2001 Skopje police raid

During the 2001 insurgency in Macedonia, a raid was conducted by the Macedonian police against ethnic Albanian rebels in a suburb of Skopje on 7 August. The police killed the rebel group and captured their weapon supplies. Ethnic Albanian politicians acknowledged the police raid and the deaths but refused to comment. Members of the NLA and ethnic Albanians claimed the men were civilians.[10][11]

Skopje police raid
Part of the 2001 insurgency in Macedonia
Date7 August 2001
Location
Result

Macedonian victory[1][2][3]

  • Militants neutralized[1]
  • Weapons and ammunition seized[4][5]
  • Disbandment of the Skanderbeg special unit[3]
Belligerents
 Macedonia National Liberation Army
Commanders and leaders
Ljube Boškoski Lefter Koxhaj [1]
Nëdriçim Koxhaj [3]
Units involved
Macedonian police Skanderbeg special unit[6]
Strength
Unknown Unknown
Casualties and losses
None[7] 5 killed[8][3]
30 arrested[9][3]

Raid

The raid took place on 7 August 2001, in the Skopje suburb of Čair around 4:00 a.m. (UTC+2).[12] Five rebels were killed in the raid.[1] According to the Macedonian interior minister Ljube Boškovski, the Macedonian police acted on information that NLA rebels were planning an attack on the capital and that they would attack from the nearby town of Aračinovo,[2] the site of the Aračinovo crisis a month prior, after which they were evacuated by NATO forces. During the fighting in Aračinovo, the rebels claimed they would attack the capital city of Skopje, including the airport and oil refinery and that they had infiltrated cells ready to attack.[13][14]

Per Boškovski, the police tried to arrest the rebels, encountered "strong armed resistance" and returned fire.[1] He reported that 30 people were arrested in the police operation.[1] The Macedonian police found a large quantity of weapons, including 6 assault rifles, 5 grenade launchers, 400 rounds of ammunition, 5 pistols, 3 grenades and combat uniforms. Members of Macedonia's ethnic Albanian community confirmed the deaths in the police raid but refused to comment.[15][1][16]

Aftermath

On the following day, an investigator of the Human Rights Watch who was on the scene, Peter Bouckaert, said there was no evidence of "strong armed resistance" and that the men were lying down when they were shot.[12] The Macedonian version of events was also disputed by Albanian sources.[6] On the same day the NLA attacked a Macedonian army convoy near Tetovo in what would become known as Karpalak ambush, supposedly as retaliation for the 5 Albanians killed by the police during the raid.[11]

References

  1. "Macedonia rebels killed in raid". CNN. 7 August 2001. SKOPJE, Macedonia -- Five ethnic Albanian rebels have been killed in a police raid to seize illegal weapons, Interior Minister Ljube Boskovski has said.
  2. "Macedonia Police Kill Five Rebels in Skopje". Tehran Times. 8 August 2001. Retrieved 15 October 2022. SKOPJE -- Macedonian police killed five alleged ethnic Albanian rebels in a raid on a house in Skopje on Tuesday in a new blow to hopes of a peaceful end to a five-month guerrilla rebellion. "A terrorist group was preparing an attack on Skopje and the police carried out an operation early this morning," Minister Ljube Boskovski told Reuters.
  3. "Дали Охридскиот договор спречи граѓанска војна?". Civil Media (in Macedonian). 13 August 2019.
  4. "Macedonian Police Kill 5 Albanian Rebels". NY Times. Retrieved 15 October 2022. Police officers killed five Macedonian Albanian rebels today and seized illegal weapons in a raid that the interior minister said was intended to avert an attack on the capital, Skopje.
  5. "Macedonia Police Kill Five Rebels in Skopje". tehrantimes. Retrieved 15 October 2022. an AFP report said police in Skopje killed five albanians overnight and seized a van full of weapons in an operation seen as jeopardizing peace talks set to resume here Tuesday.
  6. M, Xh (2022-08-07). "21 vite nga rënia e komandant Telit, djali: Bashkë me shokët shkruat historinë". Agjencia Zhurnal.mk. (in Albanian). Retrieved 2023-06-20.
  7. RUBIN, ALISSA J. RUBIN. "Macedonian Police Kill 5 Separatists in Raid". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 16 October 2022. There were no police injuries reported in the incident, the first of its kind in Skopje since the current conflict erupted in February.
  8. "Macedonian Police Kill 5 Albanian Rebels". NY Times. Retrieved 15 October 2022. Police officers killed five Macedonian Albanian rebels today and seized illegal weapons in a raid that the interior minister said was intended to avert an attack on the capital, Skopje.
  9. "Macedonia rebels killed in raid". CNN. Retrieved 15 October 2022. A total of 30 people had been arrested in the police crackdown, Boskovski said.
  10. Krott, Rob. "Macedonia's Weaponry: A New Nation Re-Arms and Fights". The Smalls Arms Review. Retrieved 16 October 2022. She claimed the five men (who she of course did not know) were not Albanian terrorists. I wondered how these completely innocent men came to be in possession of a large arms cache. The raid made the front page of the Macedonian papers and in a photo of the contraband captured in the raid I counted at least six assault rifles, one scoped folding stock assault rifle, several loaded magazines, camouflage uniforms, and a large pile of ammo bandoliers for the South African Armscorp 40mm grenade launcher
  11. "Macedonia battle rages". CNN. 8 August 2001. Retrieved 16 October 2022. The rebels were apparently responding to the killings by Macedonian troops of five alleged rebels in Skopje on Tuesday. The rebels said they were civilians.
  12. "Five rebels shot dead by police in Skopje as peace edges closer". The Independent. 8 August 2001. Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  13. "Macedonian Albanian guerillas threaten to attack cities..." Reliefweb. Retrieved 16 October 2022. Commander Drin Korabi of the National Liberation Army (UCK) told dpa on 26 June that the protests "showed that Macedonians and the Macedonian government want a civil war with the Albanians." He added: "We warn them that our fighters will enter not only Skopje, but Kumanovo and other towns as well, if they continue avoiding dialogue with Albanians." His last point presumably refers to the authorities' refusal to negotiate with the UCK. Korabi said that the UCK has underground fighters in Skopje "waiting for a signal to act." He added that "we have the ability to take more territories under our control" if no political settlement is reached. PM
  14. "Macedonian government launches new attack on rebels". The Guardian. 11 June 2001. Retrieved 16 October 2022. On Sunday, a rebel leader known as Commander Hoxha said that they would attack "the airport, oil refineries, police stations in towns and other government installations," if the government targeted rebel forces in the north or in Aracinovo, a town just a few miles southeast of Skopje taken by the insurgents on Saturday.
  15. "5 Killed by Macedonian Police in Skopje - 2001-08-08". Voice of America. Retrieved 15 October 2022. A house and a mosque were raided in the action in a predominantly ethnic Albanian neighborhood on the north side of Skopje. Mr. Boskovski said the dawn raid was prompted by information that a terrorist group was preparing an attack on the capital.
  16. "Macedonian Police Kill 5 Albanian Rebels". Describing the clash today with Albanian rebels in Cair, a suburb of Skopje, Interior Minister Ljube Boskovski said: The group was planning terrorist activities in Skopje. We tried to arrest them, but during the operation we encountered strong armed resistance.The police returned fire, and among those killed was a rebel commander known as Teli, Mr. Boskovski said. The deaths were confirmed by Macedonian Albanian officials.
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