Tribunal Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia

Page 2435

1 Monday, 28 August 2006

2 [Open session]

3 [The accused entered court]

4 [The accused Pavkovic not present]

5 [The witness entered court]

6 --- Upon commencing at 9.00 a.m.

7 JUDGE BONOMY: Now, Mr. Aleksic.

8 MR. ALEKSIC: [Interpretation] Good morning, Your Honours.

9 I just wanted to state it for the record that my colleague has

10 been injured -- and my client in fact has an injury, and he's agreed for

11 us to continue our work in his absence. Thank you.

12 JUDGE BONOMY: Well, we are grateful for that, Mr. Aleksic. I

13 hope he recovers quickly and is back with us as soon as possible.

14 Good morning, Ms. Xhafa.

15 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] Good morning.

16 JUDGE BONOMY: We will continue with your evidence. I have to

17 remind you, though, first of all, that the solemn declaration which you

18 took at the beginning of your evidence continues to apply to that evidence

19 today.

20 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] Okay.

21 JUDGE BONOMY: Thank you.

22 Mr. Visnjic.

23 MR. VISNJIC: [Interpretation] Thank you, Your Honours.

24 WITNESS: FEDRIJE XHAFA [Resumed]

25 [Witness answered through interpreter]

Page 2436

1 Cross-examination by Mr. Visnjic: [Continued]

2 Q. Good morning, Ms. Xhafa.

3 A. Good morning.

4 Q. Ms. Xhafa, I will now ask you --

5 MR. VISNJIC: [Interpretation] First of all, I would like the

6 witness to be shown Defence Exhibit 3D66.

7 Q. I would like you to show on this map the location where you

8 stopped, in fact where you were while the convoy was not in motion. But

9 first of all, I would like to ask you, you said that you found Fazil and

10 Musa again there, you encountered them here again. Am I right?

11 A. I don't understand. Who's Musa?

12 Q. Fazil and Mirsad.

13 A. Oh, yes, yes, Fazil and Mirsad, we met them on the way somewhere

14 in lower Studime.

15 Q. Can you remember at what time it happened, what time it was,

16 approximately? Or let me assist you in a different way. Was it before

17 the convoy stopped?

18 A. No. This was the time when we were on our way to Vushtrri, after

19 the massacre. We were ordered to go to Vushtrri, and it was somewhere

20 on -- at Studime i Ulet, or lower Studime, that we met Fazil and Mirsad.

21 Q. Thank you.

22 MR. VISNJIC: [Interpretation] Can we now show the Defence

23 Exhibit D -- I'm sorry, 3D66.

24 JUDGE BONOMY: I think you have it on the screen, Mr. Visnjic.

25 MR. VISNJIC: [Interpretation] Thank you, Your Honour.

Page 2437

1 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, this is a map similar to the one you used yesterday,

2 but this time it is in colour. If you see this thin blue line leading

3 from Vucitrn and then along the Gornja Sudimlja and Donja Sudimlja road

4 and then moving on from Gornja Sudimlja, it should be the stream. Is it

5 right to say that the stream is actually following the road from Gornja to

6 Donja Sudimlja?

7 A. The stream goes from Studime i Eperme to Vushtrri. I don't know

8 in which river it flows.

9 Q. To Ceceli, yes, but that is immaterial now. Can you now tell me

10 whether on this map -- can you see the letter G up there, that should be

11 Gornja Sudimlja, and D marks Donja Sudimlja. Can you please now mark the

12 location where you stopped around 4.00 p.m. on the 2nd of May?

13 A. Somewhere here.

14 Q. Thank you. Mrs. Xhafa, do you know where Mahala Zvarca [phoen] or

15 Mahala Zuci are? It should be somewhere in Donja Sudimlja. Do you know

16 about those two locations?

17 A. No, I don't.

18 Q. Fine. Now my question to you is: In your statement, in

19 paragraph 5, the statement of 1989 [as interpreted], you say that after

20 4.00 p.m. no one was allowed to move because of a curfew, and in the

21 transcript, Milosevic trial, page 4148, you said that: "After 4.00 p.m.

22 we decided to take a rest in Sudimlja." Which one is correct then?

23 A. We were ordered and we were told that after 4.00 p.m. it was a

24 curfew in Vushtrri, so we stopped.

25 Q. Thank you. In your statement you described that after 9.00 p.m.,

Page 2438

1 the police officers appeared. At that time it was already dark, right?

2 You were still in the column of vehicles. Is that correct?

3 A. When the Serb police and army came, we were sitting down on the

4 field, and they ordered us all to go to our tractors, and ordered the

5 drivers of the tractors to clear the road. Some people were walking, some

6 people went and got on their tractors.

7 Q. When you said "to clear the road," you mean to remove the tractors

8 from the road not to have the column moved towards Vucitrn. Am I correct?

9 A. I mean the tractors had to be removed from the middle of the road.

10 It's in the direction towards Vushtrri. All the tractors had to line up

11 on the right of the road in order for their vehicles to be able to pass.

12 JUDGE BONOMY: Mr. Visnjic, it may just be me that has slightly

13 lost his way a little. The statement you're referring to there is a

14 statement we don't have. Is that correct? It was translated as "1989" --

15 well, by the translator I heard "1999," but I see it's appeared as 1989 on

16 the transcript.

17 THE INTERPRETER: Interpreter correction, this is statement 89(F).

18 JUDGE BONOMY: Oh, it's 89(F). Now, I -- it was translated

19 as "1999" and I was trying to find it there, but it's now clear if it's

20 the 89(F) statement. Thank you.

21 MR. VISNJIC: [Interpretation]

22 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, you told us - again, this is paragraph 5 - I don't

23 that you hid Ismet in -- in the trailer after the incident that you had

24 with the police. In fact, it was after the vehicles had been moved away

25 from the road. Am I right?

Page 2439

1 A. Yes. After everybody got on their tractors, a group of policemen

2 came. I can't remember how many they were, whether there were three or

3 four of them. They came to our tractor. They began to beat Ismet up. He

4 was with Jetish on the tractor.

5 Q. Yes, yes, we do have it in your statement. Thank you. I just

6 want to ask you about some details. Please tell me, can you describe how

7 you actually hid him in the trailer

8 A. Yes, very easily. They left for a moment, so he came to the

9 trailer and he laid down. We sat on him, and then we were trying to go on

10 with our way but the next group of policemen came and they began to beat

11 up Jetish.

12 Q. Yes. We will get to that. But let me now ask you something about

13 Ismet. At the Milosevic trial at page 4142 you stated that your brother's

14 son was -- had been mobilised into the KLA and that he spent some time

15 there and then returned home. And then on the same page you stated: All

16 the young men had been mobilised at that time. Is that correct?

17 Now, my question to you is in fact the following: Do you know

18 anyone else who had been mobilised together with Ismet?

19 A. There were not many of them that joined the KLA. There were young

20 people that joined, of course, but I can't give you any names. Jetish

21 responded to their mobilising order in the beginning, but then he came

22 back home. He did not stay with them.

23 Q. So let me go about this this way: Did you hear that in 1999 the

24 KLA also had the mobilisation order put out?

25 A. No. No, it was not like an order. It was voluntarily. Whoever

Page 2440

1 wanted to join them, they could.

2 Q. Fine. And do you know whether anyone -- any other young men who

3 had gone together with Ismet, whether they returned back home after their

4 stay in the KLA?

5 A. No, I don't.

6 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, your village, Donji Svracak, was it controlled by the

7 KLA until the outbreak of the conflict with NATO on the 24th of March,

8 1999?

9 A. No, there were no KLA in our village. In our village there were

10 villagers who stayed there, and there were Serbs as well from our village

11 who stayed there.

12 Q. Fine. Now, please tell me, there were no Serb police in your

13 village. Is that correct?

14 A. There was some villagers, Serb villagers, who had police uniforms.

15 Q. Fine. I will now take you back to this location between

16 Gornja Sudimlja and Donja Sudimlja, this is paragraph 6 of your 89(F)

17 statement.

18 JUDGE BONOMY: Before you do that, Mr. Visnjic, this map we have

19 on the screen which is marked, do you wish that copied at this stage or do

20 you wish simply to leave it there in case you use it again?

21 MR. VISNJIC: [Interpretation] Your Honour, yes, we can give it a

22 number.

23 THE REGISTRAR: Your Honours, that will be Exhibit IC21.

24 JUDGE BONOMY: Thank you.

25 MR. VISNJIC: [Interpretation]

Page 2441

1 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, in paragraph 6 of your statement you describe how a

2 second group of police officers came to your tractor. Now you call them

3 paramilitaries. And in your statement you describe them, but what I want

4 to ask you is whether perhaps they wore black masks over their faces?

5 A. No. The second group were not wearing masks, black masks. They

6 had blue uniforms.

7 Q. Fine.

8 A. One of them had a vest, a green vest on, the one that beat Jetish.

9 Q. Did Jetish give him the money?

10 A. We did not have any money left to give to the second group of

11 policemen, so my sister-in-law gave him -- gave them some gold things that

12 she had.

13 Q. Who did she give it to?

14 A. The policemen. She was somewhere in the middle of the tractor.

15 Q. In fact, she gave -- I apologise. Just a moment. So Hamide gave

16 it, Fazil's wife. Is that correct?

17 A. Yes, Hamide, Fazli's wife.

18 Q. Thank you. Can you give us some estimate of the time that elapsed

19 before the third group came? You said that around 10.30 -- the time is

20 okay, but I would like to give us an estimate of the time that elapsed

21 between the arrival of the second group and the third group. How much

22 time elapsed, if you can recall at all?

23 A. So when they took the jewellery and the gold, they left and we got

24 off the tractor and started walking. I can't remember how long it took

25 for the third group to come, and they came from behind a bush. Two of

Page 2442

1 them were wearing masks. And they shot my brother. My father spoke

2 something in Serbian. I don't know what he said, and they came back and

3 took my father.

4 Q. [Previous translation continues] ... statement, Mrs. Xhafa --

5 A. It was about 10.30 after we decided to start walking. I can't

6 remember exactly, but I remember that my brother said it was about -- it

7 is 10.30 after the killing occurred.

8 THE INTERPRETER: Correction.

9 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] It was my brother's daughter who

10 said it's 10.30.

11 THE INTERPRETER: Interpreter's correction.

12 MR. VISNJIC: [Interpretation]

13 Q. Are you trying to tell me that you moved towards Vucitrn on foot

14 before the third group arrived? Am I right?

15 A. No, after the killing.

16 Q. [Previous translation continues] ...

17 A. And they left.

18 Q. Fine. So when the third group appeared, was Jetish on the

19 tractor?

20 A. Yes. Jetish was on the tractor. They took him. They shot him,

21 they killed my father. After the killing, I can't tell you how long we

22 were staying there shocked. We didn't know what to do, and the order came

23 for us to move the tractor away. And they ordered a 13 year old to drive

24 the tractor, but he was so young he couldn't drive it.

25 Q. [Previous translation continues] ... to that point. But we

Page 2443

1 definitely will get to that point. I would like you to listen carefully

2 to what I am asking you. I'm referring only to portions of your

3 statement, specific portions. You don't have to go through it all again.

4 I know that you want to tell the Court about it, but please focus on what

5 I'm asking you.

6 Now I would like to read out a sentence from paragraph 7 of your

7 statement where you describe precisely this detail. In fact, it's several

8 lines, but you say: "One of them," you are now referring to this group of

9 policemen, "pointed a machine-gun at my mother's chest. Jetish had not

10 had a chance to get back onto the tractor after being beaten when they

11 took hold of him and dragged him to bush around 5 metres away on the right

12 side."

13 This is a sentence from paragraph 7 of your statement. From what

14 I was able to gather on page 8, line 22 -- 21, in fact, you said that

15 Jetish was on the tractor. So now I'm asking you, if you can recall at

16 all, whether he was on the tractor or, as you described it here, he did

17 not have a chance to get back onto the tractor after he was -- after he

18 had been beaten.

19 A. He was close to the tractor. He wanted to get on the tractor.

20 But we were discussing at that time whether to get off the tractor and

21 walk or continue on the tractor. I don't know how long this lasted, and

22 when we -- he was trying to get on the tractor, the third group -- this

23 group of policemen came and they took Jetish and shot him.

24 Q. Were there any other people there at the place where Jetish was

25 taken to, apart from himself and the police officers there by that bush?

Page 2444

1 A. There was a convoy of people, but at our tractor only the

2 policemen came and Jetish, and there were four others close to the

3 trailer. One of them put -- pointed the gun, the machine-gun, on my

4 mother's chest.

5 Q. So there were just the police officers and Jetish and no other

6 people; for instance, no other tractor drivers. Am I right?

7 A. No.

8 Q. Fine. Mrs. Xhafa, I put it to you that your brother Jetish was

9 approached by two groups of paramilitaries not three, as you claim. Is

10 that correct?

11 MR. HANNIS: Your Honour, I think that misstates what's in her

12 statement. She says "police officers," not "paramilitaries."

13 JUDGE BONOMY: Mr. Visnjic.

14 MR. VISNJIC: [Interpretation] Your Honours, this is irrelevant, in

15 fact, but if, if --

16 JUDGE BONOMY: It may be picked up as a positive confirmation that

17 they were paramilitaries at a later stage when you're trolling through the

18 transcript for your final submissions. So I think it ought to be put in a

19 way that doesn't alter what she said so far. If you're challenging the

20 identification of the personnel involved, you need to do that separately.

21 And indeed, it's you who have called -- you have gone along with her

22 description of them so far as police officers.

23 MR. VISNJIC: [Interpretation]

24 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, let me rephrase the question. I put it to you that

25 your brother Jetish was approached by two, not three, groups of police, as

Page 2445

1 you claim. Is that correct?

2 A. The correct thing is that three groups approached them. The first

3 group beat up Ismet; the second group came, beat up Jetish, and asked for

4 money; and the third group came and shot Jetish and our father.

