Amnesty: Lifting Of Martial Law In Yugoslavia
* News Release Issued by the International Secretariat of Amnesty International *
News Service 121/99
AI INDEX: EUR 70/98/99
23 JUNE 1999
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Proposed lifting of Martial Law should herald full enjoyment of human rights
PRISTINA -- Citizens rights have been severely curtailed by restrictions decreed under the state of war which
effectively stifled dissenting voices in the country, Amnesty International said, as the Yugoslav federal parliament
prepares to vote tomorrow on the lifting of the state of war.
Amnesty International is calling on the Yugoslav Government and deputies to ensure that Yugoslavias citizens, with the
lifting of martial law, gain the full enjoyment of their human rights -- in line with international standards.
People have been detained for expressing dissenting views, for refusing military service on conscientious grounds or
simply because of their ethnic origin, the human rights organization said. These people are prisoners of conscience and
should be released immediately.
The most recent victims include two Kosovo Serb refugees sentenced to 30 days imprisonment on 21 June for holding a
public gathering, in defiance of martial law, to complain that the authorities had abandoned Kosovo Serbs.
Specifically, Amnesty International is calling for an end to restrictions on the rights to freedom of assembly and
expression, the rights to liberty and security of person, and a fair and prompt trial.
Amnesty International is calling on President Milosevic to release all prisoners of conscience, including ethnic
Albanians, Serbs and members of other ethnic communities and to review all cases of people detained on political charges
with a view to their possible release. The organization is also calling on the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY)
authorities to make public the whereabouts of all political prisoners.
Despite the release of several thousand ethnic Albanian prisoners in Kosovo in recent weeks the whereabouts of many of
the thousands of Albanians detained in Kosovo for political reasons over the past year, including prisoners of
conscience, is still unknown, Amnesty International said, amid reports that prisons were emptied and many prisoners were
transferred to prisons outside Kosovo as the Yugoslav Army withdrew from the province.
Among them is Dr Flora Brovina, a woman physician and President of the Albanian Womens League who disappeared from her
home in Pristina on 22 April this year after men in civilian clothes took her away. It was later learned that she had
been detained first in Lipljan prison before being admitted to Pristina hospital. She is now said to be held in a prison
in Pozarevac in eastern Serbia. Her health is believed to be poor and Amnesty International has called for her to be
granted appropriate medical care and for information about any charges against her.
Another prisoner who has been transferred out of Kosovo is 28-year-old Naim Gashi who was among a group of refugees when
he was arrested at Sajkovac near Podujevo in May; he is reportedly being held in a prison in Prokuplje. Amnesty
International does not know if he has been charged.
The organization is seeking information about the location of other prisoners -- among them Albin Kurti, a former
student leader from Pristina who was arrested at the end of April and was also reported to be held in Lipljan. The
whereabouts of Ukshin Hoti, a political prisoner who was due for release from Dubrav prison in Istok on 17 May, after
serving a five-year sentence, is also unknown to the organisation. Several days after this date the prison was struck by
NATO bombs and according to Serbian sources at least 86 inmates died.
Guards at a prison in Pec are reported to have told UN investigators that 436 prisoners were taken away before NATO
troops arrived in the town. In Prizren a bus driver said he had taken 94 prisoners from this town to Prokuplje in early
June; it appears that the transfers had been taking place since 30 April.
According to the Serbian Ministry of Justice prisoners had been taken away for their own safety; the Ministry reportedly
said that an official would stay in Pristina until 19 June to inform prisoners families where their relatives were. Amid
reports that many files have been burned, Amnesty International fears that it may prove difficult to track down missing
prisoners.
Amnesty International is also concerned about the fate of nine ethnic Albanians, students in Belgrade, who were
reportedly arrested in the first half of May 1999.
Prisoners of conscience detained in Serbia include the Serb, Nebojsa Ristic, editor-in-chief of the independent
television station Soko in Sokobanja. On 13 April he was sentenced to one years imprisonment for having displayed a
poster protesting against repression of the media in Serbia.
Other prisoners of conscience include men who avoided draft or deserted on grounds of conscience; among them are two
Nazarenes and seven Jehovahs Witnesses said to be detained in Novi Sad after having been sentenced to up to five years
imprisonment for refusing to bear arms. Many Yugoslav citizens have left the country in order to avoid call-up. They
risk long prison sentences on their return.
Amnesty International has further called for the review of the cases brought by military prosecutors against the Mayor
of Cacak, Velimir Ilic, and against Miodrag Perovic and Nebojsa Redzic, two editors in Montenegro, who are accused of
having revealed military secrets or undermined Yugoslavias military strength in articles or broadcasts they made, with a
view to the possible dropping of charges (they are not in prison).
Amnesty International is also concerned about the imprisonment of two Australians and a Yugoslav working for a charity,
CARE. On 29 May 1999 they were convicted by a military court on charges of passing on military secrets and were
sentenced to prison terms of between four and 12 years. The organization believes they were denied a fair trial -- they
were tried behind closed doors.
ENDS...
/ Amnesty International, International Secretariat, 1 Easton Street, WC1X 8DJ, London, United Kingdom
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