| The Irish Guards Battle Group advanced into Kosovo on
Saturday 12 June, 1999. We had been given the crucial task of securing
Pristina, the capital city. None of us knew what to expect.
Although the Serbs had signed an agreement to withdraw and
not to hinder the advancing NATO force, it was known that
there was dissent in their ranks, and thus a threat that we
might face opposition. As we rolled north through the Kacanik
Gorge, passing the weary Gurkhas and soldiers of the Parachute
Regiment who had secured it at dawn, the lasting impression
was one of silence. Aside from our comrades, there was no
other life with the exception of stray dogs and donkeys. Either
side of the road, as far as the eye could see, houses lay
in ruins, charred roof timbers and the absence of life testimony
to the savage Serb pogrom.
The thunderstorms that had accompanied us all the way from
the border brought on darkness quickly that first evening.
It found us strung out over twenty kilometres of the main
road to Pristina, the head of our column just short of the
city. We had seen Yugoslavian military convoys crossing our
path but no resistance had been offered. However tension remained
high as we settled for the night. Sporadic gunfire could be
heard and there was the ever-present threat of mines. During
the early hours a great convoy of Serb tanks roared past us,
their sillouhettes menacing in the beam of an occasional headlight.
Waking at dawn on the second day we found that their thunderous
passage had been replaced with a silent stationary column
of Italian vehicles, waiting patiently for us to secure the
route through Pristina and allow them to proceed to their
destination in the West.
Our entry into Pristina was dramatic. The road from the South
crests a hill and the city is suddenly and unexpectedly revealed
below, a great sweeping panorama. As we swept down the hill
into the outskirts we were again struck by the silence. The
city was deserted, or appeared to be, though we knew from
intelligence reports that there were still over 10,000 people
living within its limits. Slowly, as our armoured vehicles
fanned-out through the streets, people started to emerge from
their hiding places. Joy replaced fear as they realized that
the months of terror were at an end. Soon our Warriors were
swamped with singing crowds and bedecked with the flowers
they threw. Amid the air of carnival though, the threat of
Serb retaliation remained. The guardsmen had important tasks
to complete and could not afford to be distracted by the crowds
for too long.
Once the city had been secured, the Paras were flown forward
to assist in keeping the peace. We handed over the eastern
half to them and concentrated on keeping the main route through
the city clear for the units of other nations to use on their
way to the outer extremities of the country.
It was not long before the Albanian Kosovars gave vent to
their pent-up anger. Disputes between Albanians and Serbian
Kosovars who had remained behind often degenerated into violence
and the guardsmen were frequently caught in the crossfire
or required to intervene. Often such interventions would be
under the noses of the international press corps who swarmed
through the city in search of drama. They found it the day
that Sergeant Meadows of the Mortar Platoon had to disarm
a furious man who was about to throw a grenade at someone
with whom he was arguing. Although the pin had been removed,
he safely disposed of it, earning himself a place as one of
the Daily Star's Men of the Year! "All in a day's work"
he said, and he wasn't wrong.
While the attention of the world's media was on the anarchy
we were struggling to contain in Pristina, the rest of the
Battle Group spread out to take control of the surrounding
countryside. In the West this comprises a vast opencast mine
which feeds the huge power stations responsible for supplying
electricity to most of the Balkans. The area is a Serb stronghold
centred on the town of Kosovo Polje. In the East, the terrain
is remote and hilly and abuts the Serbian border. It is exclusively
Albanian and provides a meagre living from subsistence farming.
To the South another Serb area contains one of the holiest
shrines of Serb Orthodox Church, the 14th century monastery
at Gracinica. The walls of its church are covered in the most
exquisite murals of scenes from the scriptures. It is a miracle
that it has survived the centuries, especially the devastation
of the German occupation in the last World War.
As word that it was safe to return spread like wildfire through
the refugee camps in Macedonia and Albania, the exiled Kosovar
Albanians started their journey home. This was not the planned
repatriation which the UNHCR had anticipated. The consequence
has been a sudden influx of people who have found their homes
destroyed and their livestock killed or removed to Serbia.
Most need shelter of some form and many medical assistance
as well. This immediate demand is what the UNHCR sought to
avoid because it takes time for the aid agencies to establish
themselves and start distributing the basic commodities. While
the delivery of bulk supplies to Kosovo was fairly swift,
it has taken longer for the non-governmental organizations
to organize its distribution. In the interim, the Battle Group
has lent a hand. Because we patrolled to the remotest villages
as soon as we arrived, we have been able to identify the areas
of greatest need and either take aid to them ourselves, or
to direct the agencies. Quite apart from keeping the peace,
it is this immediate relief of suffering that gives us all
the most satisfaction. Knowing that what we do does make a
difference sustains us through the more unpleasant times.
The evidence of atrocities is never far away. There are many
graves and the survivors' stories are harrowing. In the initial
stages we were involved in removing bodies which had lain
unburied for some time. These and the grave sites are recorded
for the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
(ICTY) who are gathering evidence to support the indictment
and prosecution of those responsible. It is an unpleasant
and difficult task, but one which is necessary if the perpetrators
are not to escape justice.
Despite the evidence of these crimes, it would be quite wrong
to regard every Serb as a criminal. As in all conflict there
are innocent on both sides. It is important to remember that
many of the Serbian Kosovars lived in harmony with their Albanian
compatriots. Indeed, we have heard stories from Albanians
of Serbs going to extraordinary lengths to defend Albanians
from the police and army. Those Serbs that remain today live
in fear, subject to intimidation by the returning Albanian
population. They have no future outside Kosovo. Slobodan Milosovic
has passed a law in Serbia which forbids the employment or
education of Kosovar Serbs and as a result we have already
seen some returns. We have no illusions about how difficult
it will be for the two communities to live together again,
but we are here to protect both sides while the United Nations
attempts to rebuild the political institutions which will
make this possible. |