US Script For Yugoslavia's Privatization
by Konstantin Kilibarda

With Serbian prime minister Zoran Djindjic's untimely demise,
Yugoslavia was back in the news for a day or two. The shameful
anniversary of the Kosovo war, on March 24, is a sad occasion to
provide important clarifications and explanations that
debunk "official" history, a useful exercise thanks to Konstantin
Kilibarda.

http://www.swans.com/library/art9/kkilib01.html

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From Der Spiegel: How Kostunica [and Djindjic!] Came to Power
Comments by Jared Israel, plus Further Reading

The media is now praising Zoran Djindjic, the recently assassinated
Serbian politician, as a great democrat and leader of the
'independent' anti-Milosevic opposition. But two years ago a German
magazine wrote that the U.S. and Germany made the opposition's
decisions & paid the bills!

http://emperors-clothes.com/docs/spie.htm

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FLASHBACK: The Nuts & Bolts of a Scam...
How the U.S. has Created a Corrupt Opposition in Serbia
A joint statement

http://www.emperors-clothes.com/engl2.htm

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Tension in Belgrade over Djindjic assassination
by Tanja Djurevic

http://www.iacenter.org/djurevic--0303.htm



--- VISNJICA ---

US Congress salutes fallen hero

WASHINGTON, March 15 (Tanjug) - At the Senate and Congress
House of Representatives, several representatives of the US
authority talked with reverence about Serbian Premier Zoran
Djindjic, assassinated in Belgrade on Wednesday, and stressed that
the United States was saluting the fallen hero.
Congressman Curt Weldon from Pennsylvania expressed deep regret, and
warned that the fact that Djindjic was gone should not stop the
process of reforms and democratization, for which the Serbian premier
had been striving for.
The world laments over a true democrat and a person that
whole-heartedly fights for freedom, Weldon said, and stressed that
Djindjic had dedicated his life to those ideals and was ready to risk
all so as to bring freedom to his country. Congressmen David Dreier
from California and Steny Hoyer from Maryland also talked about
Djindjic at the House of Representatives on Thursday.
Expressing grief, Dreier said it was long ago that the
United States had learned how high the price of freedom was. Other
nations are also learning the same thing at a high price, Dreier
said, and stressed that the sacrifice of Serbian premier should not
be forgotten. Congressman Hoyer reminded of the fact that Djindjic
had had the courage for the transfer of Slobodan Milosevic to The
Hague tribunal, and pointed out that we had lost a man whose courage
and dedication to freedom and human rights was significant both for
his nation and the international community.