While Serbia and Montenegro are independent,
Kosovo has been administered by the UN since the end of conflict
there in June 1999. There are no current estimates for the
number of SALW in the country but in 1989, long before the
various wars, there were thought to be more than 1 million
illegally held firearms in Serbia and 400,000 in Kosovo. There
are currently over 1 million firearms registered to civilians
in Serbia, which has less than 10 million citizens. The total
number of SALWs will be much higher: for example, the Serbian
police force numbers 100,000 and is armed as light infantry.
The situation in Kosovo remains serious. There are severe problems getting
the Serb minority to actively engage with the predominantly Albanian parliament.
There is a perception among the Serbs that UNMIK, the United Nations administrators,
are preparing to separate Kosovo from Serbia/Montenegro at their expense. The
fact that UNMIK police are reliant on NATO troops (KFOR) may contribute to
this unease and the continuing traffic in small arms. Although the KLA militia
has officially disbanded, in reality it has mostly been renamed as the KPC,
while many ex-KLA members have joined the police. Nonetheless there is hope:
the elections of October 2000 favoured the moderate LDK party.
Prior to and during the breakup of the Yugoslav Federation, the Serb-controlled
JNA militia supplied arms to Serbian militants in Croatia and Bosnia. There
are three conflict zones still unresolved:
In southern Serbia a splinter-group of the KLA, the UCPMB, are trying to annex
territory to Kosovo. A ground safety zone (GSZ) was established while the UN
is working for a peace settlement. Yet even in the GSZ, violent political intimidation
is commonplace and mines have been laid along police/military routes.
Belgrade continues to have links with the notoriously corrupt “Republica
Srpska” in Bosnia-Herzegovina, where Serb and Croat militants remain
antagonistic.
Another KLA splinter group, the NLA, remains active in northern Macedonia since
2001, supporting ethnic Albanians against Macedonian security forces.
A number of campaigns have been launched to tackle the SALW problem. In Montenegro,
a program run by USAID/ORT advertised through the Akcija network has resulted
in 17,000 weapon seizures between 1992 and 2002. In Kosovo, a Weapons Exchange
for Development program, the UNDP Pristina “Kosovo Illicit Small Arms
Control Project” is intending to set up a pilot scheme in the Gnijlane
region or in the south, in a mixed Albanian/Serb community. In preparation,
the Norwegian-funded weapon destruction facility at Obelic has been shut down
and a new facility at Janjevo has been established with Dutch funding. Furthermore,
SEESAC are initiating a scheme in the south of Serbia. In 2001 the US financed
the destruction of 56,000 SALW and a further 4,000 weapons from the Serbian
ministry of the interior were destroyed recently. An amnesty in April 2003
collected thousands of weapons.
Organisations
Peace
Brigades International
Saferworld Belgrade (e-mail: saferworld-see@seznam.cz)
BICC
Kosovo
BICC
Yugoslavia
UNDP Office
SEESAC
Serbia
SEESAC
Montenegro
SEESAC
Kosovo
OSCE
Serbia/Montenegro
OSCE Kosovo
Other links
OSCE
factsheet in English, Albanian and Serbian
News
article discussing Republica Sprska, with links to other SALW issues (April
2003) from TOL (login required)
Article
on the weapons held by the NLA (2001) from Janes
‘How
does Kosovo compare to other crises?’ (2000) from the
Journal for Humanitarian Assistance
An
article on the weapons held by the KLA (1999) from the Center
for Defence Information
Article
on the consequences of the peace (1999) from the Center for
Stategic and International Studies |