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Thousands of displaced Albanians arrive at refugee camp Blace in the Kosovo-Macedonia border area. Getty Images
Thousands of displaced Albanians arrive at refugee camp Blace in the Kosovo-Macedonia border area. Getty Images

1998 - Conflict in Kosovo

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Updated 19 April 2025

1998 - Conflict in Kosovo

1998 - Conflict in Kosovo
  • The plight of the mainly Muslim ethnic Albanian population during the war drew humanitarian assistance from across the Islamic world

DUBAI: By the standards of many recent conflicts, the Kosovo war in 1998 and 1999 was brief. It began with an armed uprising by the Kosovo Liberation Army against Serbian rule over the Kosovo region of rump Yugoslavia.聽

President Slobodan Milosevic鈥檚 regime in Belgrade responded with overbearing force, spawning a massive refugee crisis and raising the specter of a Bosnia-like slaughter of Kosovar Muslims.聽

NATO intervened with a prolonged campaign of bombing, leading to a peace accord and an end to the fighting. In February 2008, Kosovo declared its independence from Serbia amid unprecedented scenes of joy and jubilation.聽

The US and several EU member countries recognized Kosovo as an independent state, but Serbia, backed by Russia, did not. Since then Kosovo, a parliamentary democracy with a lower-middle-income economy, has been in a kind of limbo.聽

As someone who grew up a child of the Bosnian war in Sarajevo in the 1990s, the events in nearby Kosovo are etched forever in my mind. I am all too aware of the ancient hatreds that lay beneath the events there. Historically, Kosovo lay at the heart of the Serbian empire, having been the site of the coronations of a number of Serbian kings during the Middle Ages.聽

How we wrote it




Arab News鈥 front page covered escalating Serbian assaults on Albanian villages in Kosovo.

Despite gaining a measure of autonomy under the former Yugoslavia in 1974, the mainly Muslim ethnic Albanian population of the province chafed at the continued dominance of ethnic Serbs. In the late 1980s, the leader of the Kosovars, Ibrahim Rugova, initiated a policy of non-violent resistance to the abrogation of the province鈥檚 constitutional autonomy by Milosevic.聽

The president and members of Kosovo鈥檚 Serbian minority had long fretted about the fact that ethnic Albanians were in demographic and political control of a region that held deep significance to Orthodox Christian Serbs. During the 1992-1995 war in Bosnia, and even after the break-up of Yugoslavia, Kosovars began to be viewed with growing suspicion by Serb nationalists.聽

Popular support, meanwhile, swung in favor of ethnic Albanian radicals who were convinced their demands for autonomy could not be secured through Rugova鈥檚 peaceful methods. In 1996, the Kosovo Liberation Army emerged, carrying out sporadic attacks against Serbian police and politicians in a campaign that grew in intensity over the following two years.聽

The heavy-handed response of the Serbian police, paramilitary groups and army triggered a massive refugee crisis that drew the attention of the international media and community. An informal coalition made up of the US, the UK, Germany, France, Italy and Russia, known as the Contact Group, demanded an immediate ceasefire, among other things.聽

Key Dates

  • 1

    Kosovo conflict begins with armed uprising by the Kosovo Liberation Army.

    Timeline Image March 5, 1998

  • 2

    NATO launches campaign of airstrikes against Serbia.

    Timeline Image March 24, 1999

  • 3

    NATO airstrikes end 11 weeks after they began.

    Timeline Image June 10, 1999

  • 4

    Yugoslavia ceases to exist, renamed State Union of Serbia and Montenegro. Montenegro declares independence on May 21, 2006.

    Timeline Image Feb. 4, 2003

  • 5

    First direct talks since 1999 between ethnic Serbian and Kosovar leaders on future status of UN-run Kosovo take place in Vienna.

  • 6

    Kosovo unilaterally declares independence from Serbia, a move still contested by some to this day.

