Yes, there were mass killings 
	By Noel Malcolm 
	
	The Spectator 
	December 4, 1999 
	
		
			
				
					
						
							Noel Malcolm, in a riposte to 
							John Laughland, says there is irrefutable evidence 
							of massacres in Kosovo  
							
							READERS of The Spectator may have been 
							surprised by John Laughland's two recent articles 
							(30 October and 20 November) casting doubt on the 
							existence of mass grave sites in Kosovo, but readers 
							of Politika, the daily organ of the Milosevic 
							regime, will have taken them in their stride. On 12 
							May, in the middle of the Nato bombing campaign, the 
							Belgrade newspaper published an interview with Mr 
							Laughland, who had come to the Yugoslav capital as a 
							guest of the Serbian Academy of Sciences.  
							The purpose of his visit, the Politika journalist 
							explained, was 'to bear witness to the sufferings of 
							our people under Nato aggression'. To show their 
							'solidarity with our people', Mr Laughland and the 
							other members of his group had bought 'target' 
							stickers (sold on street corners, and sported by 
							some Belgraders as an ironic 'aim here' message to 
							Nato), and were wearing them proudly on their 
							lapels. Neither the interviewer nor Mr Laughland 
							made any mention of the sufferings of the Kosovo 
							Albanians. We now know that he believes those 
							sufferings to have been hugely exaggerated. But when 
							he visited Belgrade he was in no position to judge 
							whether the number of murdered Albanians was in the 
							hundreds, thousands or tens of thousands. 
							Apparently, this just did not seem important to him 
							at the time.  
							I read that interview with a strong and rather 
							personal sense of dismay. I have known John 
							Laughland for many years; I regard him as an 
							unusually intelligent and talented person. 
							Spectator readers with long memories may recall 
							that he was first launched as a journalist in this 
							magazine, producing trenchant commentaries on German 
							and French politics. This took place during my 
							period as foreign editor: reader, I launched him. 
							But his non-stop one-man campaign on the issue of 
							Kosovo (in this and other papers) makes me feel that 
							something has gone terribly wrong. Both of his 
							recent articles were riddled with gross 
							misrepresentations.  
							'I Was Right About Kosovo', said the headline on 
							the second article. But what exactly had his central 
							claim been? It was that, in the words of 'a 
							Texas-based thinktank', the number of bodies found 
							so far in Kosovo was only 'in the hundreds', not 
							thousands. Indeed, a 'senior intelligence source' 
							had informed him that the figure was just 670. And 
							yet, barely one week after his article was 
							published, the chief prosecutor of the International 
							Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia 
							announced that the current total was 2,108 - in 
							other words, thousands, not hundreds. And this was 
							merely an interim report: out of 529 'scenes of 
							crime', only 195 have been investigated so far.  
							For an article billed as a reply to his critics, 
							Laughland's second piece is strangely silent about 
							the most devastating criticism of all - one made by 
							the Guardian's Francis Wheen in a rebuttal which 
							Laughland cites, but does not answer. Laughland had 
							originally written: 'On 16 May, the US defence 
							secretary William Cohen said that the Yugoslav army 
							forces had killed up to 100,000 Albanian men of 
							military age. This number was declared missing ... 
							Tony Blair himself implied that the numbers might be 
							even higher... in the Times on 5 June.' Wheen 
							pointed out that Cohen had specifically not said 
							that the 100,000 men had been killed: having 
							explained that they were unaccounted for, he went on 
							to say, 'We have had reports that as many as 4,600 
							have been executed.' As for Mr Blair, his article in 
							the Times did not offer any figures at all, either 
							above or below 100,000. Laughland's claim, that the 
							public in the West was bamboozled into thinking that 
							100,000 or more Albanians had been murdered, is 
							false. The only people who have been bamboozled are 
							the readers of Laughland's articles - and readers of 
							those by other journalists who have blindly repeated 
							his claims elsewhere.  
							In fact the official estimate, used by 
							international agencies and Western governments since 
							the summer, is between 10,000 and 12,000. The ICTY 
							uses a total of 11,334. How were such figures 
							arrived at? Laughland suggests that a principal 
							source is the 'wild imaginings' or 'deliberate lies' 
							of the US government. The true answer is more 
							prosaic. They were compiled from interviews with 
							thousands of refugees, who often provided 
							independent but mutually confirmatory testimony of 
							the same events.  
							The ICTY, in particular, has used the evidence of 
							eye-witnesses who saw either the actual killings or 
							the corpses: in many cases these witnesses buried 
							the bodies themselves, having fled from their 
							villages and then returned after the Serb forces had 
							gone. It is possible, of course, that some of them 
							have exaggerated, deliberately or unwittingly, the 
							number of dead. Laughland has managed to find one 
							recorded example of a girl who has admitted to 
							reporting, falsely, the death of her sister. In his 
							first article he used this to rhetorical effect, 
							implying that all reports by all Albanians could 
							therefore be disbelieved. But it is absurd to 
							suppose that thousands of ordinary villagers have 
							taken part in such an ingenious project of 
							mass deception - particularly when their reports, in 
							many cases, have already been borne out by the 
							evidence on (and in) the ground.  
							 
