Mitrovica hospital denied oxygen delivery, WND, Jun 25
WorldNetDaily.com, June 21, 2002
By Aleksandar Pavic
The hospital in the town of Kosovska Mitrovica, one of the last
remaining
Christian Serb enclaves in the U.N.-administered Serbian province of
Kosovo,
is being denied oxygen shipments, imperiling the lives of infants in
incubators as well as several dozen patients awaiting surgery.
The crisis began on Friday, June 14, when U.N. personnel at the Kosovo
administrative border turned back a truck carrying oxygen and a
nitrogen-based component used for anesthesia, citing lack of proper
documentation, i.e., approval from the Muslim Albanian-controlled Kosovo
Ministry of Health. By late Monday, the hospital in Kosovska Mitrovica
was
down to a 24-hour supply of oxygen, which was set aside for the patients
in
the coronary unit, maternity ward and the pediatric ambulance, according
to
Dr. Milena Cvetkovic, the head of Anesthesiology. Twenty surgeries were
postponed, while emergency cases were transferred to hospitals in Serbia
proper.
"We didn't have this kind of a situation even during the hardest times
of
war," said Dr. Milan Ivanovic, deputy chief of the hospital, in a
statement
for the Belgrade daily Glas Javnosti. Underlining the fact that babies
in
incubators were in the greatest need, Ivanovic accused the U.N.
administration in Kosovo, or UNMIK, of collaborating with the Muslim
Albanian-led Kosovo provisional government in applying pressure on the
remaining Serbs in the province, who are making their last stand in the
northern part of Kosovska Mitrovica against attempts to eradicate the
Christian Serb population from Kosovo.
Dr. Vuko Antonijevic, director of the provincial Bureau of Health
Protection
said that he "couldn't find words for what was happening in time of
supposed
peace, in the presence of the international community," adding that
"patients, among whom there are children, have been sentenced to death."
WND has learned that, on Tuesday, the hospital managed to get new
supplies
of oxygen via clandestine smuggling channels, but that the situation was
still alarming. Attempts to reach hospital personnel on Wednesday have
proved unsuccessful, as has been the case with the Glas Javnosti
reporter
Ljiljana Staletovic, who broke the story.
The province of Kosovo has been under U.N. administration since June
1999,
when the 78-day long NATO bombing campaign led to a peace agreement by
which
Serbian police and Yugoslav army forces were replaced by a NATO-led
force of
50,000 troops, or KFOR. During the KFOR mandate, more than 250,000 Serbs
and
other non-Albanians have been forced to leave the province, while scores
of
Serb civilians have been killed in terrorist attacks. The province, the
spiritual and political heart of the Serb medieval kingdom, has seen 110
Orthodox churches and numerous Christian cemeteries desecrated or razed
since June 1999. Kosovo has become the main transit route for drug
smuggling
into Western Europe, accounting for approximately 90 percent of the
heroin
shipments from Pakistan and Afghanistan. It has also become a center of
white slavery, prostitution and arms smuggling, raising alarms in the
EU.
As WND reported earlier this year, the current head of the UNMIK
administration, German diplomat Michael Steiner, has warned that Kosovo
could become "Afghanistan in Europe" if current trends continued. So
far,
however, it appears that little has changed. The former Kosovo
Liberation
Army, an organization formerly labeled by the U.S. State Department as
"terrorist," has been transformed by the U.N. and KFOR into the Kosovo
Protection Corps, which has legalized and legitimized its status.
Last January, the U.N. administration installed a declared former
terrorist
leader, Dr. Bajram Rexhepi, a surgeon, as prime minister of the
province's
provisional government.
The northern part of Kosovska Mitrovica is the largest remaining compact
Serb enclave in the province and has been under intense pressure by both
the
Albanian-controlled government and UNMIK to "integrate." At the same
time,
efforts of Serb refugees to return to their homes in other areas of
Kosovo
have been consistently impeded, often violently, as the province has
become
the place of some of the worst Christian persecution in the world.
In response to the oxygen-withholding scandal, medical workers from
Kosovska
Mitrovica have sent letters of protest to U.N. Secretary General Kofi
Anan,
the World Health Organization and Steiner. It remains to be seen whether
this will be enough to prevent yet another Kosovo tragedy in the making.
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