    Timeline Image Feb. 17, 2008

The UN Security Council condemned what it described as an excessive use of force by Serbia and imposed an arms embargo but this failed to halt the violence. On March 24, 1999, NATO began a campaign of airstrikes targeting Serbian military targets. In response, Serbian forces drove hundreds of thousands of Kosovars into Albania, Macedonia (now North Macedonia) and Montenegro.聽

Though the wartime suffering of the Kosovars elicited sympathy and support from the Islamic world, some leaders criticized NATO for sidestepping the UN and labeled its military campaign a 鈥渉umanitarian war.鈥澛

The legitimacy of organization鈥檚 unilateral decision to launch airstrikes was questionable under international law. However, the UN secretary-general at the time, Kofi Annan, supported the intervention on principle, saying: 鈥淭here are times when the use of force may be legitimate in the pursuit of peace.鈥澛

Arab countries such as Libya and Iraq, which had close relations with Yugoslavia, predictably insisted on a political solution. The Gulf states, led by 海角直播, maintained a focus on the provision of humanitarian assistance and efforts to find a peaceful resolution to the conflict.聽

海角直播 was the first country to respond with aid, dispatching two relief flights that delivered more than 120 tonnes of aid, including tents, dates, blankets and carpets, according to official statements at the time. A Saudi C-130 Hercules relief plane carrying aid flew daily from Jeddah or Riyadh to Albania鈥檚 capital, Tirana, where Saudi Embassy and air force personnel handled the cargo.聽




Hundreds of displaced Kosovars queue up at Cegrane refugee camp in Macedonia to get supplies after their arrival. AFP

The Kingdom also provided a field hospital in Tirana, which opened on May 24, 1999, and 10 other health centers across Albania and Macedonia. A Saudi telethon appeal on April 16 raised almost $19 million. The Islamic Relief Organization in Jeddah, which helped organize it, said it sent $12 million in humanitarian aid.聽

A separate Kuwaiti TV fundraising initiative raised $7 million in one day, with the emir, Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmed Al-Sabah, personally donating $1 million.聽

Organizations from the UAE set up one of the largest relief camps in Kukes, near the Albanian border, which provided about 10,000 Kosovar refugees with food and access to basic amenities, including a fully equipped field hospital. The Red Crescent set up refugee camps in Macedonia and Albania.聽

The NATO bombing campaign lasted 11 weeks and eventually expanded to Belgrade, causing heavy damage to the city鈥檚 infrastructure and the inadvertent deaths of many civilians. In June 1999, the Yugoslav government accepted a peace proposal mediated by Russia and Finland.聽

NATO and Yugoslavia signed a peace accord outlining plans for the withdrawal of troops and the return of nearly 1 million refugees and 500,000 internally displaced Kosovars. Most ethnic Serbs left the region.聽

NATO鈥檚 humanitarian military intervention saved the lives of thousands of innocent Kosovars.聽

  • Emina Osmandzikovic, is a former contributor on refugee issues for Arab News. She grew up in Sarajevo in the 1990s during the Bosnian war.聽


Pakistani musicians use folk songs and rap to raise climate change awareness

Pakistani musicians use folk songs and rap to raise climate change awareness
Updated 12 min 24 sec ago

Pakistani musicians use folk songs and rap to raise climate change awareness

Pakistani musicians use folk songs and rap to raise climate change awareness
  • Sham Bhai has toured a dozen villages in Sindh teaching people about climate adaptation and resilience through song
  • Music is a useful medium for sharing information in places like rural Sindh where literacy is low and Internet access is scarce

UMERKOT, Pakistan: Villagers hush when Pakistani folk musician Sham Bhai starts singing about climate change, her clear voice rising above the simple squat dwellings.

鈥淲e are the people of the south. The winds seem to be blowing from the north. The winds seem cold and warm. My heart is burned from seeing the collapsed houses in the rain. Oh, beloved, come home soon.鈥

Sham is from Sindh, the Pakistani province worst-hit three years ago by climate-worsened deluges that affected tens of millions of people nationwide and washed away homes, farmland and infrastructure.

