Friday, 15 February 2008

save KosovoÕs ethnic Albanians...


Family members of Serb police officer Predrag Rakovic weep during his funeral in Jakovica in this January 31, 1999 file photo. Almost nine years since NATO went to war to save KosovoÕs ethnic Albanians, the breakaway Serbian province is expected to declare independence on Sunday, February 17, 2008, facing down Serb and Russian opposition with the backing of Western powers who see no alternative.

Thousands of Kosovar refugees try to cross the border at Blace after fleeing Kosovo in this March 31, 1999 file photo. Almost nine years since NATO went to war to save KosovoÕs ethnic Albanians, the breakaway Serbian province is expected to declare independence on Sunday, February 17, 2008, facing down Serb and Russian opposition with the backing of Western powers who see no alternative.

An ethnic Albanian woman walks past a group of Serb police during an investigation into an attack on the house of ethnic Albanian villager Vebi Cerimi, a member of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic's ruling Socialist Party, in the village of Donji Godanci in this October 9, 1998 file photo. Almost nine years since NATO went to war to save KosovoÕs ethnic Albanians, the breakaway Serbian province is expected to declare independence on Sunday, February 17, 2008, facing down Serb and Russian opposition with the backing of Western powers who see no alternative.


wounded woman lies near the village of Meja, where 64 people were killed and 20 wounded, including three Serb policemen who were escorting the convoy, in this April 14, 1999 file photo. Almost nine years since NATO went to war to save KosovoÕs ethnic Albanians, the breakaway Serbian province is expected to declare independence on Sunday, February 17, 2008, facing down Serb and Russian opposition with the backing of Western powers who see no alternative.

Clouds are reflected in the window of a bus as an ethnic Albanian woman waits at the Macedonian border checkpoint with Yugoslavia in Blace in this April 14, 1999 file photo. Almost nine years since NATO went to war to save KosovoÕs ethnic Albanians, the breakaway Serbian province is expected to declare independence on Sunday, February 17, 2008, facing down Serb and Russian opposition with the backing of Western powers who see no alternative.

Kosovar refugees fight for a loaf of bread distributed by Macedonian Red Cross ambulance workers as more than 25,000 ethnic Albanians from the troubled Serbian province of Kosovo wait between Macedonian and Serbian checkpoints at the Blace border crossing in this April 2, 1999 file photo. Almost nine years since NATO went to war to save KosovoÕs ethnic Albanians, the breakaway Serbian province is expected to declare independence on Sunday, February 17, 2008, facing down Serb and Russian opposition with the backing of Western powers who see no alternative.

Thousands of Kosovar refugees wait to be registered in a Red Cross tent in a field where tens of thousands of ethnic Albanians are camping at the Yugoslav-Macedonian border crossing in Blace in this April 4, 1999 file photo. Almost nine years since NATO went to war to save KosovoÕs ethnic Albanians, the breakaway Serbian province is expected to declare independence on Sunday, February 17, 2008, facing down Serb and Russian opposition with the backing of Western powers who see no alternative.

Ethnic Albanian women cry over the bodies of four slain relatives during a funeral at their family house in the village of Grajkovac, some 60 km (37miles) northwest of Pristina, in this March 17, 1999 file photo. Almost nine years since NATO went to war to save KosovoÕs ethnic Albanians, the breakaway Serbian province is expected to declare independence on Sunday, February 17, 2008, facing down Serb and Russian opposition with the backing of Western powers who see no alternative.

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