The New York Times November 1, 1987, Sunday, Late City Final Edition Section 1; Part 1, Page 14, Column 1;
"In Yugoslavia, Rising Ethnic Strife Brings Fears of Worse Civil Conflict"
By DAVID BINDER, Special to the New York Times
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia Portions of southern Yugoslavia have
reached such a state of ethnic friction that Yugoslavs have begun
to talk of the horrifying possibility of ''civil war'' in a land
that lost one-tenth of its population, or 1.7 million people, in
World War II. The current hostilities pit separatist-minded
ethnic Albanians against the various Slavic populations of
Yugoslavia and occur at all levels of society, from the highest
officials to the humblest peasants. A young Army conscript of
ethnic Albanian origin shot up his barracks, killing four
sleeping Slavic bunkmates and wounding six others. The army says
it has uncovered hundreds of subversive ethnic Albanian cells in
its ranks. Some arsenals have been raided.
Vicious Insults
Ethnic Albanians in the Government have manipulated public funds
and regulations to take over land belonging to Serbs. And
politicians have exchanged vicious insults. Slavic Orthodox
churches have been attacked, and flags have been torn down. Wells
have been poisoned and crops burned. Slavic boys have been
knifed, and some young ethnic Albanians have been told by their
elders to rape Serbian girls.
Ethnic Albanians comprise the fastest growing nationality in
Yugoslavia and are expected soon to become its third largest,
after the Serbs and Croats.
Radicals' Goals
The goal of the radical nationalists among them, one said in an
interview, is an ''ethnic Albania that includes western
Macedonia, southern Montenegro, part of southern Serbia, Kosovo
and Albania itself.'' That includes large chunks of the republics
that make up the southern half of Yugoslavia.
Other ethnic Albanian separatists admit to a vision of a greater
Albania governed from Pristina in southern Yugoslavia rather than
Tirana, the capital of neighboring Albania. There is no evidence
that the hard-line Communist Government in Tirana is giving them
material assistance.
The principal battleground is the region called Kosovo, a high
plateau ringed by mountains that is somewhat smaller than New
Jersey. Ethnic Albanians there make up 85 percent of the
population of 1.7 million. The rest are Serbians and
Montenegrins.
Worst Strife in Years
As Slavs flee the protracted violence, Kosovo is becoming what
ethnic Albanian nationalists have been demanding for years, and
especially strongly since the bloody rioting by ethnic Albanians
in Pristina in 1981 - an ''ethnically pure'' Albanian region, a
''Republic of Kosovo'' in all but name.
The violence, a journalist in Kosovo said, is escalating to ''the
worst in the last seven years.'' Many Yugoslavs blame the
troubles on the ethnic Albanians, but the matter is more complex
in a country with as many nationalities and religions as
Yugoslavia's and involves economic development, law, politics,
families and flags. As recently as 20 years ago, the Slavic
majority treated ethnic Albanians as inferiors to be employed as
hewers of wood and carriers of heating coal. The ethnic
Albanians, who now number 2 million, were officially deemed a
minority, not a constituent nationality, as they are today.
Were the ethnic tensions restricted to Kosovo, Yugoslavia's
problems with its Albanian nationals might be more manageable.
But some Yugoslavs and some ethnic Albanians believe the struggle
has spread far beyond Kosovo. Macedonia, a republic to the south
with a population of 1.8 million, has a restive ethnic Albanian
minority of 350,000.
''We've already lost western Macedonia to the Albanians,'' said a
member of the Yugoslav party presidium, explaining that the
ethnic minority had driven the Slavic Macedonians out of the
region.>>>
Attacks on Slavs
Last summer, the authorities in Kosovo said they documented 40
ethnic Albanian attacks on Slavs in two months. In the last two
years, 320 ethnic Albanians have been sentenced for political
crimes, nearly half of them characterized as severe.
In one incident, Fadil Hoxha, once the leading politician of
ethnic Albanian origin in Yugoslavia, joked at an official dinner
in Prizren last year that Serbian women should be used to satisfy
potential ethnic Albanian rapists. After his quip was reported
this October, Serbian women in Kosovo protested, and Mr. Hoxha
was dismissed from the Communist Party.
As a precaution, the central authorities dispatched 380 riot
police officers to the Kosovo region for the first time in four
years. Officials in Belgrade view the ethnic Albanian challenge
as imperiling the foundations of the multinational experiment
called federal Yugoslavia, which consists of six republics and
two provinces.
