Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Post 50 ... and the fat lady has just left the room

The latest gossip on land is the sudden departure of the PDSRSG (or deputy head) of UNMIK, Gen. Steven Schook (rtd), from Kosovo yesterday. He made waves a couple of months ago when he gave a solo press conference announcing he was being investigated by the UN's Office of Internal Oversight (OIOS) for "loving his job". Well, if he is to be believed, the people of Kosovo just lost a good friend. But friends come and go as long as they are sent by Washington, Kosovo' heart will not be broken too long :) The SRSG apparently is "saddened by" and I mourn his departure. I have met him a couple of times at some functions and he exuded so much confidence and straight-forwardness, something found mostly in Texans (is he Texan?). Very unlike most UN people I have met here who tend to be sneaky and three-faced. Maybe that is why he was doomed to leave.

So, Gen. Schook, here is an adieu from Luna ... I always thought you were hot!!! Feel free to have a "personal relationship" with me next time we cross paths.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

... here is 50 Cent as a consolation price ...

They have yet to produce the cheaper mobile system they were awarded a contract for but yet they can bring 50 Cent to Prishtina. Doofs ... IPKO that is!!! I want my money back .. oh wait, I do not subscribe to internet access at home anymore.


I rejoice for all fake hiphop posers in the city who will run to pay other's yearly salaries for this show but really, can't the private industry think of better ways to bring good tidings to the region (e.g. sponsor kids' education, promote local culture, build museums, etc.) than bringing a rich rap star to Kosovo? Maybe this will take all our minds off independence for a while ... pfffff.

NOTE: The author is fully aware that she is, unintentionally, promoting 50 Cent's gig. S'ka problem. 50, please donate to the SOS village in Pristina. Those kids need all the love a rap artist can afford a million times over.




Monday, December 3, 2007

here is what they think about ... always relative to others ...

Kosovo's future: The day after independence

Nov 22nd 2007 From The Economist print edition

The next Balkan headache for the European Union

FOR months the future of Kosovo has been uncertain. In March Marti Ahtisaari, a former Finnish president, presented a plan for conditional independence to the United Nations, which has run the province since the end of the war in 1999. Russia stepped in to stop this, and has since treated Kosovo as a bargaining card with the West. The crude message was that, even though Kosovo is surrounded by the European Union and NATO, a resurgent Russia can still get its way there. Now it looks as if this may have backfired. Kosovo has a population of 2m, 90% of whom are ethnic Albanians who have long demanded independence. Serbia's leaders say they cannot have it, since Kosovo was always a Serbian province and not a Yugoslav republic before the country fell apart. Serbia has proposed various models of autonomy, drawing on such examples as Hong Kong and the Swedish-populated Aland Islands, formally part of Finland. But Kosovo's Albanians have rejected them all. A final bout of diplomacy intended to reach a compromise has, predictably, failed so far to find one.

The diplomats will present a report on their work to the UN on December 10th. Russia and Serbia want the talks to go on after that. But their chances of success are diminishing. “The intriguing thing,” comments Mr Ahtisaari, with not a little hint of satisfaction, “is that the Russian attitude has reinforced the unity of the EU. I don't think that was their original intent.” Kosovo's Serbs were told to boycott the election on November 17th by their leaders, and only 40-45% of Kosovar Albanians turned up to vote. The election was won, with 34% of the vote, by Hashim Thaci, a former political leader of Kosovo's guerrillas who fought against the Serbs in 1998-99. After the poll he said Kosovo would declare independence immediately after December 10th. But privately he told Western diplomats he could wait until spring; he then said nothing would be done before consulting the Europeans and Americans. Many countries wonder if Kosovo's independence is a good idea. Some fear a precedent for separatists, from Abkhazia to Catalonia. At one time, the European Union looked set to be divided over recognition. But a likely German decision to say yes, plus what seemed a scary bid by Russia to exploit Kosovo to divide the EU, has converted many doubters. Only Cyprus is likely to resist to the bitter end. Slovakia and Greece seem resigned to accepting Kosovo's independence.

