@puno, се согласуваш ли со oвие тврдења:
the Macedonian National Liberation Army (NLA), which campaigned for human rights but sought to carve its own statelet out of Macedonia; and the regionwide Albanian National Army (ANA)68, which seeks a pan-Albania based on maps created during the time of the 1878 Treaty of Prizren69. Behind the UÇKPMB conflict lies control of a byroad of the Balkan route. The insurgency centred on Veliki Trnovac - a heroin trafficking centre that Interpol has monitored since the 1980s (GDN Oct. 2001:3). GDN also asserts that heroin was a motivating factor behind the Macedonian insurrection of 2001: control of the SkopjePreševo road (which runs through then-contested Arachinovo and Kumanovo, and ultimately connects them with Veliki Trnovac) was at stake. Misha Glenny simply and unequivocally states that the 2001 Macedonian conflict was about control of the counterfeit cigarette trade70.
And so: elements of the KLA acquired funding from drugs and prostitution in Europe. Reports by Interpol, Europol, U.S. and European governments, the Observatoire Geopolitique des Drogues, and journalist’s accounts detail links between KLA members and Albanian organised crime, and claim that some KLA weapons were bought with heroin profits, laundered through European banks (Yannis 2003:176). This implicates members of the KLA, but the KLA itself remained a loose group of men with guns. Some shot soldiers; some shot civilians, and some ran heroin. A caveat must be leveled; just as there are Albanian drug traffickers, they are different from Kosovar Albanian drug traffickers, and members of the KLA who traffic drugs (Williams 2001:108). Often the groups are viewed as indistinguishable from one another, but differences and affiliations are marked. One distinction remains for the umbrella as a whole; it killed more Albanians than it did Serbs34.