Serbs reportedly planting land mines to create Kosova 'no man's land'
April 9, 1999 BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (CNN) -- Kosovars faced a new threat Friday after two separate reports that Serb authorities were planting land mines along the Yugoslav-Albanian border in an apparent bid to isolate the war-ravaged province.
News of the development prompted deep concerns from the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Sadako Ogata, who said the flow of people out of Kosova had suddenly stopped. "We don't know what has happened to them. I'm very, very worried," she told a news conference in Albania Thursday.
CNN correspondents who visited the frontier region Thursday said Serb forces could be seen laying what appeared to be land mines just inside their territory at Morina, the main border crossing into Albania.
NATO spokesman Jamie Shea reported similar information saying the land mines were part of an attempt by Serb authorities to make Kosova "a total no-man's land". "We face a situation that for many months the Serb army was mining the border with Albania to stop people from going in. Now they seem to be mining to stop people from going out," Shea said.
For more than two weeks, tens of thousands of ethnic Albanian Kosovars have fled into Albania claiming they were forced out by Serb security forces. But British Secretary of State for International Development Clare Short said Serb-led Yugoslav forces now appeared to be turning the remaining Kosovars around. About 10,000 refugees queuing for days to enter Albania have reportedly disappeared. "They seem now to have started rounding up refugees queuing to leave Kosova and returning them by force," Short said. "We do not know if they have been driven back into their homes or elsewhere within Kosova," she said.
CNN Correspondent Mike Boettcher said he was told that many vehicles belonging to ethnic Albanians were found abandoned, some of them burned, along the road leading to the border post.
According to Serbian media, the Kosovars returned to their homes amid assurances that it was safe to return.
U.S. State Department spokesman James Rubin said Washington had "credible but not confirmed reports" that war crimes had been committed by Serb forces against ethnic Albanians in Kosova. Rubin said the U.S. government would turn over its evidence to the International War Crimes Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.