This is a big success, says Ivan Krastev, a Balkan analyst, “but the problems will come later. It must be understood that EU unity cannot expire on the day after the recognition of Kosovo.” What this implies is a large EU commitment to the region, beyond replacing the UN mission in Kosovo with an EU one. It is not clear that all European governments are prepared for this.
Several things need to be done in the wake of Kosovo's probable independence. The most delicate are careful handling of the Serb breakaway northern bit of Kosovo and the reinforcement of pro-European voices in Serbia. The second may involve some unpalatable decisions, such as setting aside the condition that Serbia's advancement towards EU accession must be conditional on the arrest of Ratko Mladic, a Bosnian Serb general wanted by The Hague war-crimes tribunal. Another place causing concern is Macedonia, where recent violence involving ethnic Albanians has set nerves jangling. Macedonia hopes to be invited to join NATO next April. That would warn off predators in what by then may be a newly independent Kosovo. But it may not happen, for Greece threatens to veto a Macedonian invitation as part of its 15-year-long campaign to get it to change its name.

----------------------------------------------------------

The independence precedent If Kosovo goes free

Nov 29th 2007 SUKHUMI AND TSKHINVALI From The Economist print editionWhy

Georgia's enclaves would love to follow, but will probably fail

KOSOVO Albanians and Serbs met in Austria this week for last-chance talks before a United Nations deadline of December 10th, after which Kosovo is likely to declare independence unilaterally. Serbia's old ally, Russia, blocks any UN resolution. But plenty are watching south of Russia in the enclaves of Georgia. As Maxim Gunjia, the cheery young deputy foreign minister of Abkhazia, says, “because Russia does not want Kosovo to be recognised, it does not mean that we do not want it.” When the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia fell apart, sovereignty passed to their constituent republics. But Kosovo was a province of Serbia. Its independence, argues those worried by precedents, will be seized on by separatists from Catalonia to Chechnya (to say nothing, nearer home, of the Bosnian Serb republic). As Russia's Vladimir Putin once asked, “If people believe that Kosovo can be granted full independence, why then should we deny it to Abkhazia and South Ossetia?” Why indeed, ask people in these two enclaves, which are among the four “frozen conflicts” left from the wreckage of the Soviet Union. The enclaves broke away from Georgia in nasty wars in the early 1990s, but no country recognises their independence. Two other frozen conflicts are in Transdniestria, which split from Moldova, and Nagorno-Karabakh (see article). Recently the presidents of three of these Russian-backed places met in Sukhumi, Abkhazia's capital.

Abkhazia is a backwater, much of it in ruins. In contrast to the Balkans, it has received no international largesse. This would change, argues Mr Gunjia, if the world would only recognise Abkhazia. That is unlikely. Western countries are wedded to the territorial integrity of Georgia; so, despite its support for the secessionists, is Russia. Leyla Taniya, an analyst, sighs that Russia cares for Abkhazia only “as a card that can be played” directly against Georgia or in the great game with the West over the region's future. “Those rules which work for Kosovo will work for South Ossetia,” insists Alan Pliev, South Ossetia's deputy foreign minister, in Tskhinvali, the capital. But the situation in each place is different. Kosovo has 2m people, 90% of them ethnic Albanians, who have long been in the majority. Only 200,000 people live in Abkhazia. Before the war in the early 1990s only 18% of them were Abkhaz; even today they make up no more than 45% of the people, the rest being Armenians, Russians and Georgians. More than 200,000 Georgians from Abkhazia are refugees in Georgia who are unlikely to be allowed to return. Georgians accuse the Abkhaz of ethnic cleansing. The Abkhaz say they have reclaimed what was lost by deportations to Turkey in the 19th century and to Siberia in the 20th century, as well as through later Georgian settlement (Stalin was Georgian). Today Russia supports the Abkhaz and South Ossetians with money, troops and passports. Both places use the rouble; Russian money is flowing in, especially to Abkhazia. The Russian passports let locals travel, but may also allow Russia to claim its citizens have been attacked if Georgia tries to retake the enclaves.
Yet even if Kosovo declares independence, Russian recognition is unlikely. It might, says Inal Pliev, a journalist in Tskhinvali, be Russia's “holy duty”, but reality intrudes. South Ossetia is a tiny patchwork with perhaps as few as 50,000 inhabitants in the Ossetian-controlled part. Much of the land is controlled by Georgians. It is linked to Russia by a tunnel through the mountains; on the other side is the autonomous Russian republic of North Ossetia.

