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Battles of Ješkovo

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Battles of Ješkovo
Part of the Kosovo War
Location map of Kosovo
Ješkovo
Ješkovo

Location of Ješkovo in Kosovo, Prizren District
DateFirst battle: 1–2 September 1998[1]
Second battle: 11 March 1999
Location
Ješkovo, south of Prizren, Kosovo
Result First battle: KLA victory[2]
Second battle: Yugoslav victory[3][4]
Territorial
changes
Remaining KLA militants flee from Ješkovo
Belligerents
Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia
Commanders and leaders
Hysen Rexhepi 
Ekrem Rexha
Nehat Basha
Agim Shala 
Skënder Latifi [sq] 
Ymer Shala
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Božidar Delić
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Stojan Konjikovac [sr]
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Veljko Radenović
Units involved
125th Brigade Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslav Army
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Police of Serbia
Strength
40 defenders[a]
50 motorized vehicles[7]
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 300 soldiers and policemen[8]
KLA claim: 270 motorized vehicles and 20 tanks[citation needed]
Casualties and losses
18 killed Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 3 wounded[8]

The Battles of Ješkovo[b] were a series of battles that occurred throughout the Kosovo War. There were two main battles, fought between the insurgent Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), and the Yugoslav forces, composed mainly of Police units.

Background

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On July 7, 1998, Yugoslav forces failed to liquidate a KLA unit in Billushë and Hoçë e Qytetit, near the area of Vërrin in the District of Prizren, but were forced to retreat.[9][10] During the clashes, the KLA managed to blow up a Yugoslav jeep in front of a school. The Yugoslav army and police pledged retaliation for the clashes, strategizing an offensive against KLA positions in what had been declared a KLA free zone.[9] This led to the start of the initial clashes during the Kosovo War in the area of the District of Prizren.[11]

First battle

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On 16 July 1998, around 1:30 PM, the first battles occurred in the area of Vërrin. The Yugoslav forces tried to enter from the Tusus neighborhood, in the direction of Leskovec, Lybeçeva, and towards the village of Hoçë e Qytetit.[12] KLA forces started attacking the Yugoslav forces with a column of 50 armored vehicles,[7] and both sides kept fighting.[12] The first day of confrontation between the two forces lasted 3 hours and 40 minutes.[12] On the part of the KLA soldiers, there were neither killed nor injured, while the Yugoslav forces were separated with losses.[12] In these battles, the KLA fighters took control over the nearby villages, including Ješkovo.[1][2] After the Battle of Rahovec, KLA forces were forced to abandon all nearby strongholds and fortifications,[13] but they kept position near Ješkovo,[5] where the headquarters of the 125th Brigade of Prizren was situated.[6] Then, Hysen Rexhepi and his soldiers went to Albania to rearm[5] for future operations in the area, like the Battles of Vërrin[1] and the Battle of Lez.[14]

Second battle

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On 11 March 1999, Yugoslav forces of the 549th Motorized Brigade[8] marched towards Ješkovo,[2] with the goal of retaking the city. Yugoslav soldiers and policemen, after several hours of hard climbing towards the hills around the village, arrive at these inaccessible peaks, thus they gained advantage over the KLA positions. The Serbian forces were at an altitude of 1,176 meters, while the village of Ješkovo and the 125th Brigade's headquarters were located 600 meters lower.[8] During the following fight that ensured, General Božidar Delić is said to have ordered to “make an effort not to let anyone remain alive”[15] or “leave no one alive”,[4] by witnesses called K32 and K41. According to another witness, K58, Delić summoned his unit and said that they were ordered "to go and cleanse Ješkovo the next day".[16] The same Witness claimed that General Stojan Konjikovac was in charge of executing these actions.[16] The Yugoslav operation was successful, capturing Ješkovo back from the KLA and leaving 9 killed insurgents on their side[3] while only suffering 3 wounded policemen.[8] Because of this operation, 500 inhabitants of the village of Ljubicevo left and migrated to other villages.[17]

