KOSOVO : SERB PART OF MITROVICA
Mitrovica
has a sad reputation and has become the symbol of inter-ethnic hate in
Kosovo. Cut in two by a bridge, the northern section of the town is mostly
Serb and the southern section is mostly Albanian. The mood of the Serb
community oscillates between hate and resentment. Whereas the Albanian
section has an abundance of goods of all kinds, the Serbs in Mitrovica
suffer serious shortages (gas, cigarettes) and even food is difficult to
find.
Alcoholism is rife, particularly among those whom the war has left full of
hate and burning with a desire for revenge. Former militiamen now have an
identify crisis and their nationalistic ideas and general frustration have
spurred some of them to burn the Orthodox cross into their skin, using a
lit cigarette. Serbs here have the impression of being caught in a vice with
Milosevic on one side and the opprobrium of the West on the other, and currently
direct their hate against the US. Anti-American propaganda is omnipresent.
Slogans such as "Fuck the Coca" and satirical representations are
commonplace.
There are also less innocuous and macabre signs that Mitrovica residents
apparently respond to. Ideas of national unity, liberation from the yoke
of the oppressor, these concepts seem to trigger a semblance of identity
among all, including women and children. France is regularly targeted and
the French KFOR soldiers are occasionally taunted: France is seen as a country
that used to be a friend and that has betrayed its friendship. Just as before
the conflict, nationalists make sure they keep the fear of Albanians alive
in the Serb minority. This fear transformed through violence into rejection
is the phenomenon Milosevic cashed in on to draw his people into war.