'Lebanonizing' of Yugoslavia
High-ranking officials have spoken of the ''Lebanonizing'' of
their country and have compared its troubles to the strife in
Northern Ireland. Borislav Jovic, a member of the Serbian party's
presidency, spoke in an interview of the prospect of ''two
Albanias, one north and one south, like divided Germany or
Korea,'' and of ''practically the breakup of Yugoslavia.'' He
added: ''Time is working against us.''
The federal Secretary for National Defense, Fleet Adm. Branko
Mamula, told the army's party organization in September of
efforts by ethnic Albanians to subvert the armed forces.
''Between 1981 and 1987 a total of 216 illegal organizations with
1,435 members of Albanian nationality were discovered in the
Yugoslav People's Army,'' he said.
Admiral Mamula said ethnic Albanian subversives had been
preparing for ''killing officers and soldiers, poisoning food and
water, sabotage, breaking into weapons arsenals and stealing arms
and ammunition, desertion and causing flagrant nationalist
incidents in armyunits.''
Concerns Over Military
Coming three weeks after the ethnic Albanian draftee, Aziz
Kelmendi, had slaughtered his Slavic comrades in the barracks at
Paracin, the speech struck fear in thousands of families whose
sons were about to start their mandatory year of military
service.
Because the Albanians have had a relatively high birth rate,
one-quarter of the army's 200,000 conscripts this year are ethnic
Albanians. Admiral Mamula suggested that 3,792 were potential
human timebombs.
He said the army had ''not been provided with details relevant
for assessing their behavior.'' But a number of Belgrade
politicians said they doubted the Yugoslav armed forces would be
used to intervene in Kosovo as they were to quell violent rioting
in 1981 in Pristina. They reason that the army leadership is
extremely reluctant to become involved in what is, in the first
place, a political issue.
Ethnic Albanians already control almost every phase of life in
the autonomous province of Kosovo, including the police,
judiciary, civil service, schools and factories. Non-Albanian
visitors almost immediately feel the independence - and suspicion
- of the ethnic Albanian authorities.
Region's Slavs Lack Strength
While 200,000 Serbs and Montenegrins still live in the province,
they are scattered and lack cohesion. In the last seven years,
20,000 of them have fled the province, often leaving behind
farmsteads and houses, for the safety of the Slavic north. Until
September, the majority of the Serbian Communist Party leadership
pursued a policy of seeking compromise with the Kosovo party
hierarchy under its ethnic Albanian leader, Azem Vlasi. But
during a 30-hour session of the Serbian central committee inlate
September, the Serbian party secretary, Slobodan Milosevic,
deposed Dragisa Pavlovic, as head of Belgrade's party
organization, the country's largest. Mr. Milosevic accused Mr.
Pavlovic of being an appeaser who was soft on Albanian radicals.
Mr. Milosevic had courted the Serbian backlash vote with speeches
in Kosovo itself calling for ''the policy of the hard hand.''
''We will go up against anti-Socialist forces, even if they call
us Stalinists,'' Mr. Milosevic declared recently. That a Yugoslav
politician would invite someone to call him a Stalinist even four
decades after Tito's epochal break with Stalin, is a measure of
the state into which Serbian politics have fallen. For the
moment, Mr. Milosevic and his supporters appear to be staking
their careers on a strategy of confrontation with the Kosovo
ethnic Albanians.
Other Yugoslav politicians have expressed alarm. ''There is no
doubt Kosovo is a problem of the whole country, a powder keg on
which we>all sit,'' said Milan Kucan, head of the Slovenian
Communist Party. Remzi Koljgeci, of the Kosovo party
leadership, said in an interview in Pristina that ''relations are
cold'' between the ethnic Albanians and Serbs of the province,
that there were too many ''people without hope.''
But many of those interviewed agreed it was also a rare
opportunity for Yugoslavia to take radical political and economic
steps, as Tito did when he broke with the Soviet bloc in 1948.
Efforts are under way to strengthen central authority through
amendments to the constitution. The League of Communists is
planning an extraordinary party congress before March to address
the country's grave problems.
The hope is that something will be done then to exert the rule of
law in Kosovo while drawing ethnic Albanians back into
Yugoslavia's mainstream.
Copyright 1987 The New York Times Company
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