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Is Roland Bartetzko a terrorist?

Is the Quoran writer Roland Bartetzko a former terrorist?Additional note : answer augmented with 2 new & pertinent sources (NATO KFOR & legal source) on the 29/12/2020, and an aparte about the Podujevo bus bombing (16/02/2001, 12 dead Serb civilians, 40 injured), perpetrated by an unknown party but on a similar modus operandi than the Prishtina attack (18/04/2001) Roland Bartetzko has been convicted for.Disclaimer : Due to the outrageous Serbophobic propaganda campaign led on Quora by Roland Bartetzko, former German paramilitary in the Bosnian War and Kosovo-War, and convicted terrorist (yes indeed) and murderer now out of jail after 13 years of penance inflicted by an U.N court for the Priština bombing in 1pril 2001 which costed the life of Aleksandar Petrović, head of the Yugoslav Passport office in Priština (in Kosovo & Metohija, Serbia), and wounded 4 of his colleagues, and the success of said campaign (more than 45,000 followers, hundred of upvotes on every of his answer)… I feel like that a lot of Quorans are not aware of his background, and take for a freedom fighter who is actually a petty thug turned paramilitary during the Yugoslav Wars and then terrorist after their conclusion in what concerns Serbia.Hence this post, compiling the available sources and official documents related to Bartetzko’s criminal record, so the truth about him is available here on Quora, and hence its occasional pinning on my profile, so it reaches a maximum of people, in the hope that said truth finally reaches its legitimate audience, aka. everyone.Convicted terrorists and murderers should remain silent after they did their time, and not continue to spread publicly the hatred that led them to jail in the first instance.Accordingly to an U.N court in Priština who indicted[1] , tried[2] & sentenced him in 2002 for terrorism, murder, and attempted murder in 2001, a sentence that he served for 13 years until 2015, yes, Roland Bartetzko is. And with his Quora answers, book, and interviews, he made quite a business of the dirty soldier-of-fortune road leading him there.But let’s see for ourselves some sources beyond the well known BBC article mentioned in the question, aka. 8 different articles (the BBC one, 1 from the Hamburger Morgenposten, 3 of the Spiegel, newspapers from Germany, the country of origin of Roland Bartetzko ; one for the U.S conservative site FreeRepublic, one from the Deutsche Welle, one from NATO KFOR, and also as a bonus 3 different extracts of judgements involving Bartetzko’s conviction for terrorism, murder, and attempted murder) which speak about :his motivations,his dishonorable discharge from the Bundeswehr (German Army) in the early 90s,his paramilitary and petty-criminal intertwined career in the 90s,and a more-than-usual detailed account of the terrorist event (Priština bomb attack in 2001) he’s been indicted, judged, and sentenced for in 2002 by an U.N court.Then, 2 openings are made on Bartetzko’s tongue-in-cheek narration of the preparation of a war-crime he witnessed & its deadly outcome for a Serbian woman, and the Podujevo bus bombing (2 months before the similarly orchestrated Prishtina attack, for which Bartetzko was sentenced).Ultimately, Bartetzko’s own answer is commented at the end of my own.First one[3] :Second one[4], which is very interesting and bring some precisions (Criminal record of Bartetzko, Bartetzko fingerprints on the Prishtina bombing evidences, etc) :TERRORISM "Handwriting of a professional"A German ex-paratrooper, the UN investigators suspect, has done the dirty work for the Albanians in Kosovo. He is said to have killed unwanted Serbs with explosive attacks.Colonel Aleksandar Petrovic was a powerful man. The head of the Yugoslav passport office in Priština decided who was allowed to travel to Serbia from Kosovo and who was not, which was sometimes a life and death decision. Two opposites, between which there are sometimes only seconds in the Balkans.Last Wednesday, Petrovic was murdered with deadly precision. At around 2:50 p.m., the Serbian police officer had left his office with four companions and boarded a dark blue VW Passat. When the limousine passed a dilapidated house on Mostarstrasse, an explosive device hidden on the ground floor detonated. The remote-controlled five-kilo bomb was pointed like a funnel at the street and peppered with deadly metal fragments.Petrovic’ was shredded by shrapnel, his companions survived, some seriously injured. Only coincidence had prevented an even more serious bloodbath: Shortly before, a passerby had parked his car in front of the ruin - it significantly reduced the force of the pressure wave.A little later, a second explosive device was discovered, which apparently should have been