and claiming discrimination by majority Macedonian Slavs."
"The incidents not only undermine government promises to improve the situation of ethnic Albanians, once the insurgency is dealt with. They could also draw ethnic Albanians to the militants and away from political parties willing to negotiate with the government."
"Already, the rebels claim police harassment of ethnic Albanian civilians is feeding them with new recruits."
`Young men who are beaten up by police are joining us every day,'' a rebel commander known as ``Commander Hoxha'' told The Associated Press from the rebel-controlled village of Aracinovo, barely four miles from the capital. ``They're more than we can supply with weapons.''
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/ap/20010616/wl/macedonia_police_1.html
Rioters Burn Albanian Homes in Bitola
Police Fail to Stop Violence, Some Actively Participate
Human Rights Watch (New York, June 8, 2001): "Police in the Macedonian city of Bitola did not attempt to stop rioting crowds on Wednesday night, and some police officers actively participated in the violence, Human Rights Watch said today. As a result, dozens of ethnic Albanian homes and as many as 100 shops were burned by the mob."
"The available evidence strongly suggests that the Bitola police did not take any actions to stop the anti-Albanian attacks and that a significant number of Bitola police officers, in and out of uniform, took part in the rioting. The police took no apparent action to enforce the 10 p.m. curfew it had announced for the town, and the rioting continued until after 1 a.m., according to official police statements. The rioting crowds claimed to be revenging the deaths of Bitola police officers that were ambushed near Tetovo."
"A village mosque was also vandalized by the rioters. Grave markers were broken, and several graves had been broken open. The windows of the mosque were broken, and rioters had set the carpets inside the mosque on fire but did not succeed in burning it down. On the exterior wall of the mosque, rioters had painted several swastikas and written "Death to the Shiptars." The term "Shiptar" is an ethnic slur when used by non-Albanians"
"Anti-Albanian sentiment in Bitola is rapidly growing into a campaign by extremists to rid Bitola of its ethnic Albanian population. Witnesses interviewed by Human Rights Watch stated that the rioters had yelled slogans including "Death to Albanians," "Pure Bitola," "Albanians Out of Bitola," "Get Out Albanians," and other such statements. The rioters told some of the ethnic Albanians that they had a week to get out of town before being targeted again. Many ethnic Albanians have fled their homes in Bitola in the aftermath of Wednesday's riot because they are afraid of further attacks."
http://www.hrw.org/press/2001/06/Bitola0608.htm
Are them enough????
Ptolemy
07-17-2006, 04:43 PM
Strasbourg Court to Rule on Macedonian Roma Torture Case for the First Time in its History
Budapest, Skopje, 11 May 2006. In a decision communicated last week, the
European Court of Human Rights has declared admissible the application of
Mr. Pejrusan Jasar against Macedonia.
On 16 April 1998, Mr. Pejrusan Jasar, a Romani man from Stip, Macedonia,
was in a local bar where gambling took place. One of the losing gamblers
complained that the dice were fixed, drew a firearm, and fired several
gunshots. Several police officers were called to the bar. Mr. Jasar
maintains that police officers grabbed him by his hair and forcibly placed
him in a police van. During his detention in police custody, he was kicked
in the head, punched and beaten with a truncheon by a police officer.
Medical protocols provided immediately after Mr. Jasar was released from
police custody the following morning stated that he had sustained numerous
injuries to his head, hand and back.
In May 1998, Mr. Jasar, represented by local attorney Mr. Jordan Madzunarov
together with the European Roma Rights Centre (ERRC), filed a criminal
complaint with the public prosecutor against an unidentified police
officer. In the more than eight years intervening, no steps have ever been
taken to investigate the complaint. Mr. Jasar also brought civil
proceedings for damages against the Macedonian State. These were dismissed
in October 1999.
Having exhausted available domestic remedies, the ERRC and Mr. Madzunarov
filed a claim at the European Court of Human Rights on behalf of Mr. Jasar
against Macedonia on 1 February 2001. Mr. Jasar and his advocates
complained that he had been subjected to acts of police brutality amounting
to torture, inhuman and/or degrading treatment, as banned under Convention
Article 3. Furthermore, it was argued that the fact that prosecuting
authorities’ failed to carry out any official investigation capable of
leading to the identification and punishment of the police officers
responsible for the ill-treatment constituted a procedural violation of the
same article. It was further noted that Mr. Jasar’s lack of access to an
effective remedy with respect to the authorities’ failure to investigate
his allegations of ill-treatment violated Article 13 of the Convention read
in conjunction with Article 3.
