Some news from newspapers in Northern Ireland.
Remember that:
- NATO killed 1 500 yugoslavian women and children during their bomb-
campaign, summer 1999;
- NATO used during their aggresion against the Communism on Balkan 41
000 uranium-waste, or = about 300 000 ton British
nuclear waste all over Yugoslavia, which make sick over 10 milj.
Balkan-citizens today in uranium-cancer.
Thank You, Tony Blair, The Godfather and Terrorist N1 himself!!!
TEXT:
Milosevich raps British Government: 'Bloody Sunday is your war crime'
March 19, 2002
FORMER YUGOSLAV president Slobodan Milosevich has accused the British
Government of acting like terrorists on the streets of Derry on
Bloody Sunday.The allegation came as Milosevich, currently defending
himself against allegations of war crimes at the Hague rounded on
Paddy Ashdown while cross-examining him. His comments about Bloody
Sunday followed a series of bitter exchanges during which Milosevich
attacked Britain for taking the moral high ground, while having
committed massacres of their own. Mr. Ashdown, a former Royal Marine
Commando who was stationed in the North during the '70s, hit
back, "We in Britain have fought a campaign against terrorism, in
which I was personally involved for 30 years."But the British
Government has never had tanks, artillery looting, burning, driving
people away from their homes. "And if we had we would be before this
court. Because you did, you are."Milosevich however hit back: "The
event is well known: It is called Bloody Sunday." Mr. Milosevich
further charged Nato with committing war crimes in Yugoslavia and
said it was farcical how some nations got away with naked
aggression.Milosevich is currently being tried on 66 charges of
genocide. He is also accused of masterminding the deportation of
around 800,000 ethnic Albanians from Kosovo, and of being behind the
murder of thousands of others. Mr. Milosevich however refuses to
recognise the court where he is being tried, and has left a number of
legal figures and witnesses stunned with his comprehensive self
defence.
Derry Journal, 19 mars 2002