Wednesday August 22, 8:17 PM
U.N. wants probe into Kosovo prison break-out
PRISTINA, Serbia (Reuters) - The United Nations wants an
independent inquiry into Kosovo's top-security Dubrava prison
after seven inmates -- including convicted murderers and
terrorists -- escaped with the help of their guards.
Five prison guards have been charged with aiding Saturday's
break-out, and four other people have been arrested on
suspicion of providing covering fire for the escape outside the
prison walls with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled
grenades.
The U.N. mission in charge of Kosovo since the 1998-99 war
said on Wednesday it wanted to hold "an independent evaluation
of conditions at the Dubrava prison."
The probe would try to "ascertain all the facts and ensure
there are safeguards in the future to avoid anything else like
this happening again," said spokesman Alexander Ivanko.
Among those who escaped were Saudi-born Ramadan Shyti, who
is wanted on murder and terrorism charges in neighbouring
Macedonia, and Lirim Jakupi, who is believed to be a leader of
the shadowy Albanian National Army.
The United Nations, which has around 1,300 police officers
in the province, has no direct role at the prison. But the
escape is an embarrassment for the mission and the
16,000-strong NATO-led peace force.
One of those who broke out was armed with a pistol, while
another was making his seventh escape from prison.
A Kosovo police spokesman acknowledged the convicts might
already have slipped across the province's porous borders into
neighbouring Macedonia, Montenegro or Albania. A NATO spokesman
said Alliance forces could help with the manhunt if necessary.
The breakaway Serbian province has been run by the United
Nations for the past eight years, since NATO bombed Serbia to
drive out Serb forces and halt the killing and expulsion of
ethnic Albanians in a two-year war against guerrillas.
Ninety percent of Kosovo's 2 million people are ethnic
Albanians, who want independence from Serbia.
Tensions are running high as the West struggles to keep its
promise to back independence in the face of total Serbian
opposition, strongly backed at the United Nations by Russia.
Serb-Albanian talks are set to resume later this month in
Vienna, but NATO allies fear a unilateral declaration of
independence and possibly violent unrest if there is no
breakthrough by the end of the year.
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