She has toured a dozen villages in Sindh during the past two years, teaching people about climate adaptation and resilience through song, a useful medium for sharing information in places where literacy is low and Internet is scarce.

鈥淲hen we give a message through song, it is easy to communicate to people because they understand it,鈥 the 18-year-old singer told The Associated Press. She was performing in Umerkot district, singing in her native tongue and official provincial language, Sindhi, which is more likely to be spoken and understood in places like Umerkot than the official and national language of Pakistan, Urdu.

Women dance during a performance of a Pakistani folk musician Sham Bhai at a village in Umerkot, a district of Pakistan's southeastern Sindh province on July 17, 2025. (AP/File)

Sindh recorded more than 1,000 rain-related deaths in a few months in 2022. The damage remains visible. Broken roads and flattened houses that residents never rebuilt. Floods submerged swathes of Sham鈥檚 district, Tando Allahyar. News footage showed people wading through waist-deep water.

鈥淭he meaning of the song is that poor people鈥檚 homes built on mud are not strong,鈥 Sham explains. 鈥淲omen and children face hardship during the rains because they are vulnerable in the absence of men who go away to work. The women of the house call on their men to return because the weather is so bad.鈥

Poverty and illiteracy deepen people鈥檚 vulnerability.

Alternating patches of parched and lush farmland flank the road to Umerkot. Dry and wet spells buffet the province, and local farmers have to adapt. They now focus on winter crops rather than summer ones because the rain is more predictable in the colder months.

Villagers watch a performance of a Pakistani folk musician Sham Bhai at a village in Umerkot, a district of Pakistan's southeastern Sindh province on July 17, 2025. (AP/File)

鈥淭he monsoon season used to come on time, but now it starts late,鈥 farmer Ghulam Mustafa Mahar said. 鈥淪ometimes there is no rain. All patterns are off-course due to climate change for the last five years.鈥

He and others have switched from crops to livestock to survive.

There is little infrastructure away from the center of the district. Children get excited seeing sedans crunch through the dust.

The area is mostly poor and very hot.

Sindh鈥檚 literacy rate falls to 38 percent in rural areas. Sham said singing informs those who can鈥檛 learn about climate change because they can鈥檛 read.

Mindful of their audience, the three singers warm people up with popular tunes to catch their attention before launching into mournful tunes about the wind and rain, their lyrics inspired by writers and poets from Sindh.

鈥淧eople are acting on our advice; they are planting trees and making their houses strong to face climate change,鈥 said Sham.

鈥淲omen and children suffer a lot during bad conditions, which damage their homes.鈥

Women and girls of all ages can be seen working outdoors in Sindh, tending to crops or livestock. They gather food and water, along with wood for fuel. They are predominantly restricted to this type of work and other domestic chores because of gender norms and inequalities. When extreme weather strikes, they are often the first to suffer. One villager said when heavy rain battered homes in 2022, it crushed and killed whoever was inside, including children.

Pakistani folk musician Sham Bhai, center, arrives with her team members for her performance at a village in Umerkot, a district of Pakistan's southeastern Sindh province on July 17, 2025. (AP/File)

One woman is rapping for climate justice

People in rural areas have no idea what climate change is, said Urooj Fatima, an activist from the city of Jhuddo. Her stage name is Sindhi Chhokri, and she is known locally for campaigning on issues such as women鈥檚 rights.
But she has turned her attention to raising awareness about climate change since flooding devastated her village in 2022 and again in 2024.

鈥淲e can engage a lot of audiences through rap. If we go to a village and gather a community, there are a maximum of 50. But everyone listens to songs. Through rap, we can reach out to hundreds of thousands of people through our voice and our message.鈥

She said hip-hop isn鈥檛 common in Pakistan, but the genre resonates because of its tradition as an expression of life, hardship and struggle.

She has yet to finish her latest climate change rap, but wrote one in response to the 2022 flooding in neighboring Balochistan, the country鈥檚 poorest and least developed province, because she felt it wasn鈥檛 getting enough attention. She performed it at festivals in Pakistan and promoted it across her social media accounts. Officials at the time said more help was needed from the central government for people to rebuild their lives.

