"He distorted data on Serbian crimes", the Kosovo Special Prosecution raided the home of Shkëlzen Gashi, the author of the problematic exhibition
The Special Prosecution Office has ordered the Kosovo Police to collect information and relevant evidence regarding Shkëlzen Gashi, the author of an exhibition accused of inaccuracies about Serbian massacres during the war in Kosovo.
"According to material evidence and reports published in the media by the injured parties in the Dubrava massacre, and other massacres that occurred in Kosovo, as well as from reports by citizens who were injured and victims of these massacres, the Special Prosecution has opened a criminal case against the suspect Shkëlzen Gashi, who with his public actions is suspected of causing discord and intolerance among our citizens by damaging and changing the truth of the liberation war in Kosovo, and it is considered that with these actions the suspect has fulfilled the elements of the criminal offense "Inciting discord and intolerance" from Article 141 of the CCK.
Therefore, the State Prosecutor, in order to fully clarify the factual situation and secure other evidence in this criminal case, AUTHORIZES police officers from the Directorate Against Organized Crime and Serious Crimes to IMMEDIATELY undertake all necessary investigative actions to collect relevant information and evidence, clarifying the reason for the suspect's actions, as well as to secure other evidence on the basis of which further actions will then be decided," the order of the Special Prosecution reads.
The prosecution has requested “in particular” that “the presence of the suspect Shkëlzen Gashi be immediately ensured”. The order states that he “will be interviewed in his capacity as a suspect, explaining his actions, and where he obtained the sources of the information that he has published and which appear to be untrue”.
Integra and Admovere, the two organizations behind the exhibition that inaccurately depicted massacres that occurred during the Kosovo war, apologized in a statement Sunday morning. The two organizations, led by Shkëlzen Gashi and Kushtrim Koliqi, called for an “open discussion” to address the issue.
The exhibition, which sparked widespread outrage in Kosovo, with the Municipality of Pristina revoking the permit for its display, turned out to have been funded by the Kosovo Assembly. Today, there was a protest in front of the Assembly, organized by organizations of categories emerging from the war in Kosovo.
Shkëlzen Gashi said on Saturday that the data on the massacres were based on the list of those killed from the "Kosovo Memory Book" of the Humanitarian Law Center in Kosovo (HLC), an organization led by Natasha Kandić, a Serbian human rights activist.
But the Humanitarian Law Center said in a response that same day that the data presented in the exhibition in some cases provides an inaccurate picture of the crimes and this is not related to issues of interpretation, but to "a basic lack of knowledge about international humanitarian law, the facts proven in court and the way to read the data."
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