5 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, what I'm claiming is that Jetish -- that it was Jetish

6 and not Hamide who gave all the money in their possession. So Jetish gave

7 them the money, not Hamide, as you claim. Is that correct?

8 A. They asked money from Jetish and from my father. They went to my

9 father to ask for money while they were beating up Jetish. And my

10 sister-in-law, because she knew he had no money, she gave all her

11 valuables, jewellery and gold, and then they left when they took it.

12 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, it is still my position that the second group of

13 policemen again asked for money and that Jetish had nothing left to give.

14 Is that correct?

15 A. Yes, that's correct. Jetish did not have anything to give them.

16 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, I put it to you that Jetish was told to go to where

17 the bushes were, together with a few other tractor drivers. Is that

18 correct?

19 A. No, that's not correct. He was close to the tractor -- the bush

20 was close to the tractor. They took him to that bush. It was right in

21 front of us that he was killed.

22 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, I also put it to you that at the moment when he was

23 ordered to go to the shrub together with the other few tractor drivers and

24 that he was shot at when he caught up with that group. Is that correct?

25 A. I don't know about other drivers. I'm speaking here about Jetish

Page 2446

1 and my family. They took Jetish only to that bush. When they took

2 Jetish, these people in masks, they didn't exchange any words. They just

3 pointed the gun at him. I know that my father said something, and they

4 also took my father and they shot him as well.

5 MR. VISNJIC: [Interpretation] Your Honour, the question at

6 page 10, line 7, through to page 12, line 4, these questions are based on

7 paragraph 6 of the statement given by Jetish Xhafa to the OTP

8 investigators on the 26th of February, 2000, at page K0075428.

9 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, you say that - this was in paragraph 8 of your 89(F)

10 statement - you say you heard three shots when your father was being shot

11 at. In that paragraph, as regards the third shot, you said: "I heard

12 another shot, but I didn't see where it came from."

13 Could you clarify it for us, please?

14 A. Yes. When they took my father, we realised that he would be

15 killed as well. We heard a shot and then another. I turned my head

16 around because I didn't want to look. I heard a cry, and they both

17 remained killed there.

18 Q. Did you hear the third shot after that? Because this is the way I

19 read your statement, if I understand it correctly.

20 A. There were many shots. The police were shooting all the time.

21 There were other tractors around, where there were shots as well, from all

22 sides.

23 Q. So you are stating that there was general firing in your environs

24 and that the police fired on several occasions and many shots. Did I

25 understand your testimony correctly?

Page 2447

1 A. Yes. Because when we started to walk, we passed some corpses on

2 the road; that means that other people were killed as well.

3 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, it was quite dark at that time of day and you didn't

4 see -- well, how far ahead or behind you were you able to see, having in

5 mind the time of day?

6 A. It was a clear night. The moon was shining, and the tractors had

7 their lights on. So we could see very clearly.

8 Q. Very well. Your uncle, Muharrem, was he with you in the column

9 perhaps?

10 A. Yes, he was. But we met him on the way to Vushtrri.

11 Q. You met him later as well then?

12 A. Yes.

13 Q. Very well. In your statement you continue to describe how you

14 were ordered to set the tractors in motion and that only Lavdim knew how

15 to drive a tractor, how to operate it. Am I correct?

16 A. Yes. Ismet was there as well, but because he was hiding and we

17 didn't dare ask him, "Drive the tractor," for fear of being caught, we

18 didn't know what to do. A Serb came and asked him to start the tractor.

19 He just could drive it for a hundred metres, no more, and we stopped then

20 and we continued on foot.

21 Q. And then Ismet abandoned you, he left. Is that correct?

22 A. Yes. After the tractor stopped and we started to walk, we looked

23 around. There were no policemen. We got off the tractor. Ismet was with

24 us in the group, and we walked together until we joined another group.

25 And there was a time when the police left, so he took the chance and went

Page 2448

1 on the other side of the road and went towards Samodreza to meet the KLA,

2 and he met them after that one day or two, I'm not sure.

3 Q. And did you see Ismet again?

4 A. After the war ended, we met Ismet. I think it was on the 17th of

5 June. I went to see my brother and I met Ismet as well in Samodreza.

6 Q. Did the -- the KLA escort the convoy for a while? If they were

7 moving towards Dreza, they must have accompanied you at least part of the

8 way?

9 A. No, that's not true. When we joined the convoy from Sllakovc, the

10 KLA went in a different direction. We did not see the KLA or meet them

11 that day. There were only unarmed people, civilians, in the convoy.

12 Q. In what direction did the KLA go; do you know?

13 A. I don't know. It was in the opposite direction. Maybe towards

14 Llapi.

15 Q. Weren't the Serbian forces coming from the other direction? They

16 were advancing, and that was one of the reasons why you went towards

17 Vucitrn?

18 A. The opposite direction is towards Dumnica, and from there they

19 went towards the villages of Llapi. I don't know. While the Serbian

20 forces came from the direction of Sekovc --

21 THE INTERPRETER: Vesekovc, interpreter's correction.

22 MR. VISNJIC: [Interpretation]

23 Q. When you say "Dumnica," is it the location --

24 MR. VISNJIC: [Interpretation] I believe I will have to ask again

25 for 3D66 to be put in front of the witness so that she can indicate where

Page 2449

1 the location is.

2 Q. When you say "Dumnica," is it the place we see on the map to the

3 right-hand side of Samodreza?

4 A. Yes. Dumnica is somewhere here, upper Dumnica. I didn't ask or

5 know where they were staying.

6 Q. And you partially followed the road between Sllakovc to Samodreza,

7 and then you turned towards Gornja Sudimlja. Is that correct?

8 A. Yes.

9 Q. Very well. Thank you, Mrs. Xhafa. I wanted to ask you the

10 following. In paragraph 11 of your 89(F) statement, you state that while

11 in Vucitrn your uncle Muharrem went to see a Serb by the name of Biba who

12 was your neighbour, and he explained to him your situation, and then he

13 helped get Jetish's sons released. My question is, therefore, this man,

14 this Biba, was he a policeman?

15 A. Yes. He had a police uniform.

16 Q. So what did Muharrem explained to him, what situation, that your

17 father and probably your brother were killed that night. Is that what he

18 told him?

19 A. Yes, he told him the truth, everything that had happened to us

20 that night. I don't know how much he helped us, but that day our sons

21 were not taken to prison.

22 Q. And this was all on the 3rd of May, 1999, before noon. Is that

23 correct?

24 A. Yes, yes.

25 Q. And your uncle basically reported the murders of your brother and

Page 2450

1 your father, although at that time you didn't know that your brother --

2 whether your brother had survived. So your uncle reported your father's

3 and your brother's murders to the policemen. Is that correct?

4 A. Yes.

5 Q. Do you know whether the police took any steps after that?

6 A. No, nothing. I don't know.

7 Q. Thank you. I wanted to ask you this, Mrs. Xhafa, from the same

8 paragraph: In the territory of the Vucitrn municipality, were there some

9 people with tractors who stayed behind and didn't leave towards Albania?

10 Because in your statement you state that all those who had tractors went

11 to Albania. I'm asking you now: Do you know whether -- of anyone who had

12 a tractor and who remained instead of going to Albania?

13 A. How could I know? As far as I know, all the tractors were ordered

14 to go to Albania. The people left on foot, were asked to go to the Kicic

15 and Smrekonice.

16 Q. So you don't really know whether all those who had tractors were

17 ordered indeed to go to Albania?

18 A. Yes.

19 Q. While you were in the village of Dobra Luka, there you describe an

20 event in paragraph 15 of your statement, where you say that you saw the

21 Serb police go to one part of Dobra Luka. And then you said you heard

22 some shots and that you were around 200 metres away from that place. You

23 don't really know whether they took away those Albanian families,

24 including women and children. You didn't see that. Is that correct

25 A. No, I didn't see, but I could hear the shooting and we could see

Page 2451

1 them enter that neighbourhood on that day. The following day, we learned

2 that they had taken the children and women and the remaining men there in

3 the direction of the villages Stutarice [phoen], Okrashtica, and so on.

4 Q. Thank you, Mrs. Xhafa.

5 MR. VISNJIC: [Interpretation] This concludes my cross-examination,

6 Your Honours.

7 JUDGE BONOMY: Thank you, Mr. Visnjic.

8 Mr. Aleksic.

9 Mr. Aleksic: [Interpretation] No questions for the witness.

10 Thank you.

11 JUDGE BONOMY: Mr. Cepic.

12 MR. CEPIC: [Interpretation] Thank you, Your Honour.

13 By your leave, before I start posing questions, I wanted to

14 address the problem I discussed with Mr. Hannis. This refers to the

15 patterns on camouflage uniforms, and this refers to this and the next

16 witness. Unfortunately, none of us can make out what exactly is in the

17 pictures, in the photographs. I discussed this issue with my learned

18 friend Mr. Hannis, and I understand their situation. I just wanted to

19 point out this problem because it will have to do with both this witness

20 and the next witness, who is also going to be invited to recognise the

21 patterns.

22 JUDGE BONOMY: Well, as I see it, the Prosecution have failed to

23 give us copies of these uniforms that are capable of being identified, and

24 that therefore the evidence at the moment lacks any specification so far

25 as it relates to these pictures. So the only way you can deal with it, I

Page 2452

1 think, is to try to describe things to the witness and cross-examine on

2 the basis that these don't exist. And it may be that later will be too

3 late for the Prosecution to introduce them.

4 MR. CEPIC: [Interpretation] Thank you, Your Honour. I will have a

5 few short questions, by your leave, for Mrs. Xhafa. Thank you.

6 Cross-examination by Mr. Cepic:

7 Q. [Interpretation] Mrs. Xhafa, good morning. My name is Djuro

8 Cepic, attorney-at-law, and I appear here on behalf of General Vladimir

9 Lazarevic as a member of the Defence.

10 Today you stated that together with the police -- you've described

11 that the convoy was approached by the military as well, but as you stated

12 the military were somewhere in the middle or at the rear of the convoy,

13 whereas you yourself were at the front. Is that correct?

14 A. We were somewhere in the middle of the convoy, in the middle part,

15 while the military and -- moved along the convoy in their military

16 vehicles. Some were at the entrance of Studime i Ulet.

17 Q. Therefore, in the opposite direction?

18 A. I don't understand you. I don't understand your question.

19 Q. They were moving in the opposite direction of where you were

20 going?

21 A. Yes. They went up to the upper part and then came down with their

22 vehicles.

23 Q. Thank you.

24 MR. CEPIC: [Interpretation] No further questions. I apologise.

25 [In English] I do apologise, I will withdraw my intention that

Page 2453

1 I -- I've got some additional questions, please.

2 Q. [Interpretation] If I understood your statement well, when you

3 said they were at the rear of the column, they were not close to you.

4 Isn't that correct?

5 A. While we were resting there at the entrance of Studime i Ulet,

6 there was a tank, a military tank. And those who manned that tank made us

7 shout: Draza, Draza, Sloba, Sloba.

8 Q. You didn't mention that in your statement. In fact, you said

9 something quite the opposite.

10 A. I don't think I said the opposite. This is the truth, what I'm

11 telling you.

12 Q. In English, page 2, paragraph 5; in Albanian, paragraph 2, page 3,

13 you said: "Members of paramilitary units approached our tractors on

14 several occasions." Isn't that correct?

15 A. Yes. This was in the beginning.

16 Q. Thank you. And you couldn't clearly make out the insignia they

17 wore as -- on the members of, as you put it, the military. Isn't that

18 correct?

19 A. Who are you referring to?

20 Q. The previous soldiers you mentioned, not the paramilitaries. The

21 soldiers. You couldn't see -- make out their insignia when they moved in

22 the -- along in those vehicles. Isn't that correct?

23 A. No.

24 Q. Thank you.

25 MR. CEPIC: [Interpretation] No further questions.

Page 2454

1 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] We could see the tank, but not the

2 insignia, no. And we didn't dare look at that direction and see what kind

3 of insignia they had.

4 MR. CEPIC: [Interpretation] Thank you. Your Honour, I have no

5 further questions.

6 JUDGE BONOMY: Mrs. Xhafa, what's the significance of the chant:

7 Draza, Draza?

8 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] It was a Chetnik gang, a Serbian

9 Chetnik gang from the past, and they made us chant the name, his name.

10 JUDGE BONOMY: Mr. Petrovic.

11 MR. PETROVIC: [Interpretation] Thank you, Your Honour. No

12 questions.

13 JUDGE BONOMY: Mr. O'Sullivan.

14 MR. O'SULLIVAN: No questions.

15 JUDGE BONOMY: Thank you.

16 Mr. Lukic.

17 MR. LUKIC: Thank you, Your Honour.

18 Cross-examination by Mr. Lukic:

19 Q. [Interpretation] Good morning, Mrs. Xhafa. My name is Branko

20 Lukic. Together with Mr. Ivetic and Mr. Ogrizovic, I represent Mr. Lukic

21 as his Defence counsel. I will have a few questions related to your

22 statements tendered by the Prosecution in this case, and now I would like

23 you to answer as briefly as possible so that we are able to complete this

24 as soon as possible. And if the Judges or the Prosecutors think that you

25 need to provide any further explanation, they will, I'm sure, ask for

Page 2455

1 those explanations.

2 In paragraph 2 of your 89(F) statement of the 25th of August,

3 2006, you say that you were forced to leave your house because Serbs

4 started burning houses in your village. In your statement of 11th of

5 October, 2001, the English version that's page 2, paragraph 2; Albanian

6 version, again page 2, paragraph 2; and in Serbian it is page 2,

7 paragraph 3, you say: "We moved out of the village because some of our

8 neighbours, Serbs, from the same village moved out and went to the village

9 of Nedakovc. We thought that something would happen and we decided to

10 go."

11 Now, in relation to this part of your statement, let me ask the

12 you the following question. How many Serb households were there in your

13 village?

14 A. I don't know.

15 Q. Is it true that the Serb families moved out of your village before

16 you, yourself, left your village?

