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RRIPE, Albania -- Europe's top human rights watchdog is launching a probe into a bone-chilling allegation: That ethnic Albanian guerrillas may have kidnapped Serb civilians at the end of Kosovo's 1998-99 war, removed their organs and sold the body parts on the black market.
A United Nations inquiry into the issue in 2004 proved inconclusive. So did a recent investigation by the Associated Press, which obtained U.N. and Serbian documents detailing what was uncovered at a farmhouse in remote north-central Albania: bloodstains, syringes, empty bottles of muscle relaxant, surgical gear and other material. The family living in the house in Rripe offers a plausible explanation for everything the investigators found.
The allegations were first made public in a memoir earlier this year by Carla Del Ponte, the former chief U.N. war crimes prosecutor. In "Madame Prosecutor," an account of her tenure as head of the International Criminal Tribunal for former Yugoslavia, Ms. Del Ponte said her office was tipped to possible organ trafficking.
Although the information was "tantalizing," Ms. Del Ponte wrote, "in the end, the attorneys and investigators on the KLA cases decided that there was insufficient evidence to proceed." They left it to U.N. officials and the local Kosovo and Albanian authorities to investigate further, which never happened.
Now, a probe is being led by Dick Marty, the Swiss senator who headed an investigation into allegations that the CIA operated secret prisons in Eastern Europe. Mr. Marty, working on behalf of the Council of Europe, would not comment before his Balkans fact-finding mission is completed.
Serbian authorities say they have uncovered new evidence.
They say two wealthy Europeans - a Swiss and a German - apparently were among the recipients of kidneys, livers and other organs harvested in Albania and sold via middlemen in a macabre but meticulously orchestrated operation that involved private aircraft and tens of millions of dollars.
Bruno Vekaric, a top adviser to Vladimir Vukcevic, Serbia's chief war crimes prosecutor, declined to identify the purported recipients but said the information came from "people involved in the operation," including former members of the now-disbanded Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA).
Mr. Vukcevic showed the AP a thick blue binder jammed with documents that he recently handed over to Mr. Marty. He declined to let AP review the statements, citing the need to protect the identities of Albanian informants.
KLA guerrillas fought Serbian troops loyal to the late strongman Slobodan Milosevic in a conflict that claimed at least 10,000 lives. The bloodshed ended after NATO pummeled Serbia with air strikes and sent in peacekeepers in June 1999. Kosovo's ethnic Albanian leaders declared independence in February 2008.








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