Czech apology over Nato’s 1999 Yugoslavia bombing
Belgrade: Czech President Milos Zeman apologised on Tuesday for Nato’s bombing of former Yugoslavia in 1999, which his country took part in while he was prime minister.
The three-month bombardment was designed to halt Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic’s deadly crackdown on separatist ethnic Albanians in Kosovo, a southern province that later declared independence.
The US-led campaign in effect ended a conflict that had begun in 1998 and had killed more than 13,000 people, the final chapter of Yugoslavia’s bloody collapse. Zeman, who served as prime minister between 1998 and 2002 before taking over as president in 2013, said his country was "the last" within Nato to consent to the campaign.
"I would like to use this opportunity to apologise for the bombing of former Yugoslavia," Zeman said during an official visit to Prague by Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic.
The 76-year-old Zeman, who has faced protests at home for his closeness to Russia, added that his country "desperately" sought partners within the alliance to object to the campaign, but ultimately failed.
"It was lack of courage," he said. "With this plea of forgiveness, I resolved my long-standing trauma, because remorse is liberating.
"I said this and saved my soul." Vucic said Serbians "will always be grateful" to Zeman. "The words he just spoke of the bombing have never been said before," Vucic said. The 11-week campaign was the alliance’s first intervention against a sovereign state in its 50-year history.
The campaign is hailed in Kosovo as crucial in ending the war, with Westerners -- especially Americans -- enjoying unwavering popularity. The capital Pristina even boasts a statue of Bill Clinton, who was president at the time, on a boulevard named after him.
-
Meghan Markle Showcases Princess Lilibet Face On Valentine’s Day -
Harry Styles Opens Up About Isolation After One Direction Split -
Shamed Andrew Was ‘face To Face’ With Epstein Files, Mocked For Lying -
Kanye West Projected To Explode Music Charts With 'Bully' After He Apologized Over Antisemitism -
Leighton Meester Reflects On How Valentine’s Day Feels Like Now -
Sarah Ferguson ‘won’t Let Go Without A Fight’ After Royal Exile -
Adam Sandler Makes Brutal Confession: 'I Do Not Love Comedy First' -
'Harry Potter' Star Rupert Grint Shares Where He Stands Politically -
Drama Outside Nancy Guthrie's Home Unfolds Described As 'circus' -
Marco Rubio Sends Message Of Unity To Europe -
Savannah's Interview With Epstein Victim, Who Sued UK's Andrew, Surfaces Amid Guthrie Abduction -
Piers Morgan Supports Bad Bunny As US Lawmakers Seek Action -
Jennifer Love Hewitt Reminisces About Workign With Betty White -
Hilarie Burton Reveals Valentine's Day Plans With Jeffrey Dean Morgan -
Cardi B Compares Her Fall To Government At Las Vegas Show -
Harry Styles Silently Deleted Instagram App