鈥淭here are potholes on the road; the roads are ruined,鈥 raps Urooj. 鈥淚 am telling the truth. Will your anger rain down on me? Where was the Balochistan government when the floods came? My pen thirsts for justice. Now they鈥檝e succeeded, these thieving rulers. This isn鈥檛 a rap song, this is a revolution.鈥

She and her sister Khanzadi campaign on the ground and social media, protesting, visiting villages, and planting thousands of trees. She wants the Sindh government to take climate change awareness seriously by providing information and education to those who need it the most, people living in rural areas.

鈥淭his happens every year,鈥 said Urooj, referring to the floods. 鈥淐limate change affects a person鈥檚 whole life. Their whole life becomes a disaster.鈥

She cites the disproportionate and specific impact of climate change on women and girls, the problems they experience with displacement, education, hygiene, and nutrition, attributing these to entrenched gender discrimination.

鈥淔or women, there are no opportunities or facilities. And then, if a flood comes from above, they face more difficulties.鈥

She elicits controversy in rural areas. Half the feedback she receives is negative. She is undeterred from speaking out on social taboos and injustice.

鈥淩ap is a powerful platform. If our rap reaches just a few people, then this is a very good achievement. We will not let our voices be suppressed. We will always raise our voices high.鈥


Pakistan partners with UAE鈥檚 DP World to launch export gateway in Dubai

Pakistan partners with UAE鈥檚 DP World to launch export gateway in Dubai
Updated 30 min 9 sec ago

Pakistan partners with UAE鈥檚 DP World to launch export gateway in Dubai

Pakistan partners with UAE鈥檚 DP World to launch export gateway in Dubai
  • The initiative is a joint venture between Pakistan鈥檚 NLC and the UAE鈥檚 DP World logistics management company
  • The Mart is designed to facilitate business through integrated warehousing, logistics and exhibition spaces

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani exporters and manufacturers are set to expand their global footprint through 鈥淧akistan Mart鈥 in Dubai, Pakistani state media reported, with the initiative aimed at granting Pakistani products direct access to 鈥渉igh-demand鈥 markets.

The 鈥淧akistan Mart鈥 is a joint venture between the Pakistan鈥檚 National Logistics Corporation (NLC) and the UAE鈥檚 DP World logistics management company to establish a dedicated trade hub in Dubai.

The development followed the visit of a high-level delegation representing the NLC and DP World to the Islamabad Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ICCI), the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) news agency reported.

The delegation was led by Brig. Mohammad Yousaf, Director Plans at NLC, along with Abdullah Yaqoob Al-Sayed Ahmad Al-Hashmi, Head of Traders Markets at DP World, Fakhre Alam, Vice Chairman of DP World, and Junaid Tariq, Director Business at NLC.

鈥淭he facility in Dubai will provide state-of-the-art logistics, warehousing, and retail infrastructure to facilitate direct access for Pakistani manufacturers and exporters to high-demand markets across the Middle East, Africa, and South America,鈥 Brig. Yousaf was quoted as saying at a session outlining the scope of Pakistan Mart.

Pakistani exporters often participate in major trade exhibitions in Dubai to showcase products ranging from textiles to food and pharmaceuticals. These events offer direct access to global buyers, enhance brand visibility and support Pakistan鈥檚 efforts to expand its export footprint in the Gulf and beyond.

On the occasion, DP World Head of Traders Markets Al-Hashmi described Pakistan Mart as a 鈥済ateway to global trade,鈥 designed to facilitate business through integrated warehousing, logistics and exhibition spaces.

The UAE is Pakistan鈥檚 third-largest trading partner after China and the United States, and a major source of remittances and foreign investment. Policymakers in Pakistan consider the Emirates an optimal export destination due to their geographical proximity, which minimizes transportation and freight costs while facilitating commercial transactions.