					 
				 
			 
		 
	 
	
		
			
				
					
						
							Does this mean, then, that the ICTY investigators 
							will eventually find every one of those reported 
							11,334 bodies? Of course not. In some cases the 
							death was witnessed, but not the burial. Some bodies 
							were just left on the surface: these decomposed 
							quickly in hot weather, and were then dispersed by 
							scavenging animals. Massacre sites seldom yield all 
							their victims; in the case of Srebrenica, for 
							example (the most exhaustively studied massacre in 
							recent history), the number of dead is known to be 
							7,300 (plus or minus a few hundred), but the number 
							of bodies recovered after four years is less than 
							half of that total. And in any case the purpose of 
							the ICTY investigation is not to produce a 
							body-count, but to provide the sort of detailed 
							evidence - preferably including the identity of the 
							victim and the place, time and manner of death - 
							that can be used in a criminal trial. For that 
							reason, 'partial remains' have been excluded from 
							the interim total it has issued, even when those 
							body-parts had clearly belonged to several human 
							beings. 
							 There is, however, another reason why many of the 
							bodies will never be found. The Serb forces had 
							learned an important lesson from the ICTY's 
							investigations in Bosnia: at one site after another 
							in Kosovo they made great efforts to destroy, 
							disguise or remove the evidence of their killings. 
							The ICTY's report refers to 'sites where there was 
							obvious evidence of grave tampering, body removal, 
							disposal of bodies by other means ..... Where only 
							ashes remain, even when it is clear that many people 
							were burnt, the ICTY does not assign any number to 
							the body-count.  
							The ICTY's investigators have interviewed the 
							grave-diggers at local cemeteries in Kosovo: they 
							described frequent visits by the Serb police or 
							military, who would unload heaps of bodies from 
							their vehicles and order them to dispose of them. 
							Those bodies now rest in 'ordinary' graves. At some 
							of the massacre sites the victims were later buried 
							by their own neighbours or relatives - also, 
							naturally enough, in rows of individual graves. But 
							here Laughland deploys what is surely the most 
							grotesque part of his argument: he suggests that 
							these deaths do not count, because the bodies were 
							not placed in 'mass graves'. The method of burial, 
							apparently, is sufficient to turn a massacre into a 
							mere multiplicity of individual deaths.  
							The ICTY seldom uses the phrase 'mass graves'; it 
							prefers to say 'mass grave sites'. But, given the 
							syntactical fluidity of the English language, this 
							could have an implicit hyphen in either of two 
							places: mass grave-sites' or 'mass-grave sites'. 
							Switch it from the former to the latter, and, with a 
							whisk of Laughland's magic wand, the evidence can 
							then be dismissed as insignificant or non-existent. 
							The murder of thousands of people can thus be turned 
							into, in the words of The Spectator's 
							headline-writer, 'The Massacres That Never Were'.
							 
