Steril "debatt" (var Postmodernistisk poesi)

From: Oddmund Garvik (tuxon@ifrance.com)
Date: Sat Feb 05 2000 - 12:00:47 MET


Knut Rognes har bestemt seg for å halda fram den einsidige
(løgn)propagandaen om Kosovo. Han har kort minne, og har i mange
månader vist at han blei heilt blind den dagen Nato gjekk til aksjon i
fjor vår. Han ser ikkje kva som skjedde før, og om det blir vanskeleg,
tonar han det ned, eller reduserer det til ingenting. Det finst fleire
rapportar om den katastrofale politikken til det serbiske regimet, som
går mykje lenger attende enn den situasjonen som utløyste Nato-aksjonen.
Referansar til desse er lagt ut her tidlegare. Likevel driv Rognes
med denne klippinga, og til tider lyg han heilt openlyst. Eg veit ikkje
om han gjerest på, eller om han tek oss andre for idiotar:

> Feil: Intervensjonen utløste en bølge av etnisk rensing ingen hadde
> sett make til før. Kronologien er altså: først bombingen, deretter
> utdrivelsene. Intet i OSSE-rapporten (eller U. S. State Departments
> rapporter, eller siktelsen til Krigsforbrytertribunalet) støtter det
> Garvik her sier, Garviks lesemåte har store mangler. Ingen utdrivinger
> skjedde før 24. mars, det er dokumentert til overmål av alle.

osb.

Men gå då til OSSE-rapporten t.d., og les! Han finst her:
http://www.osce.org/kosovo/reports/hr/part2/index.htm

Og det står m.a. dette:

> This report, and its companion volume, detail the dedicated work of
> OSCE human rights officers over a full year in Kosovo/Kosova. It was
> a year in which a long history of human rights violations,
> persistent and pervasive, culminated in an armed conflict. Well over
> one million Kosovo Albanians were displaced, across the border and
> inside, and thousands killed. The large-scale violations committed in
> the period preceding and during the conflict (December 1998 to
> mid-June 1999), are documented fully in Kosovo/Kosova: As seen, as
> Told, the companion report that bears witness to the scale of ethnic
> violence and the abuse of power by the State that orchestrated that
> violence. It is a shocking document in its gruesome details and
> conclusions.
>
> This was also a year that saw hope of a new future for
> Kosovo/Kosova, freed from a past of systematic discrimination, abuse
> and conflict. The evidence of recent violations, mainly committed
> against today's minority communities, documented in this second
> volume (covering mid-June through October) indicates that the cycle
> of violence has not yet been broken. On the evidence presented here,
> there is no region in Kosovo/Kosova in which human rights are fully
> respected. Of course, this must be viewed in historic context. Human
> history tells us that no society emerges from a traumatic, violent
> conflict without scars. Deep wounds take time to heal. With
> unspeakable atrocities, massive humiliation and hardship still fresh
> in everyone's mind and with thousands of people still missing,
> feared dead or detained in Serbian prisons, reconciliation can only
> be achieved with effort and time.

Bernard Kouchner skriv i forordet:

> The OSCE is simultaneously releasing another report, As Seen, As
> Told - An Analysis of the Human Rights Findings of the OSCE
> Verification Mission (OSCE/ODIHR 1999) which covers the period from
> December 1998 to June 1999. The OSCE finds in that report that
> Yugoslav and Serbian forces, along with police, paramilitaries and
> some civilians, committed extensive human rights abuses and violated
> the laws of armed conflict. Their victims were overwhelmingly Kosovo
> Albanians. Some Kosovo Serbs were victims of Kosovo Liberation Army
> (UCK) violations of humanitarian law, but there was nothing close to
> equivalence; the Yugoslav and Serbian military, police and security
> services targeted Kosovo Albanians. Executions, arbitrary arrests,
> torture, rape and other forms of sexual violence, and forced
> expulsions characterized the Yugoslav and Serb forces' campaign to
> expel Kosovo Albanians to other states.
>
> Barely one year after the start of the Kosovo Verification Mission,
> Kosovo/Kosova has experienced these gross and systematic human rights
> violations, a three month bombing campaign by NATO which resulted in
> the Yugoslav and Serb forces withdrawing from the province, and the
> return of the OSCE human rights monitors last June. For the past
> five months these observers, now numbering about 75, have carried
> out their mandate to investigate human rights abuses and ensure that
> human rights protection and promotion concerns are addressed. This
> report describes the OSCE's work and makes some important findings.

Konfliktane i det tidlegare Jugoslavia er komplekse, men det er
vanskeleg, for ikkje å seia umogleg å stikke under stolen at det
serbiske regimet under Milosevic (inkl. deler av "opposisjonen") er
hovudansvarleg for dei humanitære katastrofane som verda har vore
vitne til i dette området dei siste ti åra.

Eg gidd ikkje å halda fram denne sterile utvekslinga med Rognes og
Holen, for dei er forkalka. Eg har endeleg nok av anna å bruke tida mi
på.

Oddmund Garvik
 
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