17 A. Yes, that's true. They left a day before we did. They went to

18 the village of Nedakovc. Our Albanian neighbours who were there, they

19 came with us, and they actually informed us that all the Serbs left the

20 village. We saw that the houses were set on fire in Sfracak e Eperm;

21 therefore, we decided to leave as well and set off in the direction of

22 Studime.

23 Q. So the houses were set on fire one day before you left the

24 village?

25 A. Actually, on that day while the Serbs left the village, a day

Page 2456

1 before us.

2 Q. So on the day when the Serbs left the village, which is one day

3 before you left the village, the houses were on fire?

4 A. The houses were set on fire on the day we left.

5 Q. When you moved out of your village, you headed towards the

6 villages that were much stronger strongholds of the KLA. Is that correct?

7 A. Well, we thought that there won't be Serbs in that zone and felt

8 it would be safer for us to go to Dumnice, while the KLA was in Sllakovc.

9 And from Dumnice then we went to Sllakovc.

10 Q. How did this arrangement come about for you to leave the village?

11 How was this agreement reached? Did anyone order you to leave?

12 A. No. We could see the danger coming towards us.

13 Q. Madam, Mrs. Xhafa, is it not correct that the departure from your

14 village was in fact organised by the KLA? In fact, they helped you pack?

15 A. No. No. We left ourselves. There was no KLA in our village, and

16 the KLA was very far from our village.

17 Q. Today you were asked whether the area in which your village was,

18 whether it was in fact controlled by the KLA. You also said that there

19 was no police in this area, just the locals, Serbs as you put it, who had

20 police uniforms. Those inhabitants of your village, did they have the

21 regular police uniforms or were their uniforms different from those of the

22 regular police?

23 A. They had police uniforms. And we could see them even earlier

24 dressed in these uniforms, in blue police uniforms.

25 Q. Do you remember what kind of weapons they had?

Page 2457

1 A. No, I don't remember that.

2 Q. If I were to tell you that the uniforms possibly worn by the

3 people in the villages, and those people in fact were members of the local

4 security, that those uniforms differed from the uniforms worn by the

5 regular police, would you allow that this was in fact possible?

6 A. I don't understand your question, I really don't.

7 Q. Fine. It's not a problem. I will repeat my question. If I were

8 to tell you -- if I were to claim --

9 JUDGE BONOMY: Yes.

10 MR. HANNIS: Your Honour, I guess I'm objecting for a lack of

11 foundation. I don't know that we've established with this witness what a

12 regular police uniform looks like to compare it to anything else.

13 JUDGE BONOMY: It's an unanswerable question as phrased at the

14 moment. I think the witness's statement was quite right. Now, I assume

15 that it was going to be clarified, so let's hear what the alternative

16 question is, Mr. Hannis.

17 MR. HANNIS: Oh, sorry. I thought you were asking me.

18 JUDGE BONOMY: No, no. Let's hear what Mr. Lukic's alternative

19 version is.

20 MR. LUKIC: [Interpretation]

21 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, it would be much easier if we had the pictures that

22 you used in the identification process to determine what uniforms in fact

23 you were able to identify. Unfortunately, we don't have this picture, and

24 as instructed by the Chamber we have to go about it this way. That is why

25 I have to apologise if I have to dwell on this for a little while longer,

Page 2458

1 but we will have to do that in order to determine some things that we

2 can't determine in any other way.

3 My question is as follows: Would you agree with my claim and

4 would you allow that it is possible that the uniforms worn by the people

5 in your village were, in fact, different from the uniforms worn by the

6 regular police?

7 MR. HANNIS: I have the same objection, Your Honour.

8 JUDGE BONOMY: It's the same question.

9 It's impossible to -- to know whether the witness can answer that

10 because we have no idea what her experience of regular police uniforms is.

11 So, as Mr. Hannis points out, we don't have a foundation for the question.

12 MR. HANNIS: Your Honour, I don't -- I don't know if it would be

13 of any assistance to counsel or not. We have Exhibit P2254 which has

14 photos of various military and police uniforms. Now, if Mr. Lukic has

15 seen that and any of those meet his definition of what a regular police

16 uniform is, maybe he would like to show it to her and inquire if she

17 recognises any of those.

18 JUDGE BONOMY: There's a helpful suggestion, Mr. Lukic.

19 MR. LUKIC: I haven't been using that evidence in preparation for

20 this witness, so I might try --

21 JUDGE BONOMY: Can I perhaps try to understand the significance of

22 the question. If you accept that there are police -- or there are Serbs

23 in the village who wear what she describes as police uniforms, what's the

24 issue?

25 MR. LUKIC: The issue is that it is not -- it's not the police

Page 2459

1 force, it's a local security.

2 JUDGE BONOMY: Yeah, but that's not going to be determined by her

3 knowledge of --

4 MR. LUKIC: That's what I tried --

5 JUDGE BONOMY: Her identification of uniforms.

6 MR. LUKIC: Maybe she knew. I don't know. I tried to -- maybe it

7 was a bit of fishing expedition, but --

8 JUDGE BONOMY: And you're saying that they are not under the

9 jurisdiction of the Ministry of the Interior?

10 MR. LUKIC: Yes, that's correct.

11 JUDGE BONOMY: Well, is that going to be -- is that particular

12 point going to be determined by looking at pictures of uniform?

13 MR. LUKIC: Maybe not.

14 JUDGE BONOMY: It doesn't seem to me it's going to advance our

15 knowledge of the matter, so it might be better if you proceed to something

16 else.

17 MR. LUKIC: I'll move on.

18 Q. [Interpretation] Mrs. Xhafa, the KLA strongholds were located in

19 Studime i Eperme and Ceceli, and your column was heading precisely in that

20 direction. Is that correct?

21 A. Yes.

22 Q. In paragraph 4 you describe the size of the column and you say

23 that there were around 50.000 people in it. When asked by my colleague

24 Visnjic, you say that you were sure that there were no KLA members in the

25 column. Did you know each and every one of the 50.000 people in the

Page 2460

1 column?

2 A. No, I didn't know them, but I'm sure that there were no KLA

3 soldiers in the convoy. The army left in the opposite direction, and the

4 convoy was void of KLA members. These were all civilians from Llap-Shala

5 area, some were from Vushtrri. It was a large number of people in that

6 convoy.

7 Q. Are you aware of the fact that KLA members often threw down their

8 weapons and removed their uniforms and joined the civilians?

9 A. No, I don't know.

10 Q. Are you aware of the fact that KLA members, while they were in

11 their villages, often moved about in civilian clothes?

12 A. No, I don't know. I didn't go out to investigate who was wearing

13 what kind of uniforms.

14 Q. This is precisely what my point is, Mrs. Xhafa. For you, only a

15 person in a uniform is a member of the KLA. Is that correct? Or let me

16 try and rephrase my question. If there were some KLA members in the

17 column wearing civilian clothes, would you be able to recognise that

18 person as a KLA member?

19 A. Of course I would because I would recognise the KLA uniform. But

20 as I said, there were no KLA members, soldiers, in uniforms in the convoy.

21 Q. Thank you. That would be enough.

22 I would now like to move on to paragraph 5 of your statement; our

23 Defence believes that it is one of the most contentious parts. And in

24 this respect I would like to ask you: My learned colleague Mr. Visnjic

25 discussed with you the issue of how many times your column -- or in fact,

Page 2461

1 your tractor was approached by members of various formations.

2 Mrs. Xhafa, to what extent are you in fact able to distinguish

3 among members of the military, police, paramilitaries, local security?

4 Because I would like to ask you a few questions about that. So my first

5 question to you is: Are you sure when you categorise a certain group of

6 people as belonging to a certain formation, are you sure about what

7 formation a certain group belongs to?

8 JUDGE BONOMY: Well, what do you have in mind, Mr. Lukic? You

9 need to give her a specific example, I think.

10 MR. LUKIC: Yes, I can go to specifics, but I try to elicit from

11 this witness whether she's really sure about what she is claiming in this

12 statement or not. And I will go to the specifics, yes. Or you want me to

13 start --

14 JUDGE BONOMY: Well, I think it's a pretty useless question to ask

15 her whether she's sure about whether people belong to certain formations.

16 MR. LUKIC: I can --

17 JUDGE BONOMY: Perhaps her degree of certainty is different

18 depending on the circumstances. We really need to look at the

19 circumstances.

20 MR. LUKIC: Okay. Thank you, Your Honour.

21 Q. [Interpretation] Mrs. Xhafa, as instructed by the Trial Chamber,

22 let me now ask you a specific question. In your previous statements, not

23 the 89(F) statement, the statement from the 26th of February, 2000, the

24 second group, the group consisting of four police officers, in English

25 version that would be the last paragraph in page 2; Albanian version,

Page 2462

1 page 2, second -- page 3, paragraph 2, you say about this group that they

2 were paramilitaries. In this statement you say: "At around 9.00 p.m.

3 four Serb police officers arrived. They were shooting in the air with

4 their machine-guns."

5 That is why I'm asking you --

6 MR. HANNIS: Just a point of clarification, Your Honour. I

7 believe she referred to this as the first group to approach them.

8 JUDGE BONOMY: Well, I -- now that we're jumping between

9 statements, of course it's difficult to follow.

10 MR. LUKIC: Let's try this the first group, actually. Yes, I'm

11 sorry. It's paragraph 5, Your Honour, of the 89(F) statement. It's

12 fourth sentence or fifth sentence in that paragraph. It says:

13 [Interpretation] "We were surrounded on all sides by Serb military.

14 Around 9.00 p.m. four policemen arrived. They were shooting in the air

15 with their machine-guns."

16 In the previous statement, the four men were described as four

17 paramilitaries. Now I would like to ask a question that would allow the

18 witness to explain why at one time she thought that these men had been

19 paramilitaries and at another time she thought these men had been police

20 officers. Whatever the explanation can be provided by the witness as to

21 what details made her --

22 Q. So, Mrs. Xhafa, what are the details that made you change your

23 statement and your mind so that now you think that these people are --

24 were in fact police, not the paramilitaries?

25 A. It's not clear to me to which group you are referring.

Page 2463

1 Q. The first group, the four men who approached your tractor. You

2 have it in paragraph 5 of your 89(F) statement, if you have it in front of

3 you.

4 A. Yes. Now can you repeat the question, please.

5 JUDGE BONOMY: Can I help you with it.

6 You have the statement in front of you, do you?

7 MR. HANNIS: It appears she has her 89(F) statement.

8 JUDGE BONOMY: Yeah. And if you look at paragraph 5 of that

9 statement --

10 THE WITNESS: Mm-hmm.

11 JUDGE BONOMY: -- you will see just around the middle of the

12 statement: "Around 9.00 p.m. four Serb policemen arrived."

13 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] Yes.

14 JUDGE BONOMY: Now, when you made a statement in February 2000 to

15 the Office of the Prosecution, you described these four people as four

16 paramilitaries. The question you're being asked is: Why are the two

17 statements different?

18 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] To me, "paramilitaries" are those

19 who wear police uniforms, black gloves, masks, and that's why I call

20 them "paramilitaries."

21 MR. LUKIC: [Interpretation]

22 Q. Can we conclude then that when you gave the first statement in

23 February 2000, that you recalled -- remembered these people as people

24 wearing police uniforms, black masks, and black gloves? And now, when you

25 gave this statement in August this year, you no longer remembered that

Page 2464

1 group in the same way; in other words, dressed in the same way. Can you

2 now explain to us how this difference between the two statements came

3 about?

4 A. I think I've already answered this question. In the beginning,

5 the group that I described with the gloves was described as

6 paramilitaries, and I told you already why I called them paramilitaries.

7 JUDGE BONOMY: You've drawn from the answer, Mr. Lukic, the exact

8 opposite impression from the one I've drawn. The witness is saying that

9 they are the same, and she's using two different words to describe the

10 same people.

11 MR. LUKIC: Your Honour, but then we have the next question --

12 JUDGE BONOMY: Indeed.

13 MR. LUKIC: -- the next sentence actually, the second one --

14 JUDGE BONOMY: Which one, sorry?

15 MR. LUKIC: [Interpretation] The third sentence -- fourth sentence,

16 actually.

17 Q. You say: "Members of the paramilitaries were shouting at the

18 tractor drivers to clear the road for their armoured vehicles to be able

19 to pass."

20 So all around you were the people that you describe as wearing

21 black gloves, masks, and they are in your vicinity and they are actually

22 shouting at the tractor drivers. Is that correct?

23 A. Well, these were walking beside the column and they were shouting

24 at the drivers of tractors and they were shooting in the air.

25 Q. You go on to say that they were cursing and insulting you in

Page 2465

1 Serbian. You don't speak Serbian, Mrs. Xhafa. Is that correct?

2 A. I understand it a little bit.

3 Q. Are you able to read Serbian?

4 A. A little, yes.

5 Q. Are you able to read Cyrillic?

6 A. A little bit.

7 Q. Well, it is impossible to be able to read something a little bit.

8 Either you know all the letters or you don't.

9 A. I know, yes. I might have even forgotten a letter or two in

10 Cyrillic, but I know.

11 Q. Thank you, Mrs. Xhafa. It is now time for our break, if the Trial

12 Chamber agrees with me that this is the right time to take a break.

13 JUDGE BONOMY: Yeah. Thank you, Mr. Lukic. Can you indicate how

14 long roughly you'll be?

15 MR. LUKIC: Your Honours, I have a few issues to clarify with this

16 witness, so I hope that I can finish in one hour. I'll try my best to cut

17 it short as much as possible, but ...

18 JUDGE BONOMY: Very well. Well, we'll resume at five minutes

19 to 11.00.

20 --- Recess taken at 10.33 a.m.

21 --- On resuming at 10.56 a.m.

22 JUDGE BONOMY: Mr. Lukic.

23 MR. LUKIC: [Interpretation] Thank you, Your Honour.

24 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, I will try to put concise questions to you. In any

25 case, I'll try to be more concise and precise than before the break, and I

Page 2466

1 would kindly ask for similar answers provided to you [as interpreted], so

2 that we can try to finish this as soon as possible, and I also realise

3 that the Trial Chamber was not all too pleased to hear that I would have

4 another hour of questions.