detonated at the same time in order to literally circle the target Petrovic. It was connected to electrical wires that led to a nearby hiding place. Although the second bomb did not detonate, the UN police officers stated that the attack bore "the signature of a professional".This "handwriting" now causes considerable eddies far beyond the borders of the Balkans. Although 4,000 UN police officers and around 40,000 KFOR soldiers are on duty in Kosovo, thousands of Serbs and other ethnic minorities who have fled cannot return home from abroad. The German Foreign Ministry also warns of deportations to Kosovo; the refugees would have to fear "systematic pressures, intimidation and violent attacks, which are always fatal" by radical Albanians.And now, of all people, a German is supposed to have done the dirty work for the Albanians. An ex-Bundeswehr paratrooper was arrested as the alleged main perpetrator of the Petrovic murder. According to information from UN circles, he is also suspected of being responsible for three more terrorist attacks in Kosovo as a UÇK contract killer. The suspect was arrested shortly after the detonation. An Albanian police command had delivered a violent man to the UN police on the afternoon of April 18. He had a German passport in the name of Roland Bartetzko, 30 years old, a former non-commissioned officer.The all-over dust-covered Bartetzko violently denied having anything to do with the attack. The explosion terrified him. The criminal police in Pristina, which is headed by a German state guard, took his fingerprints and initially let him go again.Only later, after the Pristina Murder Squad (the UN police homicide) had compared the traces on the unexploded bomb to Bartetzko's fingerprints, the German was put out to search.On Friday, two days after the colonel's death, investigators from the Team Six anti-terrorist unit attacked. At around 11:30 p.m., they arrested Bartetzko near his apartment in Pristina. He resisted violently and was injured on the right arm during the action. The United Nations investigative judge Renate Winter issued an arrest warrant for murder, assault and terrorism.Bartetzko is not a blank slate. In 1991 the non-commissioned officer was "dishonorably" released from the Bundeswehr. As a member of a paratrooper unit stationed in Merzig, he is said to have previously participated in lone fighter courses and explosives courses.After his release, Bartetzko left Germany and initially lived in a student accommodation, a 20 square meter room for a monthly rent of 200 marks, in the Belgian town of La Calamine, not far from the German border. Former roommates today remember a "weapon tick" that he was said to have had at the time.In June 1995, Bartetzko's trail was initially lost - his data was deleted "ex officio" from the population register. At this point he had already broken off contact with his family. According to UN files, Bartetzko initially fought under the battle name "Matthias" on the Croatian side in the Yugoslav wars, until he was finally captured and even declared dead. But in truth the German was able to flee and later joined Muslim fighters.Only in January 1996 did Bartetzko reappear in Germany. After entering Austria, the police picked him up at the border crossing near Bad Reichenhall and secured his fingerprints. The BKA had tracked him down because of his mercenary activities, but there was no evidence: Service in a foreign force is not punishable under German law as long as there is no knowledge of specific crimes.Three months later, the obviously desperate Balkan Desperado was brought to the Munich Stadelheim Correctional Facility for handbag robbery. At the same time, the Austrian police searched for Bartetzko - also because of a robbery. After another detention, this time in Rastatt, the ex-mercenary apparently moved to Kosovo.After the invasion of NATO troops, Bartetzko appeared in Mitrovica, founded the security company Sucuir Kosova and married an Albanian. Vabona Mustafa was impressed by the socially romantic streak of the German, who never ceased to rave about the "human warmth", the "real feelings" and the "warmth of the people" in Kosovo. "Germany is freezing cold," he is said to have always said.Bartetzko apparently found human warmth above all at the UÇK. In his apartment on Ramiz-Sadiku Street, the police found photos of him posing in a combat dress next to his Albanian comrades. Because "Roland" sounded so strange to the militia officers, he let them call them "Shaban" (hero).The soft German, however, might also have its hard sides. The word "security company", it says in Pristina, is really nothing more than a nice paraphrase for terror and extortion. According to a UN spokesman, the former high school student "with the German passport, the Russian name and the Albanian