“Our aim is unification with North Ossetia,” says Alan Pliev. “We don't know if that would be as part of Russia or as a separate united Ossetian state.” The deputy speaker of parliament, Juri Dzittsojty, is cautious. “I would prefer there to be an independent and united Ossetia, but today it is not possible. It is safer to be with Russia. The main aim of the struggle is to be independent of Georgia.” And tomorrow? If Russia recognised the enclaves, that might encourage bits of Russia that wanted independence. This is why Russia is unlikely to act even if Kosovo is widely recognised. Yet the Georgians are nervous. David Bakradze, the state minister for conflict resolution, says he is not worried about Kosovo, but about “the misuse of Kosovo”.

Friday, November 23, 2007

... I am back ... again

I know you all missed me. I did not have time to miss y'all unfortunately. My visit home to Boston and NYC was very hectic and what have you. I also missed Thanksgiving ... yipeee. Never appreciated the mass murder of turkeys and an insult to the face of Native Americans anyway.

So, I missed much here. Elections, elections, elections and the freezing cold.

Sunday, November 4, 2007

Kosovans (Balkans) in NYC....

So, I will be heading home soon to Boston to take care of some family and educational stuff. What's the use of being in the East Coast without going to NYC, right? So I will be in the big apple a couple of days. I have heard and read a lot about the the 'big' Kosovan (Albanian) community in NYC ( and other Balkan folks also). However, I have yet to discover them or where they hang out and would love to do so. If you have any tips or info on where to go to for the Balkan (minus mafia) vibe in NYC, please & please, drop me a note and let me know.

I, for one, am glad that I am getting this excuse to go back home. My abstinence here is beginning to get to me and is driving me nuts ... hope I can do something about that once I get back to the East Coast ;)

other world news ... I think the winter is getting to people

Pakistan: Musharraf grabs for power

Iraq: Turkey is getting trigger itchy

Georgia: Lost love for the President

Chad: Aid workers kidnapping children?

Mexico: Tabasco ... another New Orleans?

Myanmar: Let's keep beating up our monks

Palestine & Israel: Keep striking with bombs and missiles

Somalia: Soma ... who?

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Sharing joy ....

I do not think I ever shared this with you but just in case, check this out:

http://www.coe.int/t/dg4/expos/expoprizren/index.html

This is a link to pictures (commissioned by the Council of Europe) of one of my favorite towns/villages in Kosovo - PRIZREN!!! Prizren rocks and I like it. I have been there couple of times now and it never tires or bores me. Very cheap to get to from Pristina also .... 3 Euros at most by public bus. The old town is cool and even cooler are the children there. Very fascinating bunch always willing to practise their English at the slight view of a stranger. I have met a couple compatriots kids there whose parents, unfortunately, got deported from our country. I usually just sit and listen to them tell me about what they miss about home (Michigan and NYC) and how they understand they have to be here in Kosovo now with their parents. These children, too wise for their ages, I tell you.

.. winter ... brrrrrrr

Is it officially winter season yet? I am already feeling it. My apologies for the lapse in posts. The veins and arteries connecting my brain to my fingers have been frozen for a while now and all I want to do is hibernate.

More to follow soon... for real ;)

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Kosovo-related Austrian Immigration Story ...

October 17, 2007
Vienna Journal
An Immigrant Girl’s Plea Draws Austria’s Attention
By MARK LANDLER