5 Today in the transcript, which is page 4, line 22, you mentioned

6 some paramilitaries shouting at tractor drivers to clear the road so that

7 they could pass with their vehicles. Did those vehicles pass indeed?

8 A. Yes, they did.

9 Q. In what direction did they go?

10 A. In the beginning they went in the direction of Vushtrri, and then

11 they came back from Vushtrri down. So they went up and down.

12 Q. What sort of vehicles were there?

13 A. I can't give you an exact answer here because I did not look very

14 closely to those vehicles, but they were military vehicles.

15 JUDGE BONOMY: Mr. Lukic, you posed that question on the basis

16 that she said a group of paramilitaries.

17 MR. LUKIC: Yes, Your Honour.

18 JUDGE BONOMY: Had told her that move. Now, the words that are on

19 the English transcript are "police." That's page 4 from this morning

20 you're talking about?

21 MR. LUKIC: That's right, Your Honour. But in her statement,

22 paragraph 5, it says: [Interpretation] "Members of paramilitary units

23 were shouting at tractor drivers to clear the road so that their armoured

24 vehicles could pass through."

25 JUDGE BONOMY: Yeah, but look at your question. Your question is:

Page 2467

1 Today in the transcript you mentioned some paramilitaries shouting at

2 tractor drivers ...

3 Now, that's not in the transcript.

4 MR. LUKIC: [Interpretation] Precisely so, Your Honour.

5 JUDGE BONOMY: And it takes us back to the problem we had just

6 before the break, on which perhaps some further clarification is required.

7 MR. LUKIC: Thank you, Your Honour.

8 JUDGE BONOMY: Mrs. Xhafa, you remember I pointed out to you that

9 in your two statements you described the four Serb persons who came

10 towards you as a -- differently. On one statement you described them as

11 police and in the other you described them as paramilitaries.

12 Now, what we would like to be clear about is: Have you changed

13 your description of these people? You previously called them

14 paramilitaries. In the statement you did recently for this case, you

15 called them police. Is that a different description? In other words, are

16 you thinking of different people from what you were thinking -- or from

17 the people you were thinking of when you made the original statement?

18 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] Yes. There were policemen in blue

19 uniforms. There were others with black gloves, and this group wearing

20 black gloves, this is the group that I called paramilitaries. And this

21 was my answer before as well.

22 JUDGE BONOMY: Now, the four people who you say: "Around 9.00

23 p.m. four," and you say now, "Serb policemen arrived." Now, what were

24 these four people wearing?

25 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] They had blue uniforms -- but there

Page 2468

1 were others along the road who had black gloves. There were many others.

2 JUDGE BONOMY: Well, let me read what the statement says a bit

3 further. It says: "Around 9.00 p.m. four Serb policemen arrived. They

4 were shooting in the air with their machine-guns. They were cursing and

5 shouting insults at us in Serbian."

6 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] Yes.

7 JUDGE BONOMY: Now, what were these four people wearing?

8 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] They had police uniforms.

9 JUDGE BONOMY: And they didn't have the masks or the black gloves?

10 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] No, others had the gloves. They

11 were circulating along.

12 JUDGE BONOMY: All right. Thank you.

13 Mr. Lukic.

14 MR. LUKIC: [Interpretation]

15 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, in the same statement, the next sentence

16 reads: "Members of paramilitaries shouted at tractor drivers to clear the

17 road so that their vehicles could move along."

18 That is why I asked you about those vehicles. Did you see who

19 operated those vehicles?

20 A. How could I know? I did not have a look who was driving those

21 vehicles.

22 Q. Therefore, you don't know whether those vehicles belonged to the

23 people who were shouting at you?

24 A. The people who were shouting were on foot, they were walking, and

25 these vehicles were other vehicles. I think they belonged to the army.

Page 2469

1 That's why we had to clear the road for them.

2 Q. I want to move on to paragraph 7 of your statement. In the second

3 sentence of the paragraph you state: "Two were wearing black Balaclava

4 masks with holes for the eyes and mouth. They had blue camouflage

5 uniforms."

6 Is this the description you provided for the members of

7 paramilitary units?

8 A. I think that the people in black masks were paramilitaries, yes.

9 I don't know what kind of police that would be.

10 Q. And those are the people who shot Jetish and your father. Isn't

11 that correct?

12 A. Yes.

13 Q. Thank you. At the moment when the masked people took Jetish away,

14 you mentioned there was some shooting at the same time close to or around

15 where you were. Did you know that at that moment there was fighting

16 between the KLA and the Serb forces?

17 A. No, that's not true. There was no fighting between the KLA and

18 the Serbian forces.

19 Q. When you were on the tractor - and we know it was around

20 10.30 p.m. - in what direction did these masked people take Jetish in

21 relation to where you were, in front of you, to your black, to your left,

22 to your right?

23 A. They killed Jetish in front of us [as interpreted]. They got him

24 off on the right side. It was right in front of our eyes that he was

25 killed. We were on the tractor trailer when it happened, and I could see

Page 2470

1 everything.

2 Q. Did you know that related to this incident there was a police

3 patrol who was sent out to carry out an on-site investigation relating to

4 the murders, but they were forced to return as they were attacked by the

5 KLA? And that was two days after the conflict in question.

6 MR. HANNIS: Your Honour, if there's a document relating to this

7 which the cross-examination is done, I haven't received it from the

8 Defence.

9 JUDGE BONOMY: How did you expect the witness to know the answer

10 to this question?

11 MR. LUKIC: If she knows; if she does not, she will tell me. And

12 we'll use a document in the future.

13 JUDGE BONOMY: Do you know anything of this, Ms. Xhafa?

14 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] No, I don't know anything about this

15 conflict with the KLA.

16 MR. LUKIC: [Interpretation]

17 Q. Did you know, Mrs. Xhafa, that two days after the fighting the KLA

18 again seized control of the very same territory?

19 A. No, I'm not aware of that. I know that on the 4th of May the

20 bodies were collected by the civilians, and they were buried in Studime.

21 Q. What civilians, Mrs. Xhafa?

22 A. People who remained there that night in Studime. There were

23 civilians. People from Sllakovc and other villages came and helped bury

24 the dead.

25 Q. Are you testifying now that not everyone left with the column of

Page 2471

1 refugees?

2 A. There were people there that night hiding in the mountains, and

3 those people helped bury the bodies. And also people from other villages

4 who had heard about the event, the incident, came to help as well. I

5 think there were about 115 people who were killed.

6 Q. Were those people from the neighbouring villages? Did they help

7 with the burial of those killed?

8 A. Yes, they buried them.

9 Q. Therefore --

10 JUDGE BONOMY: Sorry, just hold on, Mr. Lukic.

11 MR. O'SULLIVAN: Just going back to page 35 of the transcript,

12 line 10, the question ends: "Paramilitary units." Then I believe the

13 answer begins, but it's not indicated that that's part of the answer.

14 Page 35, line 10. "I think" I believe is the first part of the answer.

15 JUDGE BONOMY: Yes, I agree with that, Mr. O'Sullivan. Thank you.

16 Yes, Mr. Lukic.

17 MR. LUKIC: [Interpretation] Thank you, Your Honour.

18 Q. Mrs. Xhafa, to go back to the topic. Therefore, there were

19 resident civilians in the nearby villages who hadn't left with the column

20 of refugees that you've described for us, and those civilians helped bury

21 the killed people?

22 A. Yes. I told you earlier that there were people in hiding that

23 night, they were hiding in the mountains. There were people from

24 Studime i Eperme and -- who had returned to their own homes. And on the

25 4th of May they came back and helped bury the dead. Other people came

Page 2472

1 from Dumnica, Cecelija, I don't know where from. So they came to Studime

2 to help bury the dead.

3 Q. Was the area controlled by the Serbian forces when those civilians

4 came in?

5 A. I don't know. I wasn't there.

6 Q. I wanted to tell you who was with those civilians. The KLA was

7 there, and you yourself said they remained in that area, that they hadn't

8 left with the rest of you. Isn't it true that the KLA remained in the

9 area you left from?

10 A. No, that's not true. I already said that there were people who

11 were hiding, and days later the KLA helped them bury the dead. The

12 funeral service was on the 4th of May.

13 Q. That's precisely what I was asking, Mrs. Xhafa. You can see for

14 yourself that now we come to the point that indeed the KLA was present in

15 the region one or two days after the fighting. Isn't that so?

16 A. They came to bury the dead when they realised that there had been

17 people who had been killed in Studime.

18 Q. I will take this as an affirmative answer to my question whether

19 there was the KLA there. If I'm mistaken, please correct me, but I wanted

20 to move on.

21 A. The KLA came on the day of the burial. I don't know how else to

22 explain this to you.

23 Q. Thank you. At the moment of KLA entry, there were no Serbian

24 forces in their area. Isn't that correct? Or did you hear of any

25 fighting on the day of the funeral or the burial?

Page 2473

1 A. I didn't hear anything about any fighting.

2 Q. Therefore, at that moment and in that region there were no more

3 Serbian forces. Is that correct?

4 A. I don't know about this. I don't know how to respond to this

5 question. I'm not aware.

6 Q. I will rephrase, put it another way. Were there any Serbian

7 forces present at the time of burial?

8 A. They were not present at the cemetery. Maybe they were further

9 away, I don't know.

10 Q. It is my assertion that they were further away. In fact, so far

11 away that they no longer controlled the area on the day of the burial. Is

12 that correct?

13 A. I don't know.

14 Q. Thank you. In paragraph 9, you talk about sending Ismet to notify

15 KLA fighters who were in the mountains about what had happened. Is it

16 true that you knew where the KLA units were?

17 A. Ismet left that night. He stayed at a mountain called Gradina,

18 and I believe he thought he would meet the KLA soldiers there. I don't

19 know whether it was the next day or the day after that where -- when he

20 met some soldiers in Dumnica, and he joined them.

21 Q. Did he join their ranks after having met them?

22 A. Yes. He joined the soldiers the next day or the day after that.

23 Q. Thank you.

24 [Defence counsel confer]

25 MR. LUKIC: [Interpretation]

Page 2474

1 Q. Some of your family members were, therefore, members of the KLA.

2 Did they wear KLA uniforms all the time?

3 A. No member of my family was in the KLA. The only one was Ismet.

4 As I said, he withdrew. But on the 2nd of May, as I said, he went to the

5 KLA headquarters and he stayed with them until the war ended.

6 Q. Thank you, Mrs. Xhafa. I think we've clarified that sufficiently.

7 I wanted to ask you something about paragraph 13. There you speak

8 about a small blue cardboard box -- oh, actually, it's a -- it was a card.

9 You said you were required to register and your name was put on that, and

10 it used as a permit to be able to stay in one of the houses in Dobra Luka.

11 Did you know that, say, the Serbs who had come from Kosovo to Serbia had

12 to undergo the same procedure, that they were given the same blue card?

13 It is the regular procedure of reporting a place of residence. You are

14 familiar with that, aren't you?

15 A. No, I don't -- I didn't have any contact with Serbs to discuss

16 with them whether they had such cards or not.

17 Q. Thank you. In the same paragraph you also state that: "Later in

18 the hospital yard one of the policemen whom I recognised as Deputy

19 Commander Simic ordered us to go back to our houses and not to assist the

20 KLA in any way."

21 For example, including providing food supplies. Did you return to

22 your houses after that?

23 A. Yes, we returned to our homes where we were.

24 Q. Was it an order or did the man simply tell you: You may go to

25 your houses now?

Page 2475

1 A. It was an order. We were told to go home, not to help the KLA.

2 If they would see any KLA member in Dobra Luka, then everybody would be

3 killed.

4 Q. Is it correct that the police in fact carried out investigations

5 and interrogations to try and establish who was a member of the KLA? It

6 wasn't killing anyone they thought was a member of the KLA. Didn't you

7 say yourself that they took people to the prison in Smrekovnica and then

8 after, those same people were released after questioning. Is it correct

9 that the police carried out investigations and interrogations relating to

10 possible membership in the KLA?

11 A. Not everybody was a member of the KLA. All the people who were

12 imprisoned were civilians and they kept them there. Some of them were

13 sent to Albania, while others, their bodies have been returned from Serbia

14 very recently.

15 Q. Is it your testimony today that some of the people who were taken

16 to Smrekovnica were killed?

17 A. I'm talking about my family.

18 Q. Was any of your family killed in the prison in Smrekovnica?

19 A. No. Other people. I've heard that some bodies have been returned

20 from Serbia recently.

21 Q. You never mentioned this before. It is not found in any of your

22 statements. You are now stating that someone was killed among the people

23 who had been taken to Smrekovnica.

24 A. Nobody knew what was happening with the people who were sent to

25 the prison in Smrekovnica. I only learned about my family members, and

Page 2476

1 this I learned very late, that they were sent to Albania. But members of

2 the families of people who had been in Smrekovnica have told me that their

3 bodies were returned from Serbia later.

4 Q. Will you tell us a name so that we can try and verify what you're

5 stating. Who told you and for which family member who was in the prison

6 in Smrekovnica that they were killed?

7 A. Dritan Merovci, his body was returned recently. It was found in

8 Serbia. I can't remember any other names now. But there were many other

9 people, the bodies of whom were returned recently.

10 Q. Do you know how the man you mentioned was killed?

11 A. I don't know.

12 Q. Do you know whether he was killed in the Smrekovnica prison?

13 A. I don't know where he was killed. I know that he was taken to

14 that prison, but his body was returned from Serbia one -- a year earlier,

15 a year ago.

16 Q. Do you know whether he had been released from the Smrekovnica

17 prison or is it something you don't know?

18 A. I don't know. He came from Serbia as a dead body.

19 Q. You say in paragraph 15 of your statement: "One morning in May

20 1999, around 8.00 a.m., I was at a house where we were staying when I saw

21 the Serb police go to one quarter of Dobra Luka. These police were

22 wearing green camouflage uniforms but they were too far away from me for

23 me to make out any insignia on their uniforms."