woman" is now considered a "big fish" by insiders. It is currently being examined whether Bartetzko was involved in three other acts of terrorism:* The bombing of the "Center for Peace and Tolerance" in Pristina on August 18 last year, in which an employee of the Turkish People's Party was injured;* The bomb attack on the residence of the Belgrade government official in Kosovo, Stanimir Vukicevic, in which his chauffeur died on November 22;* The massacre of Serbian men, women and children, whose bus convoy had caught an explosive device near Pudojevo on February 16.The investigators are particularly suspicious of the perfidious technique of the last attack, which claimed at least ten lives. The perpetrators had deposited more than 220 kilos of explosives in a water pipe under the street and waited until the armored support vehicles of the Swedish Kfor escort had passed by. Just as the bus with the civilians was over the bomb, they detonated the explosive device over a one and a half kilometer cable by holding the bare ends against a car battery.A couple with a small child was among the dead; there were also 40 injuries, some of whom were seriously injured. The carnage even preoccupied the United Nations Security Council.Bartetzko, who faces 40 years imprisonment, has so far stubbornly refused to testify at all interrogations. His Albanian lawyer, Tom Gashi, says: "I haven't seen any of the alleged evidence yet, and I don't think he committed the Petrovic attack." Given the fingerprints on the bomb, belief will hardly help much.The Frankfurt public prosecutor Peter Korneck, a specialist in organized crime who has been assigned to the United Nations in Pristina, is currently investigating the German ex-mercenary. Above all, he wants to catch the backers who are suspected in circles of the Albanian leadership. Korneck is considering transferring the investigation to Germany because "the legal possibilities in Kosovo are reaching their limits".These limits became clear last Friday afternoon. Because there were indications of a violent liberation by radical UÇK fighters, Bartetzko was flown hastily and under the strictest security precautions by Pristina into the fortress-like "Bond Steel" camp of the US Kfor troops.GEORG MASCOLO, SVEN RÖBEL, ANDREAS ULRICHBy Georg Mascolo, Sven Röbel and Andreas UlrichThird one[5] :Fourth one[6] :Fifth one[7] :Sixth one[8], the famous BBC article mentioned by the OP :German guilty of Pristina bomb attackResidents had to be evacuated after the 2001 bombingA court in Kosovo has sentenced a German national to 23 years in prison after finding him guilty on charges of murder and terrorism.The bomb had been placed in a parked car and packed with metal fragmentsThe man, Roland Bartetzko, was accused of masterminding a bomb attack last year in the centre of the Kosovan capital, Pristina. One person was killed and four others injured in the blast.Bartetzko - who fought with ethnic-Albanian rebels against Yugoslav forces in 1999 - is the first westerner to be tried for murder in postwar-Kosovo.The high-profile case was heard by an international panel of three judges.Terrorism"Bartetzko was sentenced for murder, four acts of attempted murder and terrorism," Andrea Angeli, a spokesman for the United Nations mission in Kosovo said.Bartetzko, 31, pleaded not guilty to the charges when the trial opened in February."I did not plan the bombing," the fighter for the now disbanded Albanian Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) told the court.He was arrested by UN police several days after the explosion, which took place as a group of Serbs were leaving the offices of the Yugoslav representation in Pristina.The bomb - placed in a parked car - was packed with explosives and metal fragments.Yugoslav government official Aleksandar Petrovic was killed in the blast and four others were injured.Serbs targetedThe prosecution claimed that the bombing was a "revenge" attack" that stemmed from Bartetzko's hatred of Serbs.Serbs living in Kosovo have been targeted several times in attacks by majority Albanians angered by years of repression under Slobodan Milosevic's regime. (me : repression for what ? ;-)Several other killings of Serbs - including a bomb attack in February last year that killed at least 10 people - are still unsolved.Kosovo has remained a UN protectorate since 1999, when Nato bombed the province to drive out Serbian forces.Seventh source, from NATO KFOR itself[9] :Note the following part, paramount to understand HOW FAR Bartetzko was ready to go to blast his target, & HOW UNIMPORTANT were the “collateral damages” he could do IN PRISHTINA against ALBANIANS civilians, including children (the same Albanians who revere him as a hero today..) :"There would have been extensive casualties amongst people on the street, including