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1. Introduction
I am very
pleased to have this opportunity to update you on the Kosovo, and
the important contribution made to our mission by the Multinational
Specialised Unit - we call it the MSU - which contains a great
contingent of your Arma dei Carabinieri. They play a key part in
helping us to achieve the mission of the Kosovo Force - the K-FOR
which I have the honour to command. The core of our KFOR mission is
to provide a 'safe and secure environment' in Kosovo.
2. Kosovo and KFOR
The Kosovo is
about the size of the Italian region of Veneto. Some 2.000.000
people live in the province, 88% Kosovo-Albaniens, 7% Kosovo-Serbs
and 5% others. The average age is 23 years, an average family has 6
persons and the average income is 200 euro. You will recall the
inhuman ethnic cleansing which took place in Kosovo five years ago.
This was followed by the NATO bombing campaign which prompted some
days of looting and lawlessness. In June 1999 the Serbian
authorities agreed with NATO that they would withdraw from Kosovo,
and the KFOR moved in the province, took over control and started
to establish a secure and safe environment. On the basis of UN
Security Resolution 1244 an international civil presence in Kosovo
was established in order to provide ad interim administration,
while establishing and overseeing the development of provisional
democratic self-governing institutions.
The first
priorities were for the UN to establish its Mission - an
administration we know as UNMIK - to act as a government while NATO
soldiers re-established law and order. Together, NATO forces, and
UNMIK, with a large number of Non Government Organisations (the
'NGOs') organised the supply of food, water, sanitation, power,
shelter, and health care. Very early on, UNMIK began to establish a
new Police Force for Kosovo, and invited large numbers of civilian
policemen from many nations, but the problem of law and order was
immediate - and UNMIK initiatives would take time to implement. The
Supreme Allied Commander Europe, favoured the idea of deploying
paramilitary police because conventional military forces are not
generally trained to face public disorder and criminality, and the
UN Police would take time to arrive. Paramilitary forces, trained
to act as both policemen and soldiers, offer a range of skills and
equipment, and an organisation which could support the NATO
brigades and battalions in the varied challenges they faced in
Kosovo.
Both Italy and
France contributed forces to the Multinational Specialised Unit
from the Arma dei Carabinieri and the Gendarmes. As the
international police arrived in force a modus operandi was agreed
whereby the internationals in the UNMIK-Police provided local
policing, and the KFOR MSU took on large, province-wide tasks.
Today, KFOR has nearly completed five years in Kosovo, and still
retains the MSU Regiment under command of COM KFOR. The problems of
rebuilding this 'collapsed province' have evolved, but there are
still many challenges.
Only recently
the MSU Regiment, in the meantime reinforced by Estonian Special
Police, proved its outstanding skills when dealing with the riots
on 17 and 18 March. As COM KFOR's reserve being employed to the hot
spots like Mitrovica and Gracanica they contributed decisively to
the success of this challenging operation. There are still around
3500 international policemen in Kosovo. The Kosovo Police Service
is now just over 6000 strong. This force is gaining experience, but
is only four years old, and still needs assistance in tackling some
of the greater law and order challenges. For these reasons, it
makes sense to retain forces who are able to carry out tasks which
require more than civil police skills, but which are not suited to
soldiers. Thus we still have lots of tasks for the Carabinieri and
the Gendarmes in the KFOR MSU. I will now try to give you an idea
of what troops we have in the MSU and what they contribute to the
safe and secure environment.
3. The Troops in the MSU
The MSU can be
described as a specialised asset for the management of law
enforcement and crowd control. It generally operates in order to
prevent trouble: patrols provide a presence on the ground and gain
the information essential for the direction of any crowd control
activity. The force therefore has a role at the centre of a Peace
Support Operation. The head of the MSU acts as COM KFOR's adviser
regarding matters of security and public order. He commands this
regiment sized grouping of the MSU. The MSU is able to act
Kosovo-wide and can support itself without needing logistic
assistance from the regional brigades. The MSU Headquarters,
although it looks like a military headquarters and performs
military planning, and command and control functions, contains some
specialist police elements. These give it the essential
capabilities against criminal, terrorist and extremist activity,
and for more general law enforcement. The Headquarters is
essentially manned by the Carabinieri and French Gendarmes.
4. The main striking force elements are the deployable companies in
the MSU Battalion.
The individual
carabinieri and gendarmes are well armed with a range of modern
personal infantry weapons and communications equipment. These
people have high skill levels: both the Italian and French elements
are trained to support their most specialist national police
elements and to take on the most challenging tasks, including
mentally deranged and violent criminals. These troops, from Italy,
France and Estonia have trained together and achieved an impressive
degree of interoperability. I mentioned that the capabilities of
the MSU enable it to operate against criminal activity, terrorism
and extremist activity as well as more general law enforcement. The
MSU has been deployed, as already mentioned, against some civil
disorder situations in Kosovo, including in the ethnically-divided
town of Mitrovica. More of its time, however, is spent in cordon
and search operations, patrolling, and operations against organised
crime, like the trafficking of migrants and prostitution, and the
smuggling of drugs, weapons and explosives.
Last month, in
February, the MSU mounted over 850 patrols for various purposes as
well as doing escort and search tasks.
5. What the MSU gives COM KFOR
To summarise, I
would say that Kosovo, a province with many problems, is being
rebuilt as a team effort by many nations under the NATO and UN
banners. Most of the problems being encountered are complex, and
cannot be solved by a single agency working on its own. This is no
less true in the area of security. In a Peace Support Mission there
is a balance to be struck between the reassurance of the local
population, some of whom are not happy with their neighbours, and
deterrence against extremism and its companion, organised crime.
NATO troops in KFOR are not generally trained, equipped and
organised to deal with either civil disorder or organised
crime.
The UNMIK
international police and the new Kosovo Police Service are neither
equipped, trained nor experienced in meeting civil disorder, nor in
coordinating operations across an area the size of Kosovo. The
answer is to have a paramilitary force. I am fortunate to have the
MSU who have the skills of both policemen and light infantry, and
individuals of exceptional training, experience and motivation. The
Carabinieri and Gendarmes, together with their Estonian colleagues,
are well able to meet these complex challenges, and we are very
grateful to them, and to the governments who have provided them,
for their help. Your troops are true to their motto: Semper
Fidelis.
(*) - General, Commander of
KFOR. |