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Europe, Worldwide - Monday, January 3, 2011 14:49 - 0 Comments
Allegations of Kosovo organ trafficking and vote rigging cloud future… and past
Despite claims of electoral fraud, Hashim Thaci, prime minister of Kosovo Democratic Party of Kosovo (PDK) claims to have won the election with 33.5% of the vote. This was the country’s first election since it declared its independence. Incumbent Thaci claimed victory in the election before the results were even certified. Rival, Arben Gashi, Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK) insists a new
election needs to be held to ascertain legitimacy and credibility.
Certified German politician Doris Pack, head of the vote monitoring expressed her concern about “vote-rigging.” One polling station in Drenica, which was a solid base for Thaci’s PDK reported overwhelming turnouts at the two municipalities of Skenderaj with 93.68% and Gilogovc with 86.94%. There were 1.6 million people eligible to vote. In three polling stations more ballot papers were cast than the number of people registered to vote.
Petrit Selimi says the party would have prevailed, but the filing of 171 appeals had postponed the formation of a new government. Complaints included stuffing ballot boxes, multiple voting and defective verification with ultraviolet lights. A new election has been scheduled to be held on January 9, 2011.
Another problem is that two days after the election, Swiss politician and former prosecutor for the Council of Europe, Dick Marty implicated Thaci in drug smuggling and murder, and claims to have the proof. Marty allegedly conducted the two-year investigation into organized crime in Kosovo and accused the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) of removing at least 300 ethnic Serbs and Kosovar
enemies by imprisoning them in jails in Albania. The report has been endorsed by the Council of Europe and has ordered a complete investigation. Prime Minister Sali Berisha of Albania states his country is completely open for investigation.
Thaci and his group of guerilla commanders from the region of Drenica allegedly kept the captives in secret detention areas in Albania after the 1998-1999 war ended, transferred the men to the Medicus Clinic founded by a European philanthropist who aided Albanian doctors during the 1999 Kosovo war, and performed secret and illegal organ transplants and shipped the organs to Istanbul.
The Medicus Clinic, located in a poor suburb near downtown Pristina has been alleged to have been founded by Dr. Lutfi Dervishi, a former secretary of health who provided the clinic with a false license to operate. Turkish surgeon, Yusuf Sonmez has become the subject of an international manhunt. Referred to as “Doctor Vulture” and “Turkish Frankenstein” the situation has horrible
reminders of the Nazi concentration camps and subsequent egregious human experiments performed by German surgeons.
Prosecutors also believe Shaip Muja, a former KLA “medical commander based in Albania may have overseen the operations at Medicus.
The claims first became public in 2008 when chief war crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte’s book, The Hunt: Me and the War Criminals claimed Kosovo Albanians were smuggling organs of kidnapped enemies. Her memoirs spurred the Council of Europe investigation. Del Ponte’s book originated from information she claimed to have received from Western investigative journalists, according to the
Parliamentary Assembly Council of Europe (P.A.C.E.) who were working for a US based documentary producer American Radio Works. Ms. Del Ponte has since been sent to Argentina by the Swiss government as her nation’s ambassador.
Seven people were charged with international organ trafficking which was based in Kosovo alleging poor people were hired from slums, and promised payment of up to $20,000 for their kidneys. The harvested organs were sent to patients in Israel and Canada.
The Kosovo government has rejected all allegations of human organ trafficking, and heroin smuggling and invites the United Nations war crimes tribunal to investigate the case. Senator Marty alleges human organ trafficking has been going on for years.
Kosovo’s government has been thrown under the bus before, but the timing and context of the allegations has cost Thaci a lot of credibility. He claims the reports to be “ill-intentioned propaganda” intended to undermine Kosovo’s independence that Serbia refuses to acknowledge.
The report however alleges more than organ trafficking. On a larger scale the “Drenica” group participates in much more crime and corruption including murder, trafficking of women, heroin distribution and money laundering. Thaci calls the continued PACE claims libelous. Reports filed by the U.S., DEA, FBI, and other country intelligence agencies have stated that the Drenica group members
are always named as key players for organized crime.
Why hasn’t the U.S participated in this investigation? This past summer Vice President Joseph Biden met with Thaci to “reaffirm the United States’ full support for an independent, democratic, whole, and multi-ethnic Kosovo.” Biden also “reiterated the US firm support for Kosovo’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.”
All of this certainly makes you wonder doesn’t it?
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