Pakistan鈥檚 exports reached approximately $26.9 billion between July 2024 and April 2025, reflecting a 6.4 percent increase compared to the same period in the previous year, according to the Pakistan Business Council (PBC). Leading export sectors included textiles, food products, chemicals and pharmaceuticals, and leather goods.

ICCI Senior Vice President Abdul Rehman Siddiqui termed the project a 鈥渕ilestone鈥 on Pakistan鈥檚 logistics and export landscape, according to the APP report.

鈥淭he synergy between NLC鈥檚 regional capabilities and DP World鈥檚 global network would provide immense opportunities for Pakistani businesses,鈥 he said. 


Thrilling action on the court on day 1 of 2025 FIBA Asia Cup

Thrilling action on the court on day 1 of 2025 FIBA Asia Cup
Updated 06 August 2025

Thrilling action on the court on day 1 of 2025 FIBA Asia Cup

Thrilling action on the court on day 1 of 2025 FIBA Asia Cup
  • Hosts 海角直播 lose out to highly rated China in the opening game of the basketball competition; in the other game in Group C, Jordan hold off India
  • In Group D, New Zealand record a comfortable victory over Iraq, while Chinese Taipei shock the Philippines

JEDDAH: Basketball fans were treated to four thrilling encounters on the opening day of the 2025 FIBA Asia Cup in Jeddah on Tuesday, as 16 teams begin their quest for glory at the 31st staging of the competition.

Hosts 海角直播 lost 88-93 to China, who are the most decorated team in the history of the tournament, with 16 titles to their name.

Despite the disappointment, coach Ricard Casas praised the Saudi players for their performance saying: 鈥淭hey really played well and showed their character against China, which is considered one of the best basketball teams in Asia.

鈥淪till, we have two more games and hopefully we can qualify for the quarter finals.鈥

The Kingdom鈥檚 shooting guard, Mohammed Abdurahkman who plays for Spanish team Club Basket Bilbao Berri, said the team did their best but luck was not on their side.

鈥淲e had a tough game with China but it is important for us to come back and win the next games against India and Jordan,鈥 he added.

In the other game in Group C, Jordanian forward Hashem Abbas came through for his team when they needed him most as Jordan held off India in overtime to win 91-84.

海角直播 will take on Jordan on Thursday, while India faces China.

In Group D, New Zealand, nicknamed the 鈥淭all Blacks,鈥 recorded a comfortable 100-78 win over Iraq and have their sights set on going all the way.

鈥淥ur focus is to finish as high as we can on the podium,鈥 said head coach Judd Flavell. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a tough tournament and our pool is tough. If we鈥檙e going to be our best, these teams will expose areas for improvement.鈥

Chinese Taipei and the Philippines lined up for the final game of the day, which attracted an impressive crowd that saw former come from behind to shock the latter with a 95-87 victory.

The Chinese face Iraq on Thursday, while the Philippines will need a win against New Zealand to keep their hopes alive.

The lineup of games on Wednesday is: title holders Australia vs. South Korea, Japan vs. Syria, Guam vs. Iran, and Qatar vs. Lebanon.


Trump declines to say if he supports or opposes potential Gaza takeover by Israel

Trump declines to say if he supports or opposes potential Gaza takeover by Israel
Updated 06 August 2025

Trump declines to say if he supports or opposes potential Gaza takeover by Israel

Trump declines to say if he supports or opposes potential Gaza takeover by Israel
  • Netanyahu convened his Security Cabinet to direct the military on the war's next stage, hinting that even tougher action was possible

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump declined to say whether he supported or opposed a potential military takeover of Gaza by Israel and said his administration鈥檚 focus was on increasing food access to the Palestinian enclave under assault from Washington鈥檚 ally.

KEY QUOTES
鈥淚 know that we are there now trying to get people fed,鈥 Trump told reporters on Tuesday. 鈥淎s far as the rest of it, I really can鈥檛 say. That鈥檚 going to be pretty much up to Israel.鈥
Trump said Israel and Arab states were going to help with food and aid distribution in Gaza and provide financial assistance. He did not elaborate.