VIENNA, Oct. 16 — Arigona Zogaj returned to her school in an Austrian village on Tuesday morning, hugging classmates, accepting flowers, and ending — if only for the moment — what has become a singular act of resistance against the authorities of her adopted land. Late last month, Ms. Zogaj, a 15-year-old ethnic Albanian from Kosovo, went into hiding after the police came for her family, which has been living in Austria and seeking asylum since 2002. After her father and four siblings were deported to Kosovo, Ms. Zogaj recorded a video, broadcast on Austrian TV, in which she threatened to kill herself if her family was kept apart. Her mother, who had remained here to search for her daughter, suffered a nervous breakdown and was hospitalized. The saga of Arigona — everyone here calls her by her first name — has riveted this country, raising fraught questions about asylum seekers in a Europe no longer shadowed by war, and about the human cost of Austria’s immigration policies, which are among the most restrictive in Europe. “This girl speaks with a pure Upper Austrian dialect,” said Alexander Van der Bellen, the leader of the Green Party, which has taken up Ms. Zogaj’s cause. “These people are like native, inbred, aboriginal Austrians, and yet they are deported to Kosovo. Many people can’t accept that.” It is not that simple, of course — as it never is, when Western Europeans confront minorities in their midst.

Ms. Zogaj’s desperate flight has evoked genuine sympathy here. A crowd of 5,000 marched on the Interior Ministry to protest its hard line against her family. Austria’s largest paper, Kronen Zeitung, which champions strict immigration policies, said she should be allowed to stay. It does not hurt that Ms. Zogaj is a winsome young woman whose anguish was as authentic as her accent. Yet by all accounts, most Austrians still want to keep out foreigners, whether or not they are asking for asylum. Austria’s tough laws are supported by both the center-right People’s Party and center-left Social Democrats, which govern together in a coalition. “There is a real schizophrenia in Austria,” said Hans Rauscher, a columnist at the newspaper Der Standard. “A majority of Austrians say, ‘We can’t send poor Arigona away from her family.’ But a majority also says, ‘We can’t let in more people like her family.’” Even the claim made by her supporters — that Ms. Zogaj was happily integrated in her home village of Frankenburg — goes too far for some Austrians. Residents did rally in support of the family. But after a Catholic priest in a neighboring village, Josef Friedl, took Ms. Zogaj, who is Muslim, under his care, vandals sprayed the words Mullah Friedl on a graveyard wall. “Obviously, Arigona speaks very good German, but that’s not the case with the other members of her family,” said Günther Platter, the interior minister, who met with her in recent days and told her she did not have to fear deportation.
Mr. Platter, a conservative who used to be a small-town mayor in Tyrol, has taken a pasting in the news media for his handling of the case. He has refused to allow Ms. Zogaj’s father or siblings to return to Austria, pending a ruling on the family’s case by the Austrian Constitutional Court, which is not expected before December. Speaking over coffee, he is unbowed. “As interior minister, I can’t allow myself to be blackmailed by the media,” Mr. Platter said. “We must fight against the misuse of asylum.”

Ms. Zogaj’s father, he said, settled here in 2001, two years after the end of the war in Kosovo. Even after his initial application for asylum was denied, he arranged for his family to join him. The family then applied for asylum several more times, and was denied repeatedly. One of Ms. Zogaj’s older brothers, Mr. Platter said, had a run-in with the law, though he said he did not have details. Austria has granted asylum to thousands of refugees from the war-torn Balkans since the 1990s. In this case, Mr. Platter said, the government consulted United Nations officials who administer Kosovo, and was told there was no reason not to repatriate the Zogaj family. The fact that they would have less economic opportunity in Kosovo was not grounds for asylum, Mr. Platter said. The problem, critics say, lies with Austria’s asylum system, which has a backlog of more than 30,000 applications. Foreigners can live here for a decade or more before being told that they have to leave. At a protest on Tuesday, students wore placards with the names of other families facing expulsion. Austria has so many asylum seekers, experts say, largely because it is so difficult to get in any other way. In a European Union-backed study of migration trends released Monday, Austria ranks near the bottom of 25 European countries in its openness to migrants. A new law, adopted in 2006, raises the hurdles to reuniting immigrants with their family members and makes it harder to gain citizenship. Defenders say the measures are needed in a country in which more than 13 percent of the population is foreign-born and nearly 10 percent hold foreign passports. Critics say the policy reflects Austria’s refusal to accept that it is an immigration country, whether the immigrants are the young Czech women who work as nurses today, or the Czech refugees of a century ago. The government has begun a thorough examination of its integration policies, but Bernhard Perchinig, a senior researcher at the Austrian Academy of Sciences, said, “It’s not possible to completely close a country and have, at the same time, a good integration policy.” In this regard, Arigona Zogaj, with her Austrian-flavored German, may have done this country a service. “Cynics say this girl should be given Austrian citizenship just for showing Austrians howconfused they are about immigration,” said Michael Fleischhacker, the editor in chief of the paper Die Presse.

