Unearthing the Truth: The bottom line on a controversial Serb attack 
By Joshua Hammer, Newsweek 
April 24, 2000  
	
	In the buildup to the war in Kosovo, no incident did more to 
	mobilize world opinion against Slobodan Milosevic than the attack on Racak. 
	On Jan. 15, 1999, Serb police descended on the fortified Kosovar hamlet, 
	searching for Kosovo Liberation Army guerrillas. The Serbs shelled the 
	village and rousted hundreds of civilians from their homes. The next day KLA 
	fighters led journalists and observers from the Organization for Security 
	and Cooperation in Europe to a ravine outside Racak, where the bodies of 23 
	men between the ages of 18 and 60 lay side by side. All wore civilian 
	clothing; most had been shot in the head and neck. The corpses of 22 others, 
	including two women, were scattered about the village. After viewing the 
	scene, the chief OSCE observer, U.S. diplomat William Walker, condemned the 
	"massacre" of civilians "at close range in execution fashion."  
	
	But doubts about Walker's claims have never gone away. 
	Yugoslav authorities insisted that the victims were KLA soldiers who had 
	"fallen during combat" and accused the guerrillas of staging the massacre 
	scene. Some senior NATO officials said privately that Walker had rushed to 
	judgment. Now, NEWSWEEK has learned, a team of forensic investigators is set 
	to publish a new report on the controversial events of Jan. 15. Based on two 
	unpublicized visits to the site in November 1999 and March 2000, the 
	findings, sources say, will present incontrovertible proof of what really 
	happened at Racak that day--and vindicate Walker and others who condemned 
	the attack as a Serb atrocity.  
	
	A first forensic report was inconclusive. Led by investigator 
	Helena Ranta, 16 Finnish experts arrived in Kosovo five days after the 
	attack. But by then the bodies had been taken to a morgue and a blizzard had 
	dumped a foot of snow in the ravine; there was little evidence to collect. 
	The circumstances of the deaths were unclear, Ranta announced in March 1999, 
	though the victims were most probably "shot where found."  
	
	Still, a crucial piece of the puzzle was missing. Despite a 
	large number of victims' wounds, few bullets were ever found. The bullets 
	had to be somewhere--but no one had looked for them. Last November, Ranta 
	led a team back to the site. Exploring the ravine for the first time, she 
	said, the experts found the forensic evidence that had lain untouched for 
	all those months. They made an equally fruitful trip this March. Their 
	report is expected in late May. The verdict? Ranta will say only that "I see 
	no reason to change anything in my [initial statement]." In other words, the 
	unarmed men were executed, not at point-blank range, but probably from at 
	least a meter away. What happened at Racak can now be called a massacre with 
	certainty.  
		 
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