Serbians commemorate massacres by Nato and its Islamist allies - Photos/Video
06/05/2016 18:35
While the war against NATO-backed terrorists still rages in Syria, most of the visible scars of Nato’s criminal bombing of Serbia have now healed in the capital Belgrade. But the memories of the many innocent victims of NATO missiles and of the Islamist death squads of Albanians and Arab Jihadis in Kosovo are still raw.
APF Vice-President Nick Griffin addresses a conference organised by the National Serbian Front. Mr Griffin took the photos beneath in the heart of Belgrade last week. Below them, a useful RT report on the recent anti-Nato demonstrations in Belgrade.
"This week marks 16 years since NATO's 3 month bombing campaign against Yugoslavia. Protests meet the event in Serbia where western flags were set on fire. Serbs want the alliance to pay up. Two Serbian NGOs have said NATO should be required to pay compensation for the devastating destruction inflicted during the 1999 attack. Serbian experts put the price tag at anywhere between 60 to 100 billion dollars. The bombing took place without any go-ahead from the United Nations which is a violation of international law and norms. John Bosnitch, journalist and political consultant is In the Now."
The banners carry the faces and names of all the victims of Nato and Islamist war crimes. These include not only soldiers but also journalists murdered when Nato bombed the Serbian TV station and building workers abducted and slaughtered by the terrorists of the Kosovo Liberation Army.
From: apfeurope.com
"This week marks 16 years since NATO's 3 month bombing campaign against Yugoslavia. Protests meet the event in Serbia where western flags were set on fire. Serbs want the alliance to pay up. Two Serbian NGOs have said NATO should be required to pay compensation for the devastating destruction inflicted during the 1999 attack. Serbian experts put the price tag at anywhere between 60 to 100 billion dollars. The bombing took place without any go-ahead from the United Nations which is a violation of international law and norms. John Bosnitch, journalist and political consultant is In the Now."