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Krusha massacres
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Krusha massacres

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Coordinates: 42°19′N 20°38′E / 42.317°N 20.633°E / 42.317; 20.633

Krusha massacres
Missing Men of Krusha e Madhe (Burrat e Krushes se Madhe).jpg
Soldiers of Kosovo are holding pictures in memory of the men who were killed or went missing during the Kosovo War.
Location Velika and Mala Kruša, near Orahovac, Kosovo, FR Yugoslavia
Date 25 March 1999
Afternoon (Central European Time)
Target Kosovo Albanian men
Attack type
Mass Killing
Deaths 90–109 men killed
Perpetrators Serbian special police

The Krusha massacres (Albanian: Masakra e Krushës së Madhe dhe Krushës së Vogël, Serbian: Масакр у Великој и Малој Круши, romanizedMasakr u Velikoj i Maloj Kruši) near Orahovac, Kosovo, were two massacres that took place during the Kosovo War on the afternoon of 25 March 1999, the day after the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia began.

At that time, witnesses reported that special police unit entered the village and separated the men and boys, and killed around 100 men and male teenagers over the age of 13.Human Right Watch reported that more than 90 men were killed. Then, the women and children were forced out. In 2020, Darko Tasić, a local Serb from the same village and member of the police reserve forces was convicted as one of the perpetrators of the massacre. It is one of the first cases in which the trial of one of the perpetrators has concluded.

One of witnesses of the murder was British journalist John Sweeney, who was in the place of the murder in that time, saw disposal of dead bodies in the Drini river, and later was an important witness of the trials of Krusha massacres.


War crime trials

The massacre at Velika Kruša became a part of war crimes indictment against Slobodan Milošević and other Serbian political and military leaders:

On or about 25 March 1999, the villages of Velika Kruša and Mala Kruša/Krushe e Madhe and Krushe e Vogel were attacked by forces of the FRY and Serbia.

Village residents took refuge in a forested area outside Velika Kruša/Krushe e Madhe, where they were able to observe the police systematically looting and then burning the villagers' houses.

On or about the morning of 26 March 1999, Serb police located the villagers in the forest.

The police ordered the women and small children to leave the area and to go to Albania. The police then searched the men and boys and took their identity documents, after which they were made to walk to an uninhabited house between the forest and Mala Kruša/Krushe e Vogel.

Once the men and boys were assembled inside the house, the police opened fire on the group.

After several minutes of gunfire, the police piled hay on the men and boys and set fire to it in order to burn the bodies. As a result of the shootings and the fire, approximately 105 Kosovo Albanian men and boys were killed by the Serb police.

— War Crimes Indictment against Milošević and others

See also

a.   ^ The political status of Kosovo is disputed. Having unilaterally declared independence from Serbia in 2008, Kosovo is formally recognised as a sovereign state by 101 UN member states (with another 13 states recognising it at some point but then withdrawing their recognition) and 92 states not recognizing it, while Serbia continues to claim it as a part of its own territory.

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