the children playing in the area if all of the 10 kilos of explosives had gone off. The whole neighborhood would have been devastated," police spokesman Derek Chappell says about the explosion.Eight one[10] :As a German guerrilla in the Yugoslav warsRoland Bartetzko served in the Bundeswehr. He later fought as a volunteer in Bosnia and Kosovo. He wrote a book about his war experiences. Nemanja Rujevic spoke to him."To be able to call myself a soldier, I thought I had to fight. Otherwise I could have joined a paintball club." Roland Bartetzko describes his motivation so simply, why he left the newly united Germany in the early 1990s to go to the Bosnian war. His book "The Smell of War - Lessons from Battle" is now also available in German.Bartetzko now lives in the Kosovan capital of Pristina. Born in Würselen in the far west of Germany in 1970, he served as a teenager in the Bundeswehr. His logic that a soldier can only be called, whoever fights, irritates and makes one listen.The answer to a small question from the parliamentary group of the Left in 2001 shows that "RB" was released under paragraph 55 (5) of the Soldiers' Act. So only the Bundeswehr soldiers are put in front of the barrack door, who "culpably violate" their duty of service or whose further whereabouts "would seriously endanger the military order or the reputation of the Bundeswehr". But Bartetzko doesn't want to know about that.Guerrilla tactician and motivational coachThe request from the left in the German Bundestag also revealed other things: That around 100 Germans were fighting on the Croatian side - mostly right-wing extremists. Bartetzko a Nazi? Not at all, he replies. He calls them vile. "For me it was just a love of adventure. The others may have had problems - with the police, the wife or the family. There were also war tourists who thought it was cool to spend a week at the front."In retrospect, it was very problematic to research the reasons. "You are dishonest and say that you only fought for the freedom of Croatia or Kosovo. That is nonsense, of course," he says in an DW interview about why he joined the Croatian Defense Council (HVO) in Bosnia and later joined the Kosovar Liberation Army (KLA).Bartetzko seems to be driven to describe everyday life as a soldier. For years he has been serving Quora, a world-famous forum that distributed some of his posts to an audience of millions. It describes how to keep your butt and teeth clean during war, when water is scarce, why cigarettes can be a popular means of payment or how a deadly ambush is set. Or how to deal with your fear without going crazy."The next morning I woke up slowly, no one shot, the sun shone from outside in the basement, and I thought to myself: 'What a beautiful morning!' But slowly it came to my mind where I was and my next thought was: 'Shit!' "Anyone expecting a structured report will be disappointed after reading 172 pages. His book is more of a collection of anecdotal episodes. Bartetzko also tries as a tipster when it comes to guerrilla tactics, or is an amateur psychologist and motivational coach. "So much crap is being told. The book is meant to fight against this turbopatriotic mythization."Croatia and later Kosovo finally achieved their main goal: the detachment of their territories from Yugoslavia. In both countries, the wars are interpreted as a defense struggle against the "Serbian aggressor".Isn't a foreign volunteer, who also reports on the taboo topic of traumatizing soldiers or alcohol and drug consumption on the front, not perceived as nest polluter? "As soldiers, we didn't necessarily have to worry about having to liberate the country every day. It's not everyday life for soldiers."The second life in KosovoUnfortunately Bartetzko hides a lot in his booklet, although his personal experience could have been valuable. The brutal wars in disintegrating Yugoslavia in the first half of the 1990s killed more than 130,000 people and around two million lost their homes. But while the former fighter describes the crimes committed by Serbs in detail, there is no evidence of Croatian or Kosovar human rights crimes. "I haven't seen any crimes, which doesn't mean there weren't," Bartetzko told DW. "If you come as a foreigner, you won't be told such things."But he has a number in his head how many people were killed by his Kalashnikov. Or also how many died from the mines he laid. However, he does not mention the number. "I didn't check to see if they were actually dead."The book ends with the NATO bombing and surrender of Serbia in June 1999. Less than two years before Roland Bartetzko's life took a decisive turn. On April 18, 2001, a car from the Yugoslavian consulate in Pristina was blown up. A colonel from the Yugoslav police died and four other people were injured. A little later, the "deserved" KLA fighter Roland Bartetzko was arrested.As in court, Bartetzko denies his guilt to the press. He senses behind the allegations against him a conspiracy of the UN mission in Kosovo, which continues to control the judiciary in the protectorate. He did not have to serve the 20-year sentence - he has been on parole since 2015. He used the time behind bars to study law. His wife, a Kosovar Albanian, had the patience to wait for him. That is why he lives in Pristina, speaks fluent Albanian and is very well connected.Some of his friends at the time - and enemies of the war - have become War Dogs. That's the name of those who know nothing but war and don't want anything else. You move through the world as legionaries. They occasionally appear in the media when there are reports of foreign legionnaires in Croatia, Serb mercenaries in Donbas or Albanians who have become jichadists. Bartetzko is at home in Pristina and is very satisfied as a lawyer in a company that produces television series.Isn't it a bit like a paintball club? "Nope, I'm too old for war. It's a closed chapter."Chapters close indeed, with the help of time, but the book never end with Roland Bartetzko. And yet, time for that too is more than overdue. Is he a terrorist ?As for myself, my own opinion and answer is yes.Here is a brief of Bartetzko’s appeal case, with facts, charges, & first instance judgment.Full appeal on this document [11] .As a bonus, Yiannis Papadopoulos mentions in his comment the very opinion of the highest “jurisdictional body of Kosovo”, who’d might be inclined to be friendly to him due to his alignment during the Kosovo-War, and yet considers still that Bartetzko is… a convicted criminal[12]who failed to prove otherwise, or prove that his rights were not respected as such.And here is an extract of the review and inadmissibility of Bartetzko’s demand of release in december 2012[13] (courtesy of another Quoran answer[14]) :Tough life…Indeed, “dear” Roland Bartetzko, opinions of your own (national media, friendly jurisdictions), and facts, are always better than hostile propaganda to make a case. So I rest mine, at least for now, until (I hope), Quora moderators finally decides to rest yours on this platform which should not tolerate your kind to make their ad-nauseam advertising there.Second Bonus : Read the following answer[15] of Roland Bartetzko, the lightness of his prose toward… a Serbian woman killed by an antipersonnel mine placed by “one of his friend” under a car-seat, and put that in parallel with Prishtina and Pudujevo bombing : Roland is testing either everyone’s patience, either everyone’s idiocy.Yes, 918 upvotes at the time of the screenshot.Edit 15/12/2020 : Bartetzko finally answered[16] the question, and here’s my comment on the answer, that’s I’ll paraphrase.Oh yes, I’m a terrorist. A big one even.Indeed Roland. Blowing-up an official car, in peace-time, in an UN administrated territory is a big act of terrorism.Especially when 2 months sooner, on the 16 February 2001, a similar event occurred to a civilian bus full of Serbs near Podujevo[17](12 dead, 40 injured) with an unknown perpetrator with a similar skill-set to yours, & a similar setting (explosives, metal fragments, remote wire activation)The targetThe victimsThe bombings targeting Serbs in Kosovo curiously stopping after your arrestation.. “Honi soit qui mal y pense ?” ;-)I was sentenced according to the Criminal Code of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia for:Terrorism (Article 125):Whoever causes an explosion, fire or take some other generally dangerous action out of hostile motives against the SFRJ, or commits an act of violence which may create a feeling of personal insecurity in citizens or a in a group of citizens, shall be punished by imprisonment for not less than five years.and, to top it all off, they added:Punishment for the gravest criminal acts (Article 139):(1) The offender shall be punished by imprisonment for not less than 10 years or by the death penalty for a criminal act referred to in article …of this law, which brought about the death of a person or caused danger to human lives or was coupled by heavy violence or large-scale destruction, or which led to the endangerment of the security, economic or military power of the country, or in other particularly heavy cases.Thankfully, the death penalty was abolished after the United Nations entered Kosovo, otherwise, I would have been in a tight spot.Sadly, the death-penalty, without due process nor judgement, was inflicted upon your victim(s), namely Aleksandar Petrovich.Other people who were sentenced by Yugoslav (Serbian) judges for terrorism offenses at around the same time were:then US president Bill ClintonBill Clinton engaged an illegal war against a sovereign country, & was almost impeached during