Russia Says ‘Nyet’ To Extradition of Milosevic Family to Serbia

Spiteful globalists request denied

Russia says it won’t extradite the widow and the son of the late Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic to Serbia. Belgrade has issued an extradition request to Russia for Mirjana Markovic and Marko Milosevic.

They’re accused of a number of frauds including tobacco smuggling during early 90s, which Serbian authorities say netted them millions of dollars.

The Milosevics, who’ve been living in Moscow for the last few years, deny all the allegations and refuse to return to Serbia to face charges.

Russia’s federal migration service says Milosevic’s family was given refugee status two years ago and is now under protection of international laws.

Slobodan Milosevic died in custody at The Hague in March 2006, before a UN War Crimes Tribunal passed a verdict on his role in the wars in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo in the 90s.

Source

Serbia has never been an enemy of the United States yet we have committed acts of war and terrorism against it. We have dispatched armies and invaded it, dropped bombs on civilian targets such as bridges, office buildings and power plants, and we have dictated what Serbia does within its own nation.

The present realities of Serbia and of Kosovo are the process of a long historical conflict. Kosovo is an ancient Serbian heartland that was conquered by the Muslim Ottoman Empire with the collusion of Muslim ethnic Albanians. Historical realities of the age old conflict can be reflected in the genocidal statements of the Prime Minister of Albania made in Kosovo in June 1942. At a meeting of Albanian leaders of Kosovo he said,

“We should endeavor to ensure that the Serb population of Kosovo be – the area be cleansed of them and all Serbs who had been living there for centuries should be termed colonialists and sent to concentration camps in Albania. The Serb settlers should be killed.” (Bogdanoviæ, Dimitrije. “The Book on Kosovo”. 1990. Belgrade: Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, 1985. page 2428. and Genfer, Der Kosovo-Konflikt, Munich: Wieser, 2000. page 158.)

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“There is no place in modern Europe for ethnically pure states. That’s a 19th-century idea, and we are trying to transition into the 21st century, and we are going to do it with multi-ethnic states.” –General Wesley Kahn Clark

“. . . the first war of the 21st century: a conflict not about communism, but about race and ethnicity, being waged by committee, against a madman who is not himself a direct threat to the countries waging war against him. . . . [T]he President is committed, and the country is behind him. The number of Americans willing to take the war to the next step – committing ground forces – has in fact been increasing steadily. It speaks well for the future.” –Susan Estrich

2008-03-02