WHY IT鈥橲 IMPORTANT
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met senior security officials on Tuesday, with media reporting he favored a complete military takeover of Gaza.
Trump had proposed a US takeover of Gaza earlier this year, an idea which was condemned by many around the world including human rights experts, Arab states, the UN and Palestinians.

CONTEXT
Israel鈥檚 near two-year long military assault in Gaza has killed tens of thousands, caused a hunger crisis, internally displaced nearly the entire population and led to accusations of genocide at the International Court of Justice and of war crimes at the International Criminal Court.
Israel denies the accusations and casts its military offensive as self-defense following an October 2023 attack by Palestinian Hamas militants that killed 1,200 and in which over 250 were taken hostage.

 

 


海角直播 to host Global IoT Congress 2025

海角直播 to host Global IoT Congress 2025
Updated 06 August 2025

海角直播 to host Global IoT Congress 2025

海角直播 to host Global IoT Congress 2025
  • The Kingdom ranks first among the top three Arab countries in smart city investments and leads the Arab world in the Government AI Readiness Index as well as the 2024 Government Electronic and Mobile Services Maturity Index

海角直播 has emerged as the Middle East and North Africa鈥檚 largest digital economy, with a market value exceeding SR495 billion ($132 billion) over the past few years. Meanwhile, the Kingdom鈥檚 Internet of Things market specifically is estimated to grow 12-18 percent year-on-year to reach a market size of SR25.8 billion, reflecting the technologically progressive approach that 海角直播 has taken to building the country鈥檚 future. The Kingdom also ranks first among the top three Arab countries in smart city investments and leads the Arab world in the Government AI Readiness Index as well as the 2024 Government Electronic and Mobile Services Maturity Index.
Global investments in IoT are forecast to exceed SR4.5 trillion by 2026, and in the Middle East and North Africa, the IoT market is projected to reach SR90 billion by the same year.

FASTFACT

海角直播鈥檚 IoT market specifically is estimated to grow 12-18 percent year-on-year to reach a market size of SR25.8 billion.

As the region鈥檚 largest IoT market, Riyadh is set to host the Global Internet of Things Congress 2025 on Oct. 21. The three-day event 鈥 the largest dedicated IoT event in the Kingdom and the wider MENA region 鈥 will put the Saudi capital in the spotlight as a regional powerhouse of emerging IoT technologies.
More than 200 prominent exhibitors and speakers ranging from industries like IoT, artificial intelligence, smart cities, energy, healthcare, and other emerging technologies, are expected from all over the world to address over 5,000 high-profile attendees such as industry leaders, C-level businesspeople and governmental stakeholders.
The Congress, organized by the Internet of Things Association, is set to host public entities, academic institutions, private companies, investors, entrepreneurs, and media representatives from all over the world. This landmark event will feature keynote sessions, interactive workshops, a technology exhibition, and strategic partnership announcements.
Abdullah bin Salem Al-Bedaiwy, chairman of the board at the IoTA, said: 鈥淎s a nonprofit organization, the association is committed to development and innovation, encouraging investment, enhancing local content, and increasing localization within the IoT sector. Our initiative aims to launch a global IoT platform in its largest market, the Kingdom of 海角直播. We extend our sincere gratitude to all our partners who contributed to making this vision a reality, and we look forward to the support of both the public and private sectors to ensure the success of this global event on Saudi soil.鈥
He added: 鈥淎s a nonprofit organization, the IoTA is committed to fostering innovation and advancing both human and technological capital in the IoT sector. Our vision is to host the region鈥檚 largest dedicated IoT event in its biggest market, the Kingdom of 海角直播. We extend our sincere gratitude to all our partners who have contributed to making this possible, and we look forward to the support of both the public and the private sector, to ensure the success of this global gathering in 海角直播.鈥

Global Internet of Things Congress 2025 will cultivate cross-border and cross-sector knowledge exchange, drive innovation, and unlock investment opportunities, aligned with the objectives of digital transformation in 海角直播鈥檚 Vision 2030.