June, 1999
"A voice of the Kosova resistance"
Editor's note: The following interview with Pleurat Sejdiiu, diplomatic
representative of the Kosova Liberation Army (KLA) and member of the Kosovan
interim government, took place on April 29 in London by Christopher Ford and
David Black of HOBGOBLIN, the English Marxist-Humanist journal. Sejdiiu is a
medical doctor who joined the movement in 1985. He says he was inspired in
his youth by Che Guevara, another physician-turned-guerrilla.
By the late 1990s the ethnic Albanian majority, living under a system of
creeping apartheid and the threat of genocide, rejected the compromise
program of Ibrahim Rugova, which was totally reliant on Western support but
could not win any compromises from Serb nationalists. The challenge to
Rugova's party was cemented in 1996 by Adem Demaqi and his Kosova
Parliamentary Party. Demaqi argued that rather than try and compromise with
those committed to a "Greater Serbia," the movement should direct its
dialogue to Serbs in Kosova who opposed ethnic nationalism. This strategy
also envisioned a full military struggle for a multiethnic Republic of
Kosova which, on gaining self-determination, could enter into a new and
equal federation with Serbia and Montenegro, called "Balkanija." By mid-1998,
Demaqi's party had become the most influential force in the leadership of
the KLA and Peoples Movement for Kosova (LPK).
The KLA was formed in 1993 at the third meeting of the general council
of the LPK. The KLA formed as the military wing of the LPK, but in a very
short time a decision was made that the KLA must be built up on its own so
it could be independent. That was because most of the political parties who
had been in so-called power during 1990-93 were pacifists such as the Rugova
party, who had stolen the ideas and methods that had been in the program of
the LPK.
In our program we say we will use all means for the liberation of Kosova,
whether democratic or military. But with democratic means proving nothing
and being useless, we thought that by becoming an independent military
organization we would attract other political parties. But that didn't
happen.
With the creation of the KLA, the LDK, especially Rugova, started accusing
the KLA of being linked to the Serbian state security. Rugova was saying
that Serbia had an interest in destabilizing us all. That was pure
demagoguery. So we have had actually to fight on two fronts. As well as
the military campaign, we had to fight politically against the LDK as the
main force opposed to any methods other than peaceful means, while all the
time they only sat in their offices, having meetings and press conferences.
They have even been against the students, organizations having mass
demonstrations.
But oppression in Kosova went on all the time, growing day by day and
the ranks of KLA began to grow from those with the idea that the only way
to get our independence was by armed struggle.
The big rise of the KLA was in 1997. In early 1998 the first frontal
confrontation with Serb forces happened in Drenica. During 1993-98 most
Albanians thought it was Serbs killing their own to destabilize Kosova.
But in February and March 1998 for the first time the KLA came without
masks and people saw they were their own sons and brothers.
After this confrontation, the people started thinking that there was
a plus in having a military wing. After this first attack, the Serbs
decided to destroy the compound of one of our leaders, killing 47. The
whole family was killed, including the smallest one who was three months
old. They thought that would destroy the KLA, but that didn't happen. That
big massacre actually boosted the ranks of the KLA from a couple of hundred
guerrillas into thousands and thousands of fighters.
Now we came to the position of having a real structure. Until now we have
had a political directorate which was the leading force of the KLA command
force, but now we have come to the stage where the KLA has been given a
right by people from all political parties to form a government which will
bring them free elections.
Under the Serbian regime any suspicion of being in the KLA, even the LPK,
meant you got five years at least in prison. This strictly underground war
caused many dilemmas and gave a lot of space to Rugova to play the game of
state power.
The first to accuse the KLA of being a terrorist organization were Serbs.
Even the Americans had never gone so far as to put the KLA on the terrorist
list. The first diplomat who openly said the KLA was a terrorist organization
was Gelband from the U.S. But then he was the first one who denied it,
because he was the first one to meet people from the directorate of the KLA.
When the first question of the journalists was "why the change of mind?" he
said yes, he was the one who said they were terrorist/Marxist-Leninists, but
added that all this information had come from the Kosovan political parties
he had spoken toRugova again!
After the Western diplomats met usand a lot of us are intellectuals who
have been living abroad and we know well the difference between what is an
act of terrorism and what is the fight for freedomthey started contacting
us more often, coming to our compounds, garrisons and barracks and so on.
During this period there's been a lot of accusationsthey have been first
of all launched from the Serb sidethat we are an Islamic terrorist group.
Well, we are born Muslim, but of course we have nothing to do with any such
thing. And now the latest one is that we are running a network of drug
dealers! But it's clear the KLA is a freedom movement and that nothing can
stop us.