In challenging Mr. Jasar’s claims, the Macedonian Government submitted that
he had not exhausted domestic remedies pursued all possibilities for
justice in Macedonia -- in respect of his complaints of ill treatment. The
Government therefore argued that the application should be ruled
inadmissible. In the Government’s view, Mr. Jasar should have complained to
the officer in charge of the station or to the Sector for Internal Control
within the Ministry of Interior, such that disciplinary proceedings could
have been instituted against the police officers responsible. The
Government also took issue with the fact that Mr. Jasar did not initiate
administrative proceedings challenging the actions of the police before the
Supreme Court. He also failed to bring the alleged police brutality to the
attention of the Ombudsman, the Government argued.
In deciding on whether to hear the case, the Court reiterated that for the
purposes of reviewing whether Mr. Jasar had in fact pursued all available
opportunities for legal remedy in Macedonia, it is essential to have regard
to the circumstances of the individual case. The Court held, “This means,
in particular, that the Court must take realistic account not only of the
existence of formal remedies in the legal system of the Contracting State
concerned but also of the general context in which they operate, as well as
the personal circumstances of the applicant. It must then examine whether,
in all the circumstances of the case, the applicant did everything that
could reasonably be expected of him or her to exhaust domestic remedies.”
The Court accepted Mr. Jasar’s arguments and noted that the possibility of
initiating a disciplinary or internal inquiry into alleged ill-treatment
cannot generally be regarded as an effective remedy in this context as
these bodies lack the necessary independence. In the Court’s view, Mr.
Jasar could have not availed himself of the possibility of bringing an
administrative dispute before the Supreme Court for ill-treatment, as this
is only possible under Macedonian domestic law when the victim has no
alternative court remedy at his disposal. The Court held that the Ombudsman
also cannot be considered an effective remedy, as this body is not
empowered to address binding decisions to the Government, but rather may
only formulate recommendations.
In the view of the Court, by filing a criminal complaint and civil action
to obtain damages, Mr. Jasar “brought the alleged police brutality to the
attention of the authorities, placing them under a duty to carry out an
appropriate investigation, and instituted a court procedure able to
establish the facts, attribute responsibility and award monetary redress.
In the normal course of events this would be regarded as fulfilling the
requirements of […] the Convention in respect of his complaints under
Article 3 and it would not be necessary to institute any other procedures.”
The Strasbourg Court also accepted ERRC’s argumentation that as no official
effective investigation into the victim’s allegations had been carried out,
he had been suffering a continuing violation of the Convention’s provisions.
Decision on the merits of the case is pending.
For further information on the case, please contact ERRC Staff Attorney
Anita Danka: anita.danka@errc.org, +36-1-413-2221.
The ERRC’s work in Macedonia is currently supported by funding from the
European Union’s CARDS program, as well as funding from the Swedish
International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA).
_____________________________________________
The European Roma Rights Centre is an international public interest law
organisation which monitors the rights of Roma and provides legal defence
in cases of human rights abuse. For more information about the European
Roma Rights Centre, visit the ERRC on the web at http://www.errc.org.
European Roma Rights Centre
1386 Budapest 62
P.O. Box 906/93
Hungary
Phone: +36 1 4132200
Fax: +36 1 4132201
Ptolemy
07-17-2006, 04:44 PM
Skopje February 16, 2006
MIRJANA NAJCEVSKA - THERE ARE NO SECRET PRISON IN MACEDONIA, ONLY SECRET POLICE HOUSES
"There are no secret prison in Macedonia, but only secret police houses where people are been tortured", Helsinki Committee's (HC) President, Mirjana Najcevska told "Makfax", commenting on the case of Kaled el-Masri.
"The Council of Europe is wrong when saying that the operations of the State Security Service (DBK) in the former system were carried out in secret prisons. There are only few such covert prisons in our country. Those practices were conducted in secret houses", said Najcevska. She added that this practice is still in place. "The police has set up such secret houses throughout Macedonia.
After being tortured there, some people manage to come out of those houses, some do not", claims Najcevska
A1 TV says that Najcevska denied that HC holds direct proofs to back its claims,but informed that during the past 10 years 15 citizens have reported to have been interrogated by plain clothes police officers in houses and apartments, not in police stations. "There have been conformations of such activities by lawyers and people that used to cooperate with the police. This ways of conduct of conducting interrogation in apartments and houses has been inherited from the former system, but since then, the number of such houses has been reduced", Najcevska said. She added Khaled el-Masri's case could prove to be of benefit for the country, saying that it could open the issue on the secret methods
used in the work of the Macedonian police.