The K32 and K41 controversy

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K32 was a "protected witness" who fought under Delić in Kosovo.[15] Both K32 and K41 are said to have fought in the Battle of Ješkovo.[18] K32 claimed that Delić ordered that no one should be left alive, and that the whole purpose of the Ješkovo operation was to kill civilians.[19] “This is pure fabrication by this soldier who was prepped to say this", Delić said. When the prosecutor asked him "who prepped the witness", Delić replied: "You are prepping your witnesses." The judges asked the witness to state the basis for his claim, and when he failed to do so, they cautioned him for "presenting unsubstantiated claims". The witness then apologized to the prosecutor and said that witness K32 was "prepped by some Albanians in Peć".[4] Delić has also denied the claim of him ordering to "leave no one alive".[4] Be that as it may, the prosecutor claims the outcome of the Ješkovo operation "was consistent with the order to leave no one alive", as all 9 KLA members were killed[3] and there were no prisoners. General Delić, again, rejects this "insinuation", claiming this was a "special KLA unit" composed of "hardened terrorists of the kind that does not surrender." The prosecutor then went on to discuss some other operations conducted by Delić's units in which a substantial number of KLA members had been killed and no prisoners had been taken.[4] A military document signed by Delić states that in the course of the operation near the village of Kabash, "the Siptar terrorist forces did not throw down their weapons until the last moment, when they changed into civilian clothes and tried to break out of the encirclement."[4] They ran into the siege line where 11 were killed and none were captured.[4] On the basis of what was written there, the judges concluded that those had been "unarmed terrorists in disguise who tried to escape but ran into an ambush," but Delić claimed they had all been "killed in combat, with their weapons in their hands or on their backs."[4] K41 claimed that he personally saw about a dozen civilians who had been killed and that he learned the next day that there had been about 30 casualties.[18] General Delić dismissed all of their allegations as nonsense. Delić also pointed out that K32 was 3 kilometers away (where his brigade's headquarters was located[18]) during the operation at Ješkovo, which meant that he was out of earshot anyway.[19] The final proof that K41 and K32 were lying came in the form of a report of the OSCE/KVM regarding the Ješkovo operation. General Delić showed the befuddled prosecutor the part of the report that explained how KVM monitors found the dead bodies of uniformed KLA soldiers in the village, not civilians.[19] Delić also went on to explain how K32 was a criminal who hid out at K41's house. Given the connection between K41 and K32, and the manifestly false nature of their testimony, Delić theorized that K32 and K41 may have been coached to give false testimony. This obvious conclusion ruffled some feathers at the tribunal, and drew angry reactions from the prosecutor and the judges.[19]

Notes

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  1. ^ 29 KLA members and 11 civilian volunteers.[5][6]
  2. ^ In Albanian: Beteja e Jeshkoves; in Serbian: Битка на Јешкову, romanizedBitka na Ješkovu.

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Më 1 shtator 1998 nuk filloi viti i ri shkollor, por filloi beteja e UÇK-së për liri a vdekje në Vërri të Prizrenit". 04 Online. 2020-09-01. Archived from the original on 13 May 2024. Retrieved 2024-05-12.
  2. ^ a b c Buza, Shaban (11 March 1999). "Serb tanks bombard rebel positions in Kosovo". reliefweb.int.
  3. ^ a b c Ana Uzelac (18 November 2005). "Milosevic [] Institute for War and Peace Reporting".
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h ""PERFIDIOUS" NICE AND "PREPPED" WITNESSES". 13 July 2005.
  5. ^ a b c Qeriqi, Zamir (2024-03-11). "Hysen Nahit Rexhepi (18.2.1973 – 11.3.1999)". Radio Kosova e Lirë. Retrieved 2024-06-04.
  6. ^ a b Qeriqi, Zamir (2024-03-11). "Feriz Abdurrahman Susuri (18.5.1969 – 11.3.1999)". Radio Kosova e Lirë. Retrieved 2024-06-04.
  7. ^ a b "Në shator u vranë këta burra shqiptarë të anës së Vrrinit". 3 September 2011.
  8. ^ a b c d e Milovan Drecun (2004). Drugi kosovski boj. Kosovo: M. Drecun, 2004. ISBN 9788684771096.[page needed]
  9. ^ a b admin (July 16, 2023). "25 vite më parë, beteja për liri a vdekje në Vërri të Prizrenit". PrizrenPress - Portal informativ (in Albanian). Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  10. ^ "Radio Omega 3". radio-omega3.org. Retrieved May 7, 2024.
  11. ^ "Beteja për liri a vdekje në Vrri-Prizren, midis UÇK-së dhe forcave serbe". gazetaprizrenit.net. 1 September 2018. Retrieved May 12, 2024.
  12. ^ a b c d "20 vjet nga beteja e parë e UÇK-së në komunën e Prizrenit". gazetaprizrenit.net. July 16, 2018. Retrieved May 3, 2024.
  13. ^ Pavkovic, A. (2000). The Fragmentation of Yugoslavia: Nationalism and War in the Balkans. Springer. p. 191. ISBN 978-0-230-28584-2.
  14. ^ "Ubijeno petnaest pripadnika OVK, ranjena dva policajca". danas.rs (in Serbian). 2008-09-03. Archived from the original on 2021-10-30.
  15. ^ a b Michael Farquhar (5 December 2005). "Milosevic [] Prosecutor attempts to undermine credibility of defence witness".
  16. ^ a b "PROSECUTION WITNESS: 'I SHOT WOMEN AND CHILDREN'". 15 March 2007.
  17. ^ "Milosevic Transcript 2002-09-10". 10 September 2002.
  18. ^ a b c "WITNESS DENIES ORDERING "DON'T LEAVE ANYONE ALIVE"". 5 July 2005.
  19. ^ a b c d Andy Wilcoxson (14 July 2005). "THE PROSECUTOR LIES, THE JUDGES SABOTAGE, AND GEN. DELIC STICKS TO HIS GUNS".