his presidency for lying to a Grand Jury.U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright,Madeline Albright publicly called for that war, after considering that the death of hundred of thousands Iraqi citizens during US sanctions was “worth it”.French President Jacques Chirac,Jacques Chirac engaged an illegal war against a sovereign country in 1999, and his responsible for huge troubles in Congo-Brazzaville during his presidency, who led to the death of dozen of thousands local civilians.British Prime Minister Tony Blair,Like Bill Clinton, Tony Blair is a friendly acquaintance of Rwandan Dictator Paul Kagame, who is running unchecked & unpunished for the genocide his forces led against Hutu population in Rwanda & Zaire/RDC. Example : Kibeho massacre in april 1995, where more than 4,000 Hutu civilians were slaughtered by his forces, the aftermath being witnessed by UN observers.German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder,After WW1 & WW2, Germany had no right to engage once again in an attack against Serbia/Yugoslavia, & yet, participated to the NATO strikes against Yugoslavia. His defense minister Rudolf Scharping has been caught red handed in propaganda-lies vs the FRY to justify the aggression.former German Foreign Minister Klaus Kinkel,Same bunch than the previous one, along yourself, Roland Bartetzko, German disgruntled paratrooper turned soldier of fortune then terrorist.German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer,Same bunch.French Foreign Minister Hubert Vedrine,Same bunch as Chirac.former British Foreign Secretary Robin CookSame bunch as Blair.As you can see, I find myself in a rather exquisite club. Feel free to call me a terrorist. For a few months, my name was even figuring on Serbia's “Most Wanted” list.“Exquisite” club of hypocrites warmongers & genocidal maniacs. Nothing unexpected from you though, considering the Serbophobic propaganda that you still display today.I'm freaking proud of that!We noticed. Answering yes to a serious question asking you if you are a terrorist & claiming pride for the given yes could be taken as a form of humor. Except that the question is serious, & so should be the answer, not only on the Yugoslav Law that you so much ironize about, but also on your crimes, that you cynically dodge to answer for in a public intervention which looks like a trolling dodge of the question more than anything else, aimed at amusing & gathering the support of your hateful cultIs expressing pride for a terrorist status that you earned for a terrorist action you were tried, sentenced, & jailed for during 13-14 years, part of the parole agreement that allowed you to go out of jail in 2015? I don’t think so, but I guess neither Prishtina nor Brussels, Berlin, or the UN, are keen to make you cease and desist. Sad.I see, at the time of my writing, that you got already 700+ upvotes in 8 hours. Serbophobia runs wide & deep, against the very principles that most of your supporters pretend to stand for. It’s ok, “we” are used to it. But that doesn’t make it any less shameful.And out of all of this, you just made this question more popular than it was before.. ;-)Translation of the German articles is a courtesy of Google Translate.As an ultimate note, I invite you all to follow the Quora topic : Roland Bartetzko (former German Army Paratrooper)Roland Bartetzko’s anti-Serb propaganda & very presence (as an unrepentant convicted terrorist) on Quora are both of public interest, and it is in the interest of the public debate that his dedicated Quora Topic grows beyond its current 200 followers & above the threshold of 1,000 followers, which will allow to publicize the question furthermore.Footnotes[1] UNMIK-OSCE-EU-UNHCR Press Briefing, 25 Oct 2001 - Serbia[2] MURDER-TERROR TRIAL BEGINS[3] Ex-Stabsunteroffizier der Bundeswehr bombte gegen Serben: Deutscher Kosovo-Terrorist[4] TERRORISMUS: „Handschrift eines Profis“[5] Deutscher Söldner im Kosovo vor Gericht - SPIEGEL ONLINE - DER SPIEGEL[6] KOSOVO: Söldner vor Gericht[7] UN Kosovo court sentences German mercenary for Albanians to 23 years in jail for terrorism[8] German guilty of Pristina bomb attack[9] Basic Information:[10] Als deutscher Guerillero in den Jugoslawienkriegen | DW | 14.02.2019[11] https://www.legal-tools.org/doc/4e777c/pdf[12] Roland Bartetzko vs. the Decisions of the Supreme Court of Kosovo - Constitutional Court[13] http://www.gjk-ks.org/repository/docs/gjkk_ki_78_13_ang.pdf[14] Nikolay Starostin's answer to Why hasn't Roland Bartetzko written a book about his experiences?[15] Roland Bartetzko's answer to Has Roland Bartetzko ever driven a tank in a battle?[16] Roland Bartetzko's answer to Is Roland Bartetzko a terrorist?[17] Seven die as Serb convoy is bombed in Kosovo

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