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Explosion at shopping mall in Kosovo kills 2, injures 9

I am sure many of you saw this news before I did as I was informed about it by a friend in the U.S. as I was waking up yesterday. My roommate claims she heard it. I have chosen not to go to the site to take pics; I am superstitious about going to places where people just died. Below are pics culled from all over the net. They speak better than words about the demonic, wicked and stupid side of mankind:















Sunday, September 23, 2007

Question....

.... can anyone inform me where I can donate clothes in Prishtina or other parts of Kosovo?

Faleminderit!!!

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Ginger

I am dedicating this post to my favorite store ne Prishtine - "ginger" ... when you have a need to feel suave, intellectual or just plain bourgeoisie, ginger is the place for you -- books, music, dvds, couch, dog and all. This store rocks....




















Thursday, September 13, 2007

Ramadan!!!

As Ramadan begins, I am wishing my fellow Kosovans a blessed and peaceful time. I pray we all remember, as the Holy Quran quites, that Piety does not lie in the East or West but only in God. Let us seek the face of Allah and prayerful seek a renewal of our minds and souls which are on the brink of total human corruption. In this spirit, I share with you a personal prayer from a friend of a friend:


RAMADAN
My Dear Sweet Allah,
the Holy month of Ramadan is coming upon us with the subtle certainty of time.
The flame inside re-ignited, the burning within me reinforced.
This passion I have for You erupts with vigor, this vigor resonates within all my brothers and sisters, covering the ends of the earth, touching all of humanity.
The energy of our worship is consolidated into a bright, shining light, a reflection of that flame inside each of us, the manifestation of our selves fully realized.
With every heartbeat, every movement, every hunger spasm, every prayer, this energy pulsates with a constant beat.
It propels me forth, I go forward in your Name, I actively engage in this world as your humble servant.
I look to only You for an understanding, a greater meaning, a rationalization of all I see.
My Dear Sweet Allah,
the Holy month of Ramadan is almost here,
Every drop of blood inside me flows with the goal of prayer,
Every muscle contracts with the goal of personifying a noble Islam in Your name,
Every frustration, every ounce of knowledge I have, all is submitted to Your will,
I trust in You, I know that on the Day, the meanings will all unravel,
I will not allow myself to feel that you have failed my brothers and sisters in Islam whom I see suffering at all corners of this earth.
My soul will no longer bleed as I think of their suffering, my heart will no longer mourn tears for injustices in this world.
I will channel all of my hurt and all of my frustrations into sincere and desperate prayer.
For these are your dearest children, those you hold closest to your bosom,
Veiled by my human ignorance, I cannot see what You know
I will not allow my faith in You to waver at the sight of adversity
On the contrary, my conviction grows even stronger
I trust in You, the Most Merciful and Most Beneficent.
The Holy month of Ramadan is now but breaths away,
I am eager to please You, my Dear Sweet Allah.
For what cause should I not serve You, Who hath created me, and unto Whom I shall be brought back? (36:22)
By Asma Chandani UC Berkeley, 2001

March Against Organized Crime

After the shooting of the police officer, about 5 000 residents of Prishtina (less than the over 10 000 that showed up for Ramush's support rally) marched peacefully through the city to show their disgust at crime in the city. It was a beautiful and powerful march. But even the residents who marched are skeptical about things turning around since the Region seems to be held captive by "local tax collectors" and corrupt officials who lay in bed together. Read this for a brief assessment.















Monday, September 10, 2007

Request

A fan in Belgrade is seeking to establish communication with people in Kosovo to facilitate better communication and understanding with people in Kosovo. He seems genuinely interested. So, if there are any readers in Kosovo that might be interested in making a penpal or email pal in Belgrade, let me know and I will put you in touch with this person.

Monday, September 3, 2007

This is what I am looking for....