"Dnevnik" says the Interior Ministry denied Najcevska's accusations on secret police houses. "The Interior Ministry denies using houses or apartments in conducting police activities", Chief of Interior Minister Ljubomir Mhajlovski's Cabinet, Goran Pavlovski, said.
DS leader, Pavle Trajanov, (former high official in the Interior Ministry) said the Ministry has always been using secret apartments for holding talks with its informers and associates. Quoting former Interior Ministry officials "Dnevnik" says that the Ministry owns around 20 secret apartments throughout the country, whereas the National Security Agency (DBK) owns additional 20. The apartments are registered on employees in the Interior Ministry of close relatives of theirs. The interrogations conducted in the apartments are being recoded by cameras hidden in TV sets. "Guests" in those apartments are most often police associates, informers, foreign diplomats and employees in foreign intelligence services. The police sometimes use luxurious apartments for blackmailing or compromising public figures, "Dnevnik" says.
Ptolemy
07-17-2006, 04:45 PM
Skopje January 31, 2006
MILS Supplement
"Utrinski Vesnik" January 27, 2005
""HALT IN HUMAN RIGHTS IMPROVEMENTS"
The situation concerning the respect of the human rights in the country has not improved in comparison to the year before, consequently leading to a wider gap between Macedonia and the developed countries, Macedonian Helsinki Committee for Human Rights said. The Committee's annual report blames the poor economic and social situation as the main impediment in practicing the human rights and liberties in Macedonia. "The state failed to procure conditions for their promotion, whereas the governmental authorities neglected the importance of the citizens' interests", Helsinki Committee's President, Mirjana Najcevska, said.
She added the Committee last year registered plunge in social and economic rights, less equality, less freedom, but more politics. Hence, the new laws on social and economic rights offer more restriction and workers' obligations, rather than security and protection. Last year will be remembered for the downward spiral of equality and the legalization of it, such as the case with the Law on MPs in the part referring to the conditions for their retirement, as well as for the unequal treatment of electricity consumers, the selective approach toward knocking down illegally constructed buildings and the privileged attitude shown toward some syndicates.
The Committee's report accuses the authorities of failing to secure better protection for inmates serving time in penitentiary facilities. Moreover, it
denounces the failure by the Public Prosecution to do its job, and accuse the courts of being highly inefficient.
The Constitutional Court and the Ombudsman did not adequately perform their duties, introducing more politics, rather than rights, in their work, the Committee said. Answering a question about the Committee's stand on Khaled el-Masri case and the silence practice by the state institutions on the matter, Najcevska said; "The state has always been defending itself by maintain silence on such issues. It has always been the state's practice whenever involved in some incident to bring down a protective curtain of silence, but due to the international community's interest in the case, I believe that this tactics would not be of much help".
Ptolemy
07-17-2006, 04:46 PM
Skopje February 22, 2006
HELSINKI COMMITTEE ROASTS THE OMBUDSMAN AND POLICE UNIT "ALFA"
The Macedonian Helsinki Committee (HC) has severely criticized the work of the Ombudsman and of the police unit "Alfa" in its report on human rights dating from December 2005 and January 2006. HC claims that there have been overwhelming evidence showing that police unit "Alfa" has been directly involved in violation of human rights and liberties, especially the rights and liberties of a certain category of people, such as the drug addicts. HC officials informed that the Committee has been continually receiving complaints on the work of the police unit "Alfa", adding that the Interior Ministry has been reluctant to issue information on the unit's way of conduct. Channel 5 TV says Interior Ministry officials disapproved of HC's critics, saying "Alfa" unit has been working highly transparently.
Referring to the Ombudsman, HC said he only serves as a state organ that only performers "cosmetic" interventions and does not respond to citizens' complaints. "The function Ombudsman has been performed by a man with clear political affiliations, who only wishes to protect the state and its interests.
Being under direct parties' influence he does not conduct any control over the state organs nor contributes toward protection of citizens' human rights", HC's President, Mirjana Najcevska, said.
Channel 5 TV says Ombudsman Ixhet Memeti declined to comment on HC's accusations, saying they lacked arguments and facts. I have no time to deal with such na‹ve and see-through political issues, as I have more important things to do, such as to help the citizens", Memeti told Channel 5 TV.
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Flipper
07-17-2006, 06:18 PM
Thanks Ptolemy...To hrw tous to exw dixei. Ta paradexontai kai teliwnei h sizithsh haha.
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