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April 7, 1999

CRISIS IN THE BALKANS: IN SERBIA

Small Serbian Town Is Stricken by a Deadly 'Accident of War'


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    By STEVEN ERLANGER

    ALEKSINAC, Serbia -- On Monday night, about 10 p.m., Stana Stojanovic, a 62-year-old pensioner, was watching "Esmeralda," her favorite soap opera, when she heard the airplanes flying low over this little coal-mining town.

    "I asked my husband if he could hear anything, but he said 'No,' so I turned off the television," she said Tuesday, shuddering and hugging herself in the hot morning sun, standing in the chaotic rubble of what remains of Vuka Karadzica Street.

    "At that moment there was a huge explosion, and it felt like a hammer on my head. I dragged him off the sofa and pulled him under a table."

    When she emerged, she said, the houses across the street were smoking heaps of brick and tile, with body parts visible and pools of blood. Her neighbors, Dragan and Dragica Milodinovic, and their 42-year-old daughter, Snezana, were dead, their daughter-in-law and two grandchildren, Marko and Dijana, badly wounded in the hospital.

    "The people responsible for this should be tried," she shouted, beginning to weep. "We will not take revenge, but we will not be slaves."

    In what NATO called an accident of war, on Monday night NATO bombs demolished two residential areas in this quiet town of 20,000 people, killing at least seven of them and wounding nearly 50 others, the local police said. The explosions also damaged NATO's reputation for surgical precision in its undeclared war from the air against President Slobodan Milosevic of Yugoslavia and his policies in Kosovo.

    In Brussels, with the dry precision of the well-briefed modern military man, Air Commodore David Wilby said: "It is possible that one of our weapons fell short of the target." NATO was aiming at a barracks that houses the 203rd Mixed Artillery Brigade, he said, but the munitions apparently fell 600 yards away.

    He regretted any loss of life, he said. "Despite our meticulous and careful pre-attack planning," he said, "the law of statistics will at some stage go against us and we will be exposed to a technical defect."

    Smilja Janic was another of those people so exposed. "I have no idea why NATO is bombing us," she said, weeping and shouting in Dusana Trivunca Street, where a second NATO bomb ripped through more houses about 300 yards from the first one.

    "I'm not any kind of politician," she said, standing in shards of glass and burnt-orange roof tiles. "I'm just an old woman and I don't understand."

    She gestured across the street to another expanse of blasted urban trash, where houses 56 and 58 Dusana Trivunca Street used to stand. "Voja and Radojka, they're probably still in that house," she said, describing her neighbors, who were teachers. "And Sofia and Jova, he was a policeman," she said.

    "I could never expect this to happen in this town," Mrs. Janic said. "I was a kid in World War II, and the Nazis just drove through town in their tanks. They didn't bomb us here."

    Tuesday, however, was the 58th anniversary of the Easter bombing of Belgrade by the Nazis, so the comparison with NATO was in the air, made incessantly by state-controlled radio, television and newspapers.

    Across the street, in the depths of the crater, a woman was wailing like a terrified animal. "You criminals!" she yelled, her voice cracking. "What have you done to us?"

    A policeman shooed a journalist away. "Her parents lived there," he said.

    In the crater, a seven of diamonds lay half-buried next to what appeared to be a child's collection of different brands of empty cigarette packets. There were Marlboro and Lucky Strike, Kent and Bastos, a Spanish brand that purports to be American.

    An orange and yellow comforter draped crazily from an empty, shattered window frame; a red plastic telephone, cracked in half, ended up on top of a demolished Mazda.

    "I don't have any feelings any more," said Aleks Zivkovic, a 27-year-old woman who lives in the town. "I'm just empty."

    She tried to help a Greek journalist with translation, then turned back. "This war was real for me from the beginning," she said. "But I couldn't ever believe my town would be destroyed -- it's small, it's almost too small to be on the map."

    On Vuka Karadzica Street, Mrs. Stojanovic had drawn a small crowd. "Clinton Nazi!" yelled one passerby. "Clinton will never kill the heart of Serbia," Mrs. Stojanovic said. Then she had some words for Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who spent part of her childhood in Belgrade with her diplomat father and who speaks some Serbian

    "Albright has no soul and no heart," Mrs. Stojanovic said. "She grew up with the Serbs and this is how she pays us back."

    A blasted Mercedes was covered with a fine layer of orange-brown dirt, like a perfect paint job. Policemen and emergency workers swept up glass and prowled the rubble, searching for life. No official tried to stop any journalist from doing interviews. There was no need. What happened here Monday night was obvious.




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