The story below is so cute and intriguing. I really really wish I have been there to be part of this festivities. As much as I enjoy the the shedding and cutting of phalli parts as much as the next guy, there is just something about the rich cultural history of this that needs to be explored. So, in all humility, I beg of my readers, if you have any idea or knowledge of culturally rich and worthwhile rituals like below in any villages or hamlets in Kosovo or the Balkans, do let me know. I would happily travel to witness these and share in people's cultures, regardless of the involvement of a phallus or not.

PS: Erecting statutes of Rocky Balboa or Bill Clinton do not count.

Published on TaipeiTimes
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/editorials/archives/2007/08/28/2003376197

AFP, DONJE LJUBINJE, Serbia Tuesday, Aug 28, 2007, Page 9

Every five years, two tiny Muslim villages in a remote corner of Kosovo put politics and all else aside to welcome family and friends -- some from across Europe -- for an age-old ritual: The mass circumcision of young boys. To the untrained eye, Donje and Gornje Ljubinje -- or Upper and Lower Ljubinje -- look like many other sleepy hamlets in southeast Kosovo, tucked into an isolated ravine in the rugged Shara mountains. A majority of the 2 million inhabitants in this breakaway Serbian Province are ethnic Albanians, many practicing Muslims. While the 3,000 residents in the two Ljubinjes share their religion, they proudly defend their ethnic differences.
The tiny population is Gorani -- or Bosniaks as some now call themselves, a Slavic subgroup in Kosovo's southern highlands who speak a language similar to Serbian, with lots of Macedonian, Albanian and Turkish influences, though their names are closer to Albanian.

The villages, which lie 5km apart, are poor and many of their youths have left in search of jobs and a better future in western Europe. But every five years in the heat of summer, residents forget every hardship that has shaped their lives during a four-day festival that culminates with the mass circumcision of young boys, performed according to rites that date back centuries.
"Everything stops when the festival begins. No one works or does anything these days except celebrate," said the doyen of the village Donje Ljubinje, 80-year-old Sadrija Karadollami.
Even he could not explain the origins of the ritual, called Sunet. Sunet is deeply rooted in both the lore and soul of these mountain villages that, until recently, could only be reached on foot in winter and where goods are still sometimes brought in on donkeys. Locals feel the ritual has helped hone their difference from other ethnic communities in the Balkans. "This is why we are not the same as the others, even when it does not help us," said 40-year-old Arif Kurtishi, in a reference to the bloody wars that have beset ethnic and religious communities in the Balkans.
So attached is Kurtishi to his roots he traveled from Sweden, where he has worked for years, to take part in the festival.


Donje Ljubinje was the setting for this year's Sunet when 130 boys aged from 10 months to five years -- some brought from abroad for the ritual -- were circumcised by 70-year-old Zylfikar Shishko, a barber from the nearby town of Prizren. Shishko, in a neatly pressed suit and traditional crocheted white cap or terlak, is the honored guest as well as a living legend in these parts after performing circumcisions for the last 45 years. "It has been so long, that I don't even know the number of boys I've circumcised in the Prizren area, maybe 15,000 or 20,000 or more," he said. The festivities began with traditional dances as hosts greeted their guests and neighbors from Gornje Ljubinje. Preparations took up the second day when the boys to be circumcised paraded through the village, dressed in special outfits. On the third day, the ritual started bright and early amid great fanfare as a local imam led a dozen men from house to house along the steep narrow streets of the village, followed by a five-man brass band playing the traditional zurla and goc, similar to a flute and drum. The imam entered the home where 13-month-old Amar Hashani lay in a bed covered with an ancient baldachin. To the sound of Muslim religious chants, Shishko pulled out his simple equipment -- a scalpel, iodine and medical powder. Two of his assistants took hold of little Amar who, suddenly among strangers, started screaming. But Shishko, unmoved, deftly finished the operation with no anaesthetic in less than 20 seconds. Only after the honored visitors left, the women -- Amar's mother and two sisters, all dressed for the occasion in elaborately gold-embroidered traditional blouses and pantaloons -- entered the room. The boy's father Efrim, part of the Gorani diaspora who brought his family from Sweden, was choked with emotion as neighbors and relatives poured into the house, wishing good luck and bringing presents for the boy. His voice trembling, Efrim drew deeply on a cigarette and said he did not think his son would remember much of the rite. "I remember mine only because I bought a bicycle from the money I got from relatives for Sunet," he said.
Washing his hands before hurrying to the next home, Shishko said he has not had a single mishap during his long career. "I learned the trade for 10 years with a master before I started to work alone. But now, I don't have a successor. All young people are obsessed with computers and this new, loud and poor music," he complained. Shishko is paid 10 euros (US$13) to 15 euros for each operation. "I do this for free for the children from poor families," he said proudly.

