Date: Fri 16-Apr-1999
Date: Fri 16-Apr-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
Behluli-Kosovo
Full Text:
Behlulis Still Wait For Word On Loved Ones In Kosovo
BY STEVE BIGHAM
Newtown resident Nasser Behluli recently spotted an old friend on the evening
news. The man's face was full of fear and confusion as he looked out across a
massive crowd of ethnic Albanians.
"He was at one of the refugee camps and it looked like he was looking for his
wife and daughters," Mr Behluli explained. "I'm very happy that I am here, but
when I saw him I felt that I should be there."
Although their family remains safe here in the United States, these are
agonizing times for Nasser and Hidajete Behluli, both ethnic Albanians who
moved their family out of war-torn Kosovo in 1992. The Behluli's, who were
featured in a front page article in The Bee two weeks ago, are finding that
information about loved ones is still hard to come by. The whereabouts of the
family members they left behind is still unknown. The telephones do not work
as Yugoslavia's Serbs continue to push ethnic Albanians from the Behluli's
native Kosovo.
"I stay up late -- until one or two o'clock in the morning -- to try to call
them or just in case they try to call here, but nothing," Mr Behluli said
Tuesday.
Mr Behluli has been in touch with his brother-in-law who lives in Serbia near
the Kosovo border. He said he tried to flee to Macedonia with his family, but
was turned back at the border. For now, they are staying inside their homes
for fear of what awaits them outside.
A year ago, Yugoslavian President Slobodan Milosevic, the former head of the
Serbian Communist Party, launched a crack down on Kosovo in an effort to rout
the Muslim Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) and disperse its population of ethnic
Albanians. President Milosevic has resisted international efforts to bring
peace to the region, and his government's "ethnic cleansing" policy has
brought death or displacement to hundreds of thousands of Kosovars.
Mr Behluli believes it is time that NATO bring in ground troops to protect
those ethnic Albanians who remain in danger.
The Behlulis talk to a nephew in Macedonia almost everyday. However, he has
not heard any news, either. Two weeks ago, Mr Behluli's family was still at
home. However, a lot has happened since then, and Nasser lies awake at night
wondering how they are doing.
At night, Nasser and Hidajete gather around the television with their children
Kaltrina and Besmir, both middle school students. It is hard for them to watch
and there is little they can do. They can only pray for the safety of their
friends and loved ones.
"I am just worried for over there," Mr Behluli said. "All the time I am
thinking of that. Thinking and wondering."