							In some cases there is direct proof, both of the 
							original burials and of the subsequent tampering. At 
							Pusto Selo a villager videoed first the burial of 
							more than 100 people (in individual graves), then 
							the arrival three weeks later of Serb officials with 
							a small truck: they removed some of the bodies and 
							reburied them elsewhere. The same thing happened at 
							Izbica, where the burial of 143 people was also 
							videoed, and the graves were then clearly 
							photographed by US aerial reconnaissance. But when 
							French troops arrived in June, they found that every 
							grave had been opened; there were no bodies (only 
							scattered 'partial remains'), but there was some 
							abandoned earth-moving equipment.  
							 
					 
				 
			 
		 
	 
	
		
			
				
					
						
							In his second article, Laughland produced a list of 
							places where the US State Department had reported 
							massacres in May; triumphantly, he announced that 
							'the ICTY investigators have not discovered one 
							single body at any of these 16 sites'. Prominent 
							among them was Izbica. The local Serb commanders may 
							have doubted whether they could find anyone gullible 
							enough to suppose that no one was killed at Izbica, 
							in the face of video footage, aerial photographs and 
							the testimonies of eyewitnesses. If so, we must 
							conclude that their doubts were unjustified. 
							 Other items on Laughland's list are simply bogus. 
							He says that 'not one single body' has been found at 
							Suva Reka; in fact the interim report, which he 
							claims to have read, specifies three grave-sites at 
							Suva Reka, with a total of 103 bodies. He says the 
							same about Podujevo; the report lists 19 bodies 
							there. He says the same about 'Kaaniku'; this is 
							just a misprint for 'Kacaniku' (the definite form of 
							Kacanik), for which the report lists 76 bodies at 
							five different sites. (Later in his article he says 
							that 16 bodies were found at Kacanik, thus 
							unwittingly contradicting himself, but still not 
							getting it right.)  
							At the mining and industrial complex of Trepca, 
							local Albanians reported that bodies were being 
							incinerated and dumped in the mines. Laughland 
							writes that 'tribunal investigators have 
							categorically denied that there were any human 
							remains either in the mine shafts or in the 
							incinerators'. This too is false. The ICTY has made 
							no such categorical denial, for the simple reason 
							that it has not investigated the majority of the 
							shafts - of which there are a great number, both 
							active and abandoned. One sample investigation was 
							made, of a few shafts, by a French caving team, but 
							even these searchers did not descend all the way to 
							the bottom (which in many cases is below the water 
							table). The tribunal merely announced that it had 
							found no human remains so far.  
							What, in the end, is the point of Mr Laughland's 
							efforts? It is to suggest that 'the Kosovo conflict' 
							- both before and during the Nato bombing - was just 
							a normal 'civil war', characterised by typical 
							military actions by Serb forces, plus a few crimes 
							on the side. This is not an adequate way to describe 
							an operation directed mainly against a civilian 
							population, which involved, even in 1998, the 
							looting and mass-burning of houses: roughly 300,000 
							people fled from their homes during that year.  
							Certainly there was an increase in the intensity 
							of the assault on the civilian population after the 
							Nato bombing began: the German government (whose 
							views Laughland pretends to take as authoritative) 
							has described what followed as 'genocide'. The real 
							question Nato governments have to answer is whether 
							there is evidence to show that some such 
							intensification of the Serb anti-civilian campaign 
							would have happened anyway; this question may be 
							disputed, but Laughland does not even attempt to 
							consider it. 
							What is indisputable is that during the spring of 
							1999 crimes were committed by Serb forces on a huge 
							scale: the destruction of more than 60,000 homes, 
							and of hundreds of mosques and historic buildings; 
							the theft of property and money from thousands of 
							refugees; the expulsion of 800,000 people into 
							neighbouring countries; and the murder of thousands 
							of civilians, including old people, women and 
							children. To dismiss or minimise these events, 
							either on the grounds that some of the bodies have 
							not yet been found, or because some of them were 
							buried in separate graves, seems like a bad joke. 
							There are many thousands of grieving relatives in 
							Kosovo to whom the humour of it will not be 
							apparent.  
					 
				 
			 
		 
	 
 
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