The circumcisions were over by early afternoon, as families of this year's boys prepared lunch for all in 14 huge military caldrons. Their neighbors from Gornje Ljubine had brought a barbecued bull for the banquet. Shehadin Hasani, 70, a retired pastry shop owner, was in charge of preparing halva, a traditional desert offered only on special occasions. Troublesome political issues so present elsewhere in Kosovo seemed to have bypassed the village, sparing it the uncompromising bickering between Serbs and Albanians over the future status of the UN-run province where some 16,000 NATO-led peacekeepers are still deployed. "Someone else, stronger and more powerful, will decide over the status," Shishko said. The fourth and final day was dedicated to traditional sports dating back to Ottoman rule in the Balkans -- tugs-of-war, long jumping, Turkish wrestling and stone-throwing. The next morning, silence again prevailed in the small hamlet as it would for another five years, until the next Sunet.

Friday, August 31, 2007

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Crazy hectic summer days ...

Whew peeps, it has been crazy for a while now. My organization has become under-staffed and I have so much more to do these days. Despite it all, I am still the best dressed in the office ;) But, also one of the most over-utilized staff member also. I often get home late but my work is good so I am not complaining. I promise to post up some new pictures of Pristina and my travels soon. I need to breath first though.

In a sad update, I heard yesterday that a young and dedicated Kosovo Police Officer was killed yesterday. That is really sad especially considering he was so young and Kosovan gang members (mafia) are suspected to have murdered him :( More on this can be found here.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Happy Belated ...

... Birthday, that is. To none other than the "come-back kid" himself, Billy Clinton. Kosovo dua Bill Clinton like nothing else ... so much that a birthday bash was thrown for him ne Prishtine this past weekend. I missed the festivities but I heard it was the party to be seen at during the weekend ;). Damn, Billy, you just refuse to die from the limelight, even in the Balkans. More on the festivities here.


What's a birthday Bash without a cake? (Photo: Ermal Meta/Agence France Presse–Getty Images)

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

I am back... this time

Don't leave, don't leave ... I made it back to my love, Prishtina. I am sorry about the absence of posts but I was on vacation. Who works during vacation? Yeah, you ....

Here are some initial photos of aerial views of Kosovo and the airport :)












Friday, August 3, 2007

I am not really back...

It's been quiet here a bit. It is because I had to run home (Boston / NYC) at the beginning of this week to take care of some personal stuff. I am still in the US and it's both enjoyable and hectic. For one, I do appreciate the joy of being in an environment where I understand what almost everyone is saying. I will have to seriously start learning Albanian and Serbian when I get back to Prishtina.

Hope y'all have not forgotten me. Keep your emails and comments coming. I will soon post some questions I have received and my answers to them. E dua Kosovo ... heaven help us all!!!

Friday, July 20, 2007

From Russia, With Love ...

U.N. to Hold Off on Kosovo Vote
By
WARREN HOGE

UNITED NATIONS, July 20 — The European and American sponsors of a resolution that would put Kosovo on the path to independence withdrew the measure from the Security Council today in the face of a promised Russian veto and said a six-nation European group would now seek a way to settle the contentious statehood question. “We regret that it has been impossible to secure such a resolution in the United Nations Security Council,” said Jean-Marc de la Sabliere, the French ambassador. “We will therefore put on hold discussions of the resolution.” He made the announcement after a morning meeting held to test the ongoing Russian resistance to the resolution despite repeated revisions adopted in recent weeks to try to meet Moscow’s objections. Vitaly I. Churkin, the Russian ambassador, said he had told the 15 council ambassadors that Russia was not prepared to vote yes or to abstain, leaving a veto the sure response if a vote were called. . . .

More here.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Monday, July 9, 2007