24 Well, what's led you to conclude that the men in green camouflage

25 uniforms were police?

Page 2477

1 A. I don't know how I would otherwise have described them. They were

2 quite a ways away, and I couldn't really distinguish them well. I don't

3 really know whether they were police or army.

4 Q. Thank you, Mrs. Xhafa. In paragraph 16 you say: "I later

5 heard" - so you don't have any direct of that. This is something that you

6 heard about - "from some people ... from Donja Sudimlja, "from Jashar

7 Rashica and Emine Rashica that they had been made to stand in front of

8 Serb tanks on the front line and that the police separated ten people from

9 the group."

10 Did the Serb police have tanks, Mrs. Xhafa, do you know about

11 that?

12 A. These people Jashar Rashica and Emine Rashica were in that

13 neighbourhood. And when Emine returned, they -- she was shot at --

14 JUDGE BONOMY: Mrs. Xhafa, the question is a very specific one.

15 Do you know whether the Serb police - the question is confined to police -

16 did have tanks as part of their normal equipment? That's the question

17 that's being asked. And if you don't know the answer to that, just say

18 you don't know.

19 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] I don't know. I just wanted to

20 explain something that had happened.

21 JUDGE BONOMY: No, we already have the account of what happened in

22 writing, it's just certain particular points that need to be clarified.

23 Mr. Lukic.

24 MR. LUKIC: [Interpretation]

25 Q. Let me just ask you this: Would you agree with my suggestion that

Page 2478

1 the Serb police did not have any tanks and that no police officers are in

2 fact able to drive a tank? So would you agree with if I were to put that

3 to you, would you agree that this was a very probable statement?

4 A. I know that there were police on foot who drove the people out of

5 their homes, but there were other people who were driving tanks and they

6 lined them up in front of the tanks.

7 MR. LUKIC: [Interpretation] Thank you, Your Honour.

8 Q. And thank you, Mrs. Xhafa.

9 MR. LUKIC: [Interpretation] I've tried to cut -- make this as

10 short as possible, so I don't have any further questions for this witness.

11 JUDGE BONOMY: Thank you.

12 Mr. Hannis.

13 MR. HANNIS: Thank you, Your Honour. I do have some questions.

14 Re-examination by Mr. Hannis:

15 Q. Ms. Xhafa, first of all, I want one more time to try to go through

16 the chronology of the men who approached your tractor and your family on

17 the 2nd of May.

18 In your statement in paragraph 5, you were talking about

19 9.00 p.m., there were four Serbs who approached. What uniforms were they

20 wearing?

21 A. They had blue camouflaged uniforms.

22 Q. And did any of these four have the black mask or the gloves that

23 you spoke of before?

24 A. The four near the tractor, no; but there were others a ways away

25 who had black masks and gloves.

Page 2479

1 Q. Okay. Then what you referred to in your statement at paragraph 6

2 is the second group who approached, and this included the fat man with the

3 stick who beat Jetish. You describe in your statement that they were

4 wearing the blue camouflage uniforms. Did any of this group have the

5 gloves or the mask?

6 A. No. The person who beat Jetish had a green camouflage jacket.

7 Q. In your statement you describe that as a vest. The translation

8 now came across as a jacket. Did it have sleeves or not, the green piece

9 of clothing?

10 A. No, without -- without sleeves.

11 Q. Then you describe around 10.30 the group of six police who came,

12 two of which you say in your statement had black mask. Did those two with

13 the black mask also have gloves or not, if you recall?

14 A. I don't know. I did see the black masks on their faces, though.

15 Q. Now, after Jetish was shot and your father was killed, you mention

16 in paragraph 9 that after a while, this is after Ismet has gone to look

17 for the KLA, you say: "After a while, the Serbs returned."

18 What were these Serbs -- can you tell us how they were dressed and

19 how many they were? These are the ones telling you to shout KLA and Slobo

20 and Draza.

21 A. Those who forced us to shout were those sitting on the tanks.

22 And the ones who told us to leave for Vushtrri had blue uniforms.

23 Q. Blue uniforms, was it a solid colour or a pattern?

24 A. They were camouflage, with a pattern.

25 Q. Now, with regard to Draza, I think you answered a question of

Page 2480

1 Judge Bonomy's about who that referred to. And at page 20, line 5 I think

2 your answer was: "A Chetnik gang from the past."

3 Can you tell us anything more about -- about that? When from the

4 past or who that individual was, or that gang was, if you know?

5 A. I know that the old people referred to them as an evil group who

6 had killed Albanians a long time ago.

7 Q. Do you know how long ago? Are we talking about 30 years? 100

8 years? 1.000 years?

9 A. No. I would think about 70, 60 or 70 years ago, but I can't

10 really tell you exactly when it was.

11 Q. Okay. Thank you. Now, paragraph 9, after this last group came

12 you said you left the tractor and started to walk down the road. And I

13 think it was on page 13, line 1 of today's transcript Mr. Visnjic was

14 asking you some questions about that. In your answer you said: As you

15 started to walk you passed some corpses on the road, and that meant to you

16 that other people were killed as well. How many corpses did you pass as

17 you walked along the road? Was it two or 20 or 200?

18 A. It would be about seven or eight bodies. But there were people

19 who were wounded, lying around but we were afraid to go and help them.

20 The cousin of -- my cousin Emin Xhafa was also killed on the tractor, and

21 we couldn't go to him to do anything for him.

22 Q. These corpses and the wounded you saw, who were they? Were they

23 fighting men in uniforms? Were they women? Were they children?

24 A. They were civilians, women, children. We saw a very old woman

25 there who was lying dead in the road there. Veliu, my cousin, was killed.

Page 2481

1 He was with the women on the tractor.

2 A. There was a young man who was wounded, and he -- he begged us for

3 help. We didn't dare to go to him to assist him.

4 MR. LUKIC: I'm sorry, Your Honour.

5 JUDGE BONOMY: Yes, Mr. Lukic.

6 MR. LUKIC: I think this can't be proper re-direct. And

7 everything was drawn from we left our tractors and left our trip on foot.

8 MR. HANNIS: This is also drawn from the answer --

9 MR. LUKIC: This is the first time we hear about these things,

10 this new names. It has never been mentioned before. I beg Your Honours

11 to rule on this issue, please.

12 JUDGE BONOMY: The matter arose in the cross-examination by

13 Mr. Visnjic, and what Mr. Hannis is doing is exploring something that was

14 raised in cross-examination.

15 MR. LUKIC: But I'm afraid that it went too far already.

16 JUDGE BONOMY: In what respect?

17 MR. LUKIC: That this is for the first time in this re-direct that

18 we hear some names and actually to go into this incident in depth.

19 JUDGE BONOMY: Well, the question was simply: These corpses, who

20 were they? Were they fighting men in uniforms? Were they women? Were

21 they children? And now you've got the answer.

22 MR. LUKIC: I think that I'll get some help from my colleague

23 Visnjic, if you can listen to him.

24 JUDGE BONOMY: It may be -- if you can later, when you've heard

25 the rest of this re-direct, indicate some way in which you are prejudiced

Page 2482

1 not to be given another chance to ask questions, then you can bring that

2 to my attention.

3 Mr. Visnjic.

4 MR. VISNJIC: I'm waiting for translation.

5 [Interpretation] Your Honours, perhaps Mr. Hannis could give us a

6 reference as to where exactly in my cross-examination this exchange

7 occurred.

8 JUDGE BONOMY: Well, I have it noted. It's towards the end of the

9 cross-examination.

10 You gave us a page, though, didn't you, Mr. Hannis?

11 MR. HANNIS: [Microphone not activated].

12 THE INTERPRETER: Microphone, please.

13 MR. HANNIS: I think I have it the bottom of page 12 and the

14 beginning of page 13.

15 JUDGE BONOMY: Page 13, line 1?

16 MR. HANNIS: Yeah, that may not be the very beginning, but that's

17 the time I noted in my handwritten notes.

18 JUDGE BONOMY: It is line 1. Anyway, you may have exhausted the

19 subject. Have you, Mr. Hannis?

20 MR. HANNIS: I have, Your Honour.

21 JUDGE BONOMY: Yeah. All right.

22 MR. HANNIS: I'll move on, if I may.

23 JUDGE BONOMY: Yes, please.

24 MR. HANNIS:

25 Q. Ms. Xhafa, you were asked by -- also by Mr. Visnjic about

Page 2483

1 paragraph 15 of your statement, and I think this was at page 17, line 1 of

2 the transcript, about when you say you saw police shooting in Dobra Luka

3 and some people were taken away that day. And the following day you said

4 you learned that the people had been taken away. How did you learn about

5 that? When did you learn it? Who told you about it?

6 A. The next day the son of the cousin of Veli Xhafa went there, and

7 he asked Emine Rashica, she was his aunt, and he had explained what -- she

8 had explained to him what had happened that day.

9 Q. Thank you. Now I want to move on to Mr. Lukic's

10 cross-examination. At page 35, line 1 there was some questions about the

11 paramilitaries directing tractors off the road so the vehicles could pass

12 by. I think you described those as green vehicles, and in your statement

13 you say they had branches on them or foliage. Could you tell us anything

14 about what kinds of vehicles those were? Are we talking about

15 automobiles? Bicycles? Trucks? Anything you can tell the Court about

16 those green vehicles.

17 A. It was some kind of military vehicle with -- I can't describe

18 exactly the wheels, but I think it was an armoured vehicle, an APC.

19 Q. Was there just one or more than one?

20 A. There may have been many, but I did not pay attention. We were

21 distressed. It was impossible for us to look at everything and follow

22 everything that was happening.

23 Q. Thank you. In paragraph 7 of your statement, and I think in the

24 transcript at page 36, line 1, it's translated you -- in your answer that

25 when Jetish was killed. Jetish actually survived the shooting, didn't he?

Page 2484

1 A. Yes, he's still alive today.

2 Q. Now I want to go forward to page 40 in line 19 in following in the

3 transcript and page 13 of your 89(F) statement. This is after you have

4 gone to Smrekovnica and gotten your blue card to register in the new

5 residence where you're staying. You mentioned Deputy Commander Simic came

6 out and told you all to go back. I think your answer was you were ordered

7 to go home. When you say "home" in that context, that was not your

8 original home where your family lived before March of 1999?

9 A. No. I meant the house where we were staying in Dobra Luka.

10 Q. And what kind of uniform was Simic wearing that day, if you

11 recall?

12 A. Yes. He had blue camouflage uniform.

13 Q. Finally I want to ask you about at page 42, line 1 in following in

14 the transcript today, you were asked about the men who had been taken to

15 Smrekovnica prison. You said a return of those bodies -- of bodies of

16 some of those men had occurred about a year ago. Were there any media

17 reports about that event at the time these bodies were returned in Kosovo?

18 A. There may have been. I did not read any. I don't know.

19 Q. Thank you.

20 MR. HANNIS: I have no further questions, Your Honour.

21 JUDGE BONOMY: Thank you, Mr. Hannis.

22 [Trial Chamber confers]

23 Questioned by the Court:

24 JUDGE CHOWHAN: Ms. Xhafa, I have to ask you know or two

25 questions. Please allow me to do so. I hope you will not be bothered.

Page 2485

1 When we say "Ms. Xhafa," does it mean you are a Shiite?

2 A. I am Muslim, yes.

3 JUDGE CHOWHAN: But are you a Shiite or a Sunni?

4 A. I don't know that, no.

5 JUDGE CHOWHAN: Okay. Do you observe a ritual during the month of

6 Muharrem which is very special with the Shiites or you don't? It's a

7 month of mourning.

8 A. Yes.

9 JUDGE CHOWHAN: Oh, okay. That is why one of the family members

10 is called as Muharrem?

11 A. Perhaps. I don't know.

12 JUDGE CHOWHAN: Okay. Now my question is, after this

13 clarification, that Jetish was Ismet's son. And Ismet was -- was a person

14 about whom it was being believed that he was a KLA -- he belonged to the

15 KLA or he had some concern with KLA. He was present at the time when

16 Jetish was fired at. Now, I just want to ask you why did they spare Ismet

17 at that time and they attacked Jetish, who was not -- who was not

18 suspected to be of the KLA? Why was he spared at that time?

19 A. Jetish is Ismet's father. I explained it earlier. And I

20 explained earlier also how we tried to hide Jetish on the tractor and the

21 third group of policemen then came and shot at Jetish.

22 JUDGE CHOWHAN: No, but at that time Ismet was available and

23 visible. Why would they spare Ismet and attack his son?

24 A. The first time they attacked Ismet as well. They beat him up and

25 they took money from him, 200 marks.

Page 2486

1 JUDGE CHOWHAN: So it was because of the money that they spared

2 him?

3 A. So later we decided to hide him, Ismet I mean, who's Jetish's son.

4 JUDGE CHOWHAN: I'm very grateful. This clarifies. One more

5 point, whereas you had answered the question of my Lord Bonomy explaining

6 what Draza meant. Could you also tell us what Slobo meant in the slogan?

7 Slobo, Slobo, Draza, Draza. What would Slobo mean, because I have not

8 been able to catch that?

9 A. Well, Slobo is Slobodan. They cheered for him. Slobo, Slobo, his

10 name.

11 JUDGE CHOWHAN: Slobo, Slobo is just a word --

12 A. Slobodan Milosevic.

13 JUDGE CHOWHAN: It's just for the interpreters that at page 6

14 and 7 when there is "Muhala," it would be "Mohalla," M-o-h-a-l-l-a.

15 Thank you.

16 [Trial Chamber confers]

17 JUDGE NOSWORTHY: Now, Mrs. Xhafa, you have explained to the Trial

18 Chamber that Ismet was not a member of the KLA, that he had been with the

19 KLA and then left and that he ended up going to the KLA and staying with

20 them until the war ended. Now, if he was not a member of the KLA, why did

21 he stay with them until the war ended? That's what I want to know from

22 you.