Most illegal groups in post-war Yugoslavia have been basically nationalist
groups, but to have the support of the Albanian state they had to have as an
ideology Marxism, because Albania was a Marxist regime. But when Communism
collapsed, the LDK changed as well, so now we are without ideology.
We are not ashamed of our past, because we have been part of the leftist
movements. But what everyone must have in mind is that Albania suffered most
from so-called Communism. We have leftists in our movement who really believe
in various ideas of Marx, and we also have the extreme Right, but our
ideology is that the time of democracy will come, and everyone will have the
right to think for themselves.
NATOSAVIOR OR ALBATROSS?
The first draft which was presented to us at Rambouillet was acceptable
as an interim agreement, but what happened in the last three days was by
all means a coup d'etat against the Kosova Albanians. For ten days our
delegation fought very hard on that draft. But after the American negotiator
went to Belgrade we found ourselves with a new draft which was less than
what Milosevic was ready to give us in 1989. So that was the point at which
we refused and only after the intervention of the Americans through Albright
and James Rubin did we come back to the previous accord.
Some people in the West thought the KLA would split but they were wrong.
We didn't want Thaci, the head of the KLA delegation, to become a new Gerry
Adams if there was going to be a split and a new "IRA," to draw a comparison.
I was the first to point this out on CNN at Rambouillet.
At Rambouillet, Demaqi resigned from the KLA delegation because he did
not trust NATO. Demaqi wanted a statement on the right to a referendum to
be held on independence. But it was not a split in the KLA between the
political and military sections. We consulted every field commanderÑeven
if their opinion was unfavorable to usand then signed an interim agreement.
The proposal at Rambouillet that the KLA disband was a hot point for us.
It was stated that there would be be a process of transformation for the KLA,
but that the KLA would not disappear.
Milosevic is unpredictable but he is not clever. He thought he could save
his nation from destruction but he didn't. Now we have the so-called opposition
of Draskovic, but he is a clown. They know Kosova is lost. The Serbian people
know it, but they won't admit itas was the case in Germany during World War
II. Even when the Serb opposition said they had different ideas, it was not
on Kosova.
The ethnic cleansing is no surprise. We thought NATO would utilize the KLA
by arming them and assisting their position. The KLA has changed a lot from
last year. We've had so many volunteers we couldnÕt handle it. We've changed
from the guerrilla structure and we now have lot of former officers, many
from Bosnia or formerly of the Yugoslav army.
Because we face an offensive against the civilian population, we have to
fight on two fronts, one in fighting the Serbs and two in saving the
civilians. After the big offensive on the 31st of March, we entered a new
phase. We have survived the Serb attacks. The KLA General Command ordered
a general mobilization of our people in Albania, Kosova and abroad. Since
then, we have 20,000 training in northern Albania and moving into Kosova,
and another 20,000 young men and women have gone to KLA-held territory
rather than stay in areas where they will be executed. The liberated
areaswe control about a third of the countryare being stabilized, we
have started gaining ground in the border areas and we intend to establish
a corridor from the Albanian border to Drenica.
ARM THE KLA!
We are ready to fight. We have no need for British and Americans to die.
In Croatia the Serbs had tanks and artillery, yet when faced with an armed
force as strong as them, Krajina fell in 24 hours. Serb morale is low; they
avoid real fighting.
The West doesn't arm the KLA because they say that the arms embargo
applies to all of the regions of old Yugoslavia, although that hasn't
stopped the Russians from supplying arms to Belgrade! The Western powers
are fearful about the situation in Macedonia, but Macedonia doesn't have
a real army. If the KLA is armed it will be the strongest in the Balkans.
Even with an interim agreement moving towards self-determination within
five years, the struggle will be protracted.
A map of a proposed partition has been published which would leave Pristina
and the Trepca mines in Serbian hands. This is Milosevic's plan. In case of
not having all of Kosova, they would take this. But we have a very strong
force in the north of Kosova. It is the area I am from, so they joke about
uswe are like Braveheart!
To partition, we say No! The KLA will be united. There can be no partition.
Albanians have lost enough land since our nation existed.
In history I have been inspired by Michael Collins and Che Guevara. I'm
studying the Irish movement and we didn't want to sign anything that would
split us as in 1921 in Ireland. We don't want the death of another Michael
Collins. And look what happened to the PLO with bombings and terrorism.
In Yugoslavia real socialism didn't exist. Tito did not solve the national
question and in many ways he made things worse. We are a poor country, and
socialism would be the best way for us, but it will be up to the people to
decide after freedom is won.
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