23 A. On the night of the 2nd of May, he went back to the headquarters

24 where he felt safer. There is the place where he felt safe, at the KLA

25 headquarters.

Page 2487

1 JUDGE NOSWORTHY: Thank you. And there's --

2 [Microphone not activated].

3 THE INTERPRETER: Microphone, please, Your Honour.

4 JUDGE NOSWORTHY: There's something else I wanted to find out from

5 you. How would you describe the relationship between the people in your

6 village and the KLA? How was the KLA viewed? What was the response of

7 the people in the village to them?

8 A. The villagers thought well of the KLA. They thought that the KLA

9 were protecting them.

10 JUDGE NOSWORTHY: Anything else?

11 A. I don't think I could add anything to this.

12 JUDGE NOSWORTHY: Thank you very much, Mrs. Xhafa.

13 No further questions.

14 JUDGE BONOMY: Thank you, Ms. Xhafa. Then that completes your

15 evidence. Thank you for coming to the Tribunal to give it, and you're now

16 free to leave. Thank you.

17 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] Thank you.

18 [The witness withdrew]

19 [Trial Chamber confers]

20 JUDGE BONOMY: Now, is this -- Mr. Marcussen, you're making your

21 first appearance, are you, in the trial?

22 MR. MARCUSSEN: Yes, Your Honour, I am. Thank you.

23 JUDGE BONOMY: And who is the next witness?

24 MR. MARCUSSEN: The Prosecution's next witness is Dr. Shukri

25 Gerxhaliu, and he should be here.

Page 2488

1 JUDGE BONOMY: We have an e-mail suggesting complex issues in

2 relation to how this evidence is being presented, but it may not be as

3 complex as the e-mail makes it out.

4 You have a transcript from a previous trial. Is that right?

5 MR. MARCUSSEN: That's correct. That is Prosecution

6 Exhibit P2258.

7 JUDGE BONOMY: And you say that that has reference within it to

8 one exhibit?

9 MR. MARCUSSEN: It has reference to Exhibit P2273.

10 JUDGE BONOMY: And what is that?

11 MR. MARCUSSEN: That is a map. It is the map which has on the

12 existing exhibit list P000038.

13 JUDGE BONOMY: We don't work in 0s here.

14 MR. MARCUSSEN: Then only P38. That is Milosevic Exhibit P123,

15 123. It's a map that was marked by the witness at page -- I believe it's

16 page 4131 and the two following pages in the Milosevic transcript and was

17 made an exhibit there. It was included also in our 92 bis package that

18 was submitted and --

19 JUDGE BONOMY: Is it P38, as marked?

20 MR. MARCUSSEN: As marked, yes.

21 JUDGE BONOMY: And that's now in the system?

22 MR. MARCUSSEN: It is now in the system.

23 JUDGE BONOMY: So we don't need to know any more about it?

24 MR. MARCUSSEN: No.

25 JUDGE BONOMY: Now, there is -- in the trial -- in the Milosevic

Page 2489

1 trial, did Mr. Gerxhaliu give evidence through a statement?

2 MR. MARCUSSEN: Yes, he was a 92 bis witness in that case, and the

3 statement dated 17 and 19 February 2000 is Exhibit P2257 in this case.

4 JUDGE BONOMY: Okay. I think I have everything, so let's have the

5 witness, please.

6 MR. MARCUSSEN: Thank you. While we wait for the witness -- no.

7 [The witness entered court]

8 JUDGE BONOMY: Dr. Gerxhaliu, good afternoon.

9 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] Good afternoon.

10 JUDGE BONOMY: Would you please make the solemn declaration by

11 reading aloud the document which will now be placed before you.

12 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] Yes.

13 I solemnly declare that I will speak the truth, the whole truth,

14 and nothing but the truth.

15 JUDGE BONOMY: Thank you. Please be seated.

16 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] Thank you.

17 JUDGE BONOMY: Mr. Marcussen.

18 WITNESS: SHUKRI GERXHALIU

19 [Witness answered through interpreter]

20 Examination by Mr. Marcussen:

21 Q. Good afternoon, Dr. Gerxhaliu.

22 A. Good afternoon.

23 Q. Could you please state your full name to the Trial Chamber.

24 A. My name is Shukri, surname is Gerxhaliu.

25 Q. Mr. Gerxhaliu, as you have been explained before entering the

Page 2490

1 court today, the Trial Chamber has the witness statement that you have

2 given to the Office of the Prosecutor and has the transcript of your

3 testimony in the Milosevic case on the 2nd of May in the year 2000. So

4 the Trial Chamber and the Defence is familiar with the contents of your

5 evidence already. So today we will be focussing on some limited points in

6 your evidence, but I just wanted to make clear on the record that

7 everybody are familiar with the details you have already provided.

8 Before we get into the evidence, I have to ask you a question

9 about the Albanian version of your witness statement given to the Office

10 of the Prosecutor. When you were proofed by the Office of the Prosecutor,

11 was it discovered that some parts from the Albanian translation of your

12 witness statement were missing?

13 A. Yes.

14 Q. And were you shown a translation of those missing parts?

15 A. Yes, I was shown those parts. And after I saw them, those

16 paragraphs were inserted and I signed those paragraphs. I don't know who

17 made the mistake, because those paragraphs that were missing made the

18 statement incomplete.

19 MR. MARCUSSEN: Could I ask that we show P2276, please, to the

20 witness.

21 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] Yes.

22 MR. MARCUSSEN:

23 Q. We are waiting for -- there we are. Has a document been displayed

24 now on the screen in front of you?

25 A. Yes, I can see it. Paragraph 25 in the Albanian, I think it's

Page 2491

1 also in English.

2 Q. Is it your signature down at the bottom?

3 A. Yes, it's my signature, 24th of August, 2006, in Den Haag.

4 Q. Thank you. And is that the document that was shown to you during

5 the meeting with the Prosecutor?

6 A. Yes, this is the one.

7 Q. And before you signed it, did you read through these three

8 paragraphs?

9 A. Of course I read them. Carefully.

10 Q. Thank you. And do they correctly reflect your recollection of the

11 events described?

12 A. Of course they are, yes.

13 MR. MARCUSSEN: Your Honours, I would like to tender this as an

14 exhibit, and I guess we will call it a supplement to the Albanian

15 translation of Dr. Gerxhaliu's statement to the Office of the Prosecutor.

16 JUDGE BONOMY: I can't say I followed exactly what this is so far.

17 You were looking at three paragraphs, and these are the missing paragraphs

18 from the previous statement. Is that right?

19 MR. MARCUSSEN: That's correct. The English version of the

20 statement and the --

21 JUDGE BONOMY: And it already has these?

22 MR. MARCUSSEN: That's correct.

23 JUDGE BONOMY: And the Serb version also has them?

24 MR. MARCUSSEN: Correct.

25 JUDGE BONOMY: All right.

Page 2492

1 MR. MARCUSSEN: So we're missing this from the Albanian version.

2 JUDGE BONOMY: That's fine. We note that that is tendered as an

3 exhibit.

4 MR. MARCUSSEN: Now, for the purpose of the presentation of

5 Dr. Gerxhaliu's evidence, we have also prepared a new version of his

6 statement which we would suggest that we tender for the purpose of the

7 rest of his examination before the Trial Chamber, and I will explain what

8 is in that statement now.

9 The English version we have simply added paragraph numbers to each

10 paragraph because in the original statement there were no paragraph

11 numbers. So as to avoid confusion when we take the witness through

12 different parts of the statement, we have added paragraph numbers.

13 Corresponding -- same thing has been done with the B/C/S version. We have

14 added paragraph numbers to the B/C/S version of the statement, but

15 otherwise it's the same one as was already in evidence.

16 To the Albanian version, in order to make the paragraph numbers

17 correspond, we have had to add paragraph numbers, insert a paragraph

18 break, and then we have inserted the missing parts of the statement in the

19 Albanian -- in an Albanian version of the statement so that once the

20 witness is taken through different parts of the statement, we have

21 corresponding statements.

22 Now, we have informed the Defence of this on Friday and asked if

23 they had any problems with this approach, and we haven't received any

24 negative feedback on that suggestion. So I hope the Defence is -- would

25 be agreeable to this approach.

Page 2493

1 So we would suggest that we make these numbered versions of the

2 statement P2275 and that we then proceed on the basis of that exhibit

3 today.

4 JUDGE BONOMY: Very well.

5 MR. MARCUSSEN: Thank you, Your Honours.

6 Could I ask that we show Exhibit P38 on the monitor, please.

7 Thank you.

8 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu, do you have a map in front of you now?

9 A. Yes, I see it.

10 MR. MARCUSSEN: May I ask the usher to assist Dr. Gerxhaliu with a

11 pen so he can mark this map.

12 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu, in which village -- where do you live?

13 A. I live in the village of Studime e Poshteme. It is close to

14 Vushtrri.

15 I find it difficult to see the places here, the names of the

16 places, because the characters are very small.

17 Q. Yes. And as I would like you to mark the full map, I'm afraid

18 I'll refrain from zooming in. We have a technical problem if we do that.

19 A. It would have been better if you could zoom it in because I can't

20 see it very well. It must be somewhere here, though, Studime e Poshteme,

21 here.

22 Q. Thank you. Now, what I'd like, Mr. Gerxhaliu -- Dr. Gerxhaliu,

23 what I'd like to ask you with respect to this map is you have described in

24 your statement that the KLA was holding about -- controlling about 80

25 per cent of your municipality in March 1999. I was wondering if you could

Page 2494

1 on this map draw a rough line showing where the KLA -- the KLA-held areas.

2 It doesn't have to be precise, but just to give us an idea about where the

3 KLA was.

4 A. This is the road Mitrovica-Vushtrri-Pristina, if I'm not mistaken,

5 the main road, while in the north-eastern part above Studime, this part

6 here, was under the control of the KLA at the time, this region. The KLA

7 was positioned here --

8 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu, could I ask you just to do -- to draw us a circle

9 or whatever shape it is just to indicate the area you just was showing I

10 could see with a pen in front of the screen that the KLA was holding. If

11 you could draw it on the screen, please.

12 A. I'm not sure whether this is Studime e Poshteme that I've marked,

13 first of all. If it is, then it's this part here above

14 Studime e Poshteme. This part that I marked was under the control of the

15 KLA, while Studime e Poshteme, Begaj, Redakovc [phoen] were closer to the

16 main road and under the control of the Yugoslav army and police forces,

17 while this part here --

18 Q. Sorry --

19 A. I don't know if I made myself clear.

20 Q. The only thing we need to clarify is the area that the KLA held --

21 the part that was north of the line that you drew?

22 A. This was called the Shala operative zone, and so they were in the

23 area of Cicavica. The Brigade 141 was there, while Brigade 142 was down

24 there in Cicavica. While here in the area of Llap, that was the Llap

25 operative area --

Page 2495

1 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu, I'm sorry to interrupt you --

2 A. That was close to the Shala area.

3 Q. Unfortunately the Court cannot see what point you are pointing at.

4 So is it correct if I say that the KLA was -- on the map they were above

5 the line that you just drew?

6 A. Listen, up to this line it was the Serb forces up to Saracak and

7 Studime, while the KLA was above that line in the mountains. The military

8 hospital was in Sllakovc. I cannot find Sllakovc here because of the

9 small characters on the map.

10 Q. [Previous translation continues] ...

11 A. So the forces were partly here and partly on the upper part.

12 Because I cannot see the names of the places very well, even though I'm

13 wearing my glasses.

14 Q. I understand --

15 JUDGE BONOMY: Well, as you'll see, Mr. Marcussen, this is

16 hopeless.

17 It's fairly common with these maps -- it was far better when we

18 had the old-fashioned ELMO and the witness could point things out and we

19 could all see what he was pointing at, and he wasn't committed to actually

20 drawing something on that might be wrong and couldn't be corrected. And

21 it may be that we should be thinking about having copies of these exhibits

22 produced so they can be used on the ELMO in a form everyone can see.

23 Anyway, you can think about how you're doing this because we're

24 going to adjourn now for half an hour and we'll resume at five to 1.00.

25 MR. MARCUSSEN: Thank you, Your Honour.

Page 2496

1 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] Would you please ...

2 --- Recess taken at 12.24 p.m.

3 --- On resuming at 12.57 p.m.

4 JUDGE BONOMY: Mr. Marcussen.

5 MR. MARCUSSEN: Thank you, Your Honour. The e-court thing we

6 tried with the map I think we will abandon, so we can give up on the

7 exhibit that we started to draw in the e-court. I had a look at the -- at

8 the screen while the witness was out, and I have to say the map is

9 absolutely minuscule. And I should apologise to the witness. It's really

10 not his fault that he couldn't see what's on the map that I was trying to

11 present to him.

12 What I would like to do is to put another map on the ELMO. Now,

13 the map comes from the bundle of maps that was handed out during the

14 opening. It's not an exhibit, but we will make it one when the witness is

15 done with it.

16 So if we could now have on the -- I guess we should have it on the

17 ELMO. And if we can -- I had folded the card so that if we zoom in on

18 what's there when it's folded, then we would have the view we would like

19 to have, please. And if we can zoom out a little bit. And we'll need a

20 little bit -- we'll need a little bit more out. We should have --

21 basically we should see the whole -- yes, this is good. Yes, please.

22 Good.

23 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu, now do you see this map a bit better? You can --

24 A. Yes, of course it's better. And now I can identify the locations.

25 It's easier for me.

Page 2497

1 Q. Thank you. Now, could I ask you to take the pen and mark -- I

2 think that has to be over on your left side on the actual card that's

3 lying next to you.

4 A. This one?

5 Q. Sorry, the usher is giving it to you. Could you mark where your

6 village is, please.

7 A. Shall I make a circle around it?

8 Q. Yes, please. And could you put a number 1 close to that circle, a

9 small number. Thank you.

10 A. Is it okay like this?

11 Q. That's fine. Thank you very much. Now, I asked you to identify

12 roughly the front line in March 1999, where the KLA front line was. Could

13 you try to draw that on that map, please. Just encircle the area roughly

14 held by the KLA on this map.

15 A. This part here was under KLA's control, and the part here where

16 Vushtrri is up to the point between the two Studimes was on the other

17 side.

18 Q. Could I ask you on the line that you just drew, at the end of the

19 line to mark -- put an N like November. Yes, there would be good. Yes,

20 please.

21 A. [Marks].

22 Q. Now, to the -- on the other side of the main road that runs up to

23 Mitrovica and on the other side of the railroad, yes, over in that

24 direction, yeah, was there a KLA-held area in that direction as well? And

25 where was the line, if you can draw that? Again, just approximately.

Page 2498

1 A. In this area --

2 THE INTERPRETER: If the witness could speak into the microphone,

3 please.

4 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] If this represents the railroad --

5 MR. MARCUSSEN:

6 Q. Yes.

7 A. -- then ...

8 Q. Thank you. And could I ask you to put an S like September, or

9 Sierra, at the end of that line. Yes, please.

10 A. Also Gllavatin and Bivolak were under control, in this part

11 Q. So to the south of the line that you have marked with a letter S

12 and to the north of the line that you have marked with a letter N were

13 KLA-held areas in your area. Is that correct?

14 A. [Indicates].

15 Q. Yes. Thank you.

16 JUDGE BONOMY: Did we get an answer to that?

17 MR. MARCUSSEN: Maybe I was just taking the gestures as an answer,

18 I'm sorry.

19 JUDGE BONOMY: Won't do.

20 MR. MARCUSSEN:

21 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu --

22 A. Yes, yes. So from the line above, it was an area controlled by

23 the KLA, and from the S down it was also an area controlled by KLA. On

24 the upper part, it was the 141 Brigade, and on the other side it was the

25 142 Brigade, and both of them operated within the Shala operation zone.

Page 2499

1 Q. Thank you very much.

2 A. Am I clear? If necessary, I can repeat it.

3 JUDGE BONOMY: No, no, that's clear. What we now need to do is

4 give a number to this exhibit.

5 MR. MARCUSSEN: I would -- sure. I will be asking the witness to

6 make some more markings on it. We can give it an exhibit number.

7 JUDGE BONOMY: No, no, we'll wait until you've finished the

8 exercise.

9 MR. MARCUSSEN: Thank you.

10 JUDGE BONOMY: You can tell us when you've completed that.

11 MR. MARCUSSEN:

12 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu, you mentioned in your statement at paragraph 6 that

13 there were an offensive launched on the 28th and 29th of March close to

14 where you live, and the offensive was launched from a place called Rasica

15 and Saracak. Could you mark those two areas on the map, please. If we

16 take --

17 A. Saracak.

18 Q. Saracak, we can take that one first. Can you put a number 2 where

19 that is.

20 A. Yes, I'll do it now. Studime e Poshteme, it's here. It consists

21 of the upper Muhala that we call it Rasica, and the lower Muhala where my

22 cousins live, Gerxhaliu. So here in the upper Muhala is the place where

23 the Rasica families live. So there were the Serb forces position with all

24 their equipment. It was a strategic hill, and they controlled this area

25 up to Samadrexha.

Page 2500

1 Q. Could I ask you to put, so we stay consistent -- Dr. Gerxhaliu,

2 would you please put a number --

3 A. So the Serb forces were in upper Saracak and in Studime at the

4 Rasica Muhala which is part of Studime. Shall I mark it be a number or a

5 letter?

6 Q. Would you put a number 3 there, please. 3, yes.

7 A. Number 3?

8 Q. Because I think we identified Saracak as being number 2, if you

9 would mark a 2 where that area is, please.

10 JUDGE CHOWHAN: And would the interpreter please put -- write the

11 correct spelling for Mohalla, M-o-h-a-l-l-a, please. That's the

12 universally accepted spelling for Mohalla, which means an area or a

13 vicinity.

14 MR. MARCUSSEN:

15 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu, so these two -- you've already said it, but just so

16 I'm clear, where these two areas hills from where the Serb forces could

17 control the surrounding area. Is that how I should understand your

18 statement?

19 A. Yes. Also the neutral zone above here up to a point between two

20 Studimes, so on a hill called Lisi i Thate. It also included the villages

21 along the highway here. Am I clear?

22 Q. Yes, thank you very much. You described in paragraph 7 of your

23 statement that you -- after you had left your house initially in early

24 April you returned to your house and Serb forces came -- the Serb police

25 came to look for you, and you saw Mr. Bunjaku's house burned. And then

Page 2501

1 the next morning you decided to flee. Now, I'll ask first -- I'd like

2 first to ask you: Why did you flee?

3 A. Well, it's quite understandable why, because we were scared that

4 in case they found us in our houses we would witness a horror like the

5 family of my cousin Seladin witnessed. This I've mentioned in my

6 statement. The order was for us to leave immediately because in case they

7 found us there we were going to face disastrous circumstances.

8 Q. You say the order were to leave. Did you decide to leave or did

9 somebody else tell you to leave?

10 A. I will try to speak slower. The moment when the order came, only

11 my wife and cousins were in my house. The house of my father is about

12 half kilometre far from my house. I was not at home, but when I came they

13 told me what had happened. They told me that the order came for us to

14 leave in 15 minutes, to leave the village in 15 minutes, because otherwise

15 we would face consequences. So we know very well what happened to those

16 who didn't leave.

17 Q. Who issued that order? Who did -- who had the order come from?

18 A. The order was issued by the local police in Vushtrri. They came

19 in a vehicle, I think, a car, and they told us to leave the village

20 immediately, to go wherever we wanted. And this is in line with my

21 statement. I think it is in the first paragraph where I say that an old

22 lady, a Serb, she told me at the clinic to leave as soon as possible. And

23 that's why we took this decision and left out of fear of the consequences

24 because, as I said, those who escaped, who fled, they survived and the

25 others, you know what happened to them. You have photographs and other

Page 2502

1 evidence.

2 JUDGE BONOMY: Mr. Marcussen, can you direct me to where the

3 reference to being ordered to leave within 15 minutes is set out in the

4 statement.

5 MR. MARCUSSEN: I believe it's not in the statement, and I think

6 the witness is talking about the incident in March, on the 26th of March,

7 and around there when he was dismissed -- but I will try to clarify that.

8 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu, the order that you just mentioned, was that in

9 March when you had been dismissed from your job at the hospital. Is that

10 correct?

11 A. Yes. But as I said, I wasn't home when the order was given, and I

12 have mentioned it in my statement. I've mentioned that I was not there

13 when they came to issue the order, but that I was informed later on by my

14 family members.

15 JUDGE BONOMY: These -- but these answers he's just given were --

16 related to a specific date in April. Paragraph 7 of the statement, after

17 you had left your house initially in early April you returned to your

18 house and Serb forces came to look for you. And you saw Mr. Bunjaku's

19 house burned. And the next morning you started -- you decided to flee.

20 MR. MARCUSSEN: As I understand it, the family -- I think I should

21 clarify this with the witness. I shouldn't be testifying.

22 JUDGE BONOMY: Yeah.

23 MR. MARCUSSEN:

24 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu, after the order was issued and you left, did you

25 return to your house again?

Page 2503

1 A. Yes, there was a lot of movement, both by my family members and

2 myself. I've mentioned this in my statement. On several occasions I went

3 back to my house. It happened that I didn't see my family for two or

4 three weeks, and I've said in my statement that they set off in the

5 direction of Pristina, hoping that they could get to Macedonia. But the

6 Serb forces, they sent the column back. Then they stayed in Maxhun. When

7 I got back to the house I found them there. For a couple of days they

8 stayed there. And it is worth mentioning that whenever I was not there

9 someone from the Serb forces would come to look for me. And I've

10 mentioned Sanije in my statement, and she told me that the police was

11 looking for me. So that day --

12 JUDGE BONOMY: Dr. Gerxhaliu, you mentioned a house belonging to

13 Izet Bunjaku being burnt. Just ignore the map, please. Just look towards

14 me, please. No, look this way, please. Just forget about the map. You

15 mentioned seeing a house in the village belonging to Izet Bunjaku burnt,

16 and you said something about leaving at that time because you got an order

17 to leave within 15 minutes. Now, are these two events related to each

18 other?

19 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] Yes, they are related to each other

20 because the order was issued in the end of March; I think it was 29th of

21 March. And on that evening the house of Izet Bunjaku was burnt, and

22 that's where we fled for the first time. But then in April I came back to

23 my house and I continued to come back on several occasions. I was told

24 that -- that the director of the hospital had said that we had to leave,

25 as they had received an order from above, from higher ranks.

Page 2504

1 JUDGE BONOMY: Well, I am utterly confused by all of this. It

2 makes me wonder why we have these when you then start these examinations

3 of the witnesses which cause nothing but confusion.

4 MR. MARCUSSEN:

5 Q. Mr. Gerxhaliu, you say at --

6 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] Shall I explain it again?

7 MR. MARCUSSEN:

8 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu --

9 JUDGE BONOMY: No thank you for the moment. You'll be asked some

10 more questions.

11 MR. MARCUSSEN:

12 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu, when you had returned to your house in April of

13 1999 and you were with your wife and children, you say at paragraph 7 of

14 the statement that the Serb police came to your house, you were hiding in

15 some bushes, and then you fled the house with your family through the

16 stream. Now, I'd like to just ask a few questions about that.

17 A. Yes, this was a second time we fled.

18 Q. Yes, exactly. Now, the second time you fled, what I'd like to get

19 you to explain is a little bit about the stream that you were using to

20 flee. Now, my first question -- first thing I need to do is to try to

21 identify where the stream is compared to the road that leads up north.

22 Now, if you stand on the road in your village and you look north towards

23 Studime e Eperme, is the stream on your left or on your right?

24 A. The stream is on my right, and the road is near the stream. The

25 stream is about 2 to 3 metres deep, and this was a road to escape because

Page 2505

1 the Serb forces could not see us, neither from the Saracak hill, neither

2 from the other hill. They had to come very close to the stream to see us.

3 So from the two locations where they were positioned, they could see us if

4 we were on the road but not when we were on the stream.

5 Q. Now, you explained that as you were fleeing on that occasion, at

6 one point you and your family was being shot at and bullets were going

7 through the leaves in the trees around you and that you were very scared.

8 Do you know where those shots came from?

9 A. The Rasica hill was closer to the stream, and from the Serb

10 positions there were shooting in the direction of the stream, of course

11 when they suspected that there was a movement there. And when there was

12 shooting, the branches would fall on our heads. As soon as the shooting

13 would stop, then we would continue our journey until we arrived to

14 Lisi i Thate hill where we felt safe.

15 Q. Thank you. Now, I'd like to jump again a little bit in your

16 evidence and in your statement. You explained that after -- you explained

17 that after you had fled you were attending to sick and wounded at KLA

18 hospitals at Bajgora, Bare, and Kovacica. Could you show us on the map -

19 if the usher would assist us - just point to where those locations are.

20 A. Yes, I will point out the locations. On this one or on the one on

21 the ELMO?

22 Q. The one on the ELMO, please.

23 A. The main hospital was here in Sllakovc. There was another

24 hospital in Kovacice. I think it's not on the map. Bajgora and Bare

25 should be here because the road from Kovacica to these two locations

Page 2506

1 should go like this.

2 Q. So somewhere up just under the text?

3 A. Yes, yes. It should be here, Bajgora and Bare, and here you can

4 see clearly Kovacica where a KLA hospital was. It still exists today,

5 this building, because it was not damaged, the building in Sllakovc.

6 Q. Thank you.

7 A. Shall I mark it?

8 Q. No, I don't think that's needed. You have explained that it's

9 around the text which says February 2000 and UNHCR on the map that we will

10 tender as an exhibit, so I don't think we need the precise locations.

11 Now, you -- on the 2nd of May you say in paragraph 11 of your

12 statement that Serb forces broke through the two -- the front line at two

13 points, Melenica and Llap. Now, Melenica, could you please show on the

14 map where that is. And again, it's over on the ELMO, not on the screen.

15 A. Here is Melenica. This is the road that comes from Mitrovica.

16 This is Trepcani, Melenica. There was a front line here, it is

17 mountainous terrain. Here you have Majden, and towards the Llap zone,

18 near Podujeve. After these two front lines were broken through, on the

19 2nd of May, the Serb forces advanced up to a point before Sllakovc. I

20 have mentioned in my statement that around 2.00 p.m. a wounded soldier

21 died and we buried him --

22 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu, I'm sorry to interrupt you. We will get to that in

23 a little bit, but we need to take it in smaller steps so we can all -- so

24 the Court can follow. I'm sorry that I interrupt you.

25 So the front line to the -- to the western side was running

Page 2507

1 around -- following basically the road that we can see on the map running

2 from Mitrovica and up north. And did I understand it correctly that the

3 eastern front line was following more or less the blue line that is going

4 up north and being the municipality line, where Llap is a little in from

5 there? Is that correct?

6 A. [Indicates].

7 Q. The witness is indicating that line --

8 A. Yes, that's correct.

9 Q. Thank you very much.

10 A. Excuse me. I'm not a military expert and I haven't been on the

11 front lines, but I just wanted to explain that those of the Llap zone were

12 on this side, while those of the Shala operational zone were there. So

13 when these two forces came here, these two units of the Yugoslav army

14 entered, joined together. And on the 2nd of April, they came to Sllakovc,

15 so this point here.

16 Q. As the Serb forces has broken through the front line, you have

17 explained in your statement that the civilians decided to flee, and I will

18 ask you in a little bit to indicate the route that they followed. But

19 I -- I'd like to ask you a question which relates to the KLA first. Now,

20 first, did the armed -- did the KLA members remain with the civilians or

21 did they separate from the civilians?

22 MR. IVETIC: Your Honour, before he answers that question, I have

23 an objection to the questions being asked as it misrepresents the

24 statement itself. He says that the civilians decided to flee, but the

25 statement I have clearly says the order came for the KLA to move. So are

Page 2508

1 we talking about the same event? I mean -- I'm having difficulty

2 following this, and if that's how he's presenting this particular event at

3 paragraph 11, I think he's misrepresenting the statement.

4 MR. MARCUSSEN: I'm referring to --

5 JUDGE BONOMY: Mr. Marcussen.

6 MR. MARCUSSEN: I'll rephrase the question. I would refer to what

7 the witness said at transcript page 1403 and 14 -- 4104 in the Milosevic

8 case. There the witness explains where the KLA fighters went.

9 MR. IVETIC: Could I get those page numbers.

10 MR. MARCUSSEN: 4103 and 4104. And that's Prosecution Exhibit

11 2258. There the witness says that the KLA fighters went to the east, to

12 the Dumnica area.

13 JUDGE BONOMY: The objection, though, is not to -- you seeking to

14 get that information, it's the preface to the question suggesting that the

15 civilians left voluntarily, when in fact the statement says they were

16 ordered to leave by the KLA.

17 MR. MARCUSSEN: I'm sorry, yeah, I didn't mean to try to represent

18 it. Let's ask the witness about who took the decision.

19 Q. So as -- Dr. Gerxhaliu, we'll get back to the map in a bit, but

20 who decided that the civilians should leave?

21 A. After the front lines of these two zones were broken through, the

22 KLA informed us and told us that they could no longer resist those forces

23 and protect us. So they issued an order for us to leave.

24 For me personally, they said I should join the wounded ones, but

25 my family wanted to be with me together at all times, so I continued with

Page 2509

1 my family and went to Ceceli, to Sllakovc. I can see Ceceli here. It

2 should be here between the villages of Sllakovc and Studime e Eperme. No,

3 here. Here is Ceceli and here is Studime e Eperme. So Sllakovc, Ceceli,

4 and we set off in the direction of Studime e Eperme. And with the

5 intention to continue to Studime e Poshteme and then to Vushtrri and

6 further on.

7 The KLA then withdrew from Zagore area in the direction of

8 Dumnice. We were a lot of inhabitants in that area, about 40.000.

9 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu, thank you very much. I'll stop you. I'm sorry I'm

10 stopping you once again. I would like to -- in your statement you

11 explained how the convoy of civilian moves along and goes very slowly and

12 at one point the convoy has to stop. Now, if you can, could I ask you to

13 mark on the map that you're looking at where approximately the front end

14 of the convoy was when it stopped.

15 MR. MARCUSSEN: And maybe the usher could help us zoom in a little

16 bit on the area that's in the middle of the card now -- yes, that will be

17 good. Thank you.

18 Q. If you could take the pen and put a number 4 at the location where

19 the front end on the convoy was.

20 A. I will mark it with a line here. Here is Studime e Poshteme, and

21 here is Studime e Eperme. As I mentioned Sllakovc, Ceceli,

22 Studime e Poshteme, it moved, but when we arrived at Studime e Poshteme

23 and up to the entrance of Studime e Eperme, here approximately, behind

24 that hill that I mentioned where the Serb forces were, at Rashica, and up

25 to this point here above Studime e Eperme. This was the convoy, the line

Page 2510

1 of the convoy. With what number shall I mark it?

2 Q. Well, let's put an A at the lower part of the line and a B at the

3 top point of the line.

4 A. [Marks].

5 Q. So A -- yes, there please. Yeah. And B --

6 A. So A and B.

7 Q. Now, how long would you estimate the convoy was at that point?

8 How long is the distance from A to B?

9 A. It should have been something between 10 to 12 kilometres, I'm not

10 sure, approximately.

11 Q. And you explain in your statement that you were asked to go to the

12 front of the line and that the convoy couldn't advance because as it

13 advanced it came out to an unprotected position and it was being shot at.

14 And then you returned to your -- to the tractor where your wife and

15 children and other family members were. Is it possible for you to mark

16 approximately where your tractor were in the convoy? And I would like you

17 to put a C at that point, like Charlie.

18 A. It was somewhere in the middle, more to the rear part. It should

19 be here, it should be here, my tractor. So it was closer to

20 Studime e Eperme than to Studime e Poshteme.

21 Q. Thank you. Now, I'd now like -- sorry. I would now like to ask

22 you some questions about the events that happened when you had returned to

23 your -- to your family at the tractor. You --

24 A. When I was at the tractor, I mentioned it in my statement, a

25 person came --

Page 2511

1 JUDGE BONOMY: Mr. Gerxhaliu --

2 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] -- and he said to me --

3 JUDGE BONOMY: Wait until the question is asked, please. You're

4 going to be asked some specific questions. It's not just a repetition of

5 the statement. We have your statement in front of us, but some particular

6 questions are being asked. So please listen to the question and answer

7 each question that is asked of you.

8 Mr. Marcussen.

9 THE WITNESS: [Interpretation] I apologise.

10 MR. MARCUSSEN: Thank you, Your Honour.

11 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu, I understand that there were different -- you

12 described them as Serb military and paramilitary coming to the area around

13 where your family were -- was, and I'll ask you some questions

14 specifically about them.

15 Now, you explained that first some armed paramilitaries or

16 military came to your wife and threatened to rape her if she didn't pay

17 them money. Now, we have the description of all that and the Judges are

18 aware of what your evidence is. What I'd like to focus on is the -- the

19 men you saw when -- that spoke to your wife. Now, you have also in your

20 statement described the uniforms of the different units that came. But

21 what I'd like to ask you particularly about is the units -- whether you

22 could see the persons threatening your wife. Could you see them when you

23 were hiding?

24 A. Yes, I could see them with my own eyes --

25 Q. Do you remember what --

Page 2512

1 A. -- and I could hear them.

2 Q. Thank you. Do you remember what uniforms they were wearing?

3 A. I've described it in my statement. It was camouflage uniform,

4 some with blue patterns and some with green patterns. Some of them wore

5 masks and had painted faces.

6 Q. And they -- all those three -- the description of those three, the

7 men in blue, the men in green, and the men with masks, they were all there

8 at the same time. Is that correct?

9 A. Yes, because they had a good level of coordination and

10 cooperation.

11 Q. Now, in -- when they came down to your tractor, what direction did

12 they come from? Did you see that?

13 A. From behind us, because those in front at Rasica hill, they came

14 later on.

15 Q. So --

16 A. These that you're asking me about came from behind us.

17 Q. So they came from the area where the KLA had been and where the

18 Serb forces had now penetrated the line. Is that correct?

19 A. Yes.

20 Q. Now --

21 A. Yes, from that part. And they came to my tractor three or four

22 times. I've mentioned it in my statement.

23 Q. And was that the same group that kept on being in the area and

24 coming back to the tractor, or was there one group that left and then

25 another group came?

Page 2513

1 A. A group would come and ask for money and leave then. And then

2 another group, and then another group, until we had no money to give them.

3 And when there was no money, they would line up the people and execute the

4 men, usually in the presence of their wives and children.

5 Q. So I think you already touched upon it. So eventually, if I

6 understand correctly, this group as it started to kill men, you jumped off

7 the tractor and hit close to the tractor you had been travelling in. And

8 then you were hiding and you heard the Serb forces being in the area, and

9 eventually about a quarter to midnight, in paragraph 24 of your statement,

10 the convoy started to move again. And then you just mentioned that --

11 then another group of -- you say Serb police came in some vehicles. Now,

12 what direction did they come from?

13 A. They came from the direction of Vushtrri -- rather, from those

14 forces that were at Rasica hill from the direction of Studime. So these

15 forces had penetrated in order to control the terrain, and this is what I

16 overheard from the -- from my hiding place.

17 Q. So now we had -- these forces, as far as you could determine, came

18 from the area that had prevented you from advancing -- prevented the

19 convoy from advancing in the afternoon?

20 A. Yes.

21 Q. And that is the area that was held by the Serb forces. Is that

22 correct?

23 A. Yes, from that direction they came upwards.

24 Q. Now, you describe in your statement that you saw Zastava 101 and

25 APCs coming up the road. Now, you also described that they had search

Page 2514

1 lights on and were looking at -- examining the area. Could you see what

2 colour those vehicles had?

3 A. Well, it was a clear night. There was moonlight. These were

4 vehicles 101 make of the police, and I distinguished them on basis of what

5 I've seen during the day while I was hiding in the stream, near the

6 stream. Of course you cannot distinguish the colours in the evening, but

7 this was their colour. They were of that colour.

8 Q. Do you remember whether it was -- how the weather was that night?

9 A. It was warm. It was a late spring that year, so there were not so

10 many trees. The mountain was kind of bare.

11 Q. Did -- do you remember whether there was any light from the moon

12 that night?

13 A. Yes, I said there was moonlight. It was full moon, but of course

14 you cannot distinguish colours at moonlight.

15 Q. Thank you, Dr. Gerxhaliu. I think I will have to jump from this

16 part of your evidence and take quite a leap forward in time and ask you a

17 few questions about the incident that you have described in your statement

18 on the 31st of May.

19 Now, I'll have to ask you if you could please make a final marking

20 on the map. You explain in your statement that at 4.00 in the morning

21 NATO bombed the old Serb barracks. Can you show us on the map where that

22 is, please.

23 A. The barracks was here in the direction of Mitrovica, where the

24 petrol station is. The road here is marked with red, isn't it, so --

25 Q. Yes.

Page 2515

1 A. -- it should be here. The barracks should be here. Shall I mark

2 it with a --

3 Q. With a 4 I think we have come to now, please.

4 A. So here is 4.

5 Q. Yeah.

6 A. So this is the approximate location where the old military

7 barracks of the Serbian army were, and I heard that there was ammunition

8 in the barracks.

9 Q. Thank you, Dr. Gerxhaliu.

10 MR. MARCUSSEN: I think we have finished with the map and I would

11 like to tender that as an in-court exhibit at this point in time.

12 JUDGE BONOMY: Can we have a number for it, please.

13 THE REGISTRAR: Your Honours, that will be Exhibit IC22.

14 MR. IVETIC: Your Honours, will the Defence be allowed a copy of

15 that map, because obviously it was something we were not produced

16 previously [sic].

17 JUDGE BONOMY: Certainly it will be given to you.

18 MR. MARCUSSEN: It will be entered into the e-court system, I

19 believe, and be made available.

20 THE REGISTRAR: Yes, Your Honours, it will be uploaded on to the

21 e-court system in due course.

22 MR. MARCUSSEN: Now, Your Honours, I only have a few questions

23 left. I don't know whether we should continue. I see that we are

24 approaching the end of the day today.

25 [Trial Chamber confers]

Page 2516

1 JUDGE BONOMY: Well, do your best to finish, Mr. Marcussen, this

2 afternoon.

3 MR. MARCUSSEN: Thank you, Your Honour. I think we can be quick.

4 Q. Dr. Gerxhaliu, you explain in your statement how Seladin

5 Gerxhaliu's family was killed, along with your uncle --

6 A. Yes.

7 MR. MARCUSSEN: I'm not going to take the witness to the

8 statement. I'm just going to have a question about paragraph 31 in the

9 statement.

10 Q. But I'll tell you, Witness, what I need from there. You have

11 explained how in your statement 12 members of the family got killed. You

12 saw the bodies, they were buried. As we don't have much time, the -- what

13 I'd like to focus on is a statement in paragraph 31 that somebody

14 suggested that the police should be alerted to this incident. Now, what

15 did the -- did that happen? Was the police alerted?

16 A. Yes.

17 Q. And what did the police do? Did they respond?

18 A. I just want to add one sentence here. I haven't mentioned the

19 name of the person who went to report this to the police. This is

20 Sheribane, the wife of a cousin of mine. She often went to the town to do

21 shopping, so she went -- we all agreed for her to go and report this to

22 the police in Vushtrri because there were crimes happening on a daily

23 basis. And they, the police, were blaming others like NATO and so on.

24 My cousin Meda [phoen] then said: Let's send Sheribane to report

25 this to the police, and that's what Sheribane did. Sheribane should be

Page 2517

1 one name, not divided, not "Sheri Ban," but just as one name.

2 Q. Thank you, Dr. Gerxhaliu. So am I understanding you correctly

3 that this was reported to the police as an example because there had been

4 no follow-up before? Is that what you're saying?

5 JUDGE BONOMY: That's not what he said, so what you've asked can

6 be no more than leading him.

7 It looks as though we are -- the clock's against you. It's

8 impossible to get short answers, I'm afraid, the way this is being

9 explored. So we will have to adjourn until tomorrow because there is

10 another case to follow us and we don't have the luxury of being able to

11 extend the time we use to complete evidence this way. It's necessary for

12 you to control the presentation better if you want to finish by certain

13 deadlines.

14 MR. MARCUSSEN: We'll do our utmost, Your Honour.

15 One point for clarification. Are we sitting tomorrow or on

16 Wednesday?

17 JUDGE BONOMY: I understand that this court is not available to us

18 tomorrow because of an appeal hearing. If you've got other information,

19 please alert me to it.

20 MR. MARCUSSEN: No, I haven't. I was just -- thank you. No.

21 Thank you, Your Honours.

22 JUDGE BONOMY: Now, Mr. Gerxhaliu, we have to interrupt here

23 because another case sits here in the afternoon and we have to adjourn

24 until the next available time for us, and that will not be until

25 Wednesday. So you have to come back here ready -- you have to come back

Page 2518

1 here ready to commence your -- re-commence your evidence at 2.15, 2.15 on

2 Wednesday.

3 Now, meanwhile, as you probably are well aware but I have to

4 repeat it to you, it's very important that you have no discussion with

5 anyone about your evidence. That's either the evidence you've given or

6 the evidence you may yet give in the case. You can talk about anything

7 else with anybody you want, but what you mustn't do is discuss the

8 evidence with anyone at all.

9 So we'll adjourn now and resume on Wednesday at 2.15.

10 --- Whereupon the hearing adjourned at 1.51 p.m.,

11 to be reconvened on Wednesday, the 30th day of

12 August, 2006, at 2.15 p.m.

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25