INTERVIEW-Brovina goes from jail to Kosovo presidency bid By Fredrik Dahl PRISTINA, Yugoslavia, Nov 13 (Reuters) - Just over a year ago, Flora Brovina was in a grim Serbian prison. Now she is campaigning to become president of Kosovo. And the ethnic Albanian human rights activist, doctor and poet is delivering a message of tolerance and co-existence, of reconciliation rather than revenge. Kosovo's ethnic Albanian majority hopes, and many minority Serbs fear, that a general election on Saturday will move the U.N.-governed Yugoslav province closer to independence. Brovina, candidate of the Democratic Party of Kosovo of former guerrilla leader Hashim Thaci, makes clear independence is also her aim but vows to try and break down ethnic barriers if elected, saying Kosovo belongs to all its people. "I personally insist that all citizens must be equal and not divided into a first and a second class," she told Reuters, using words which are in tune with international officials hoping the vote will foster a more multi-ethnic Kosovo. Arrested during NATO's 1999 bombing to end Belgrade's repression of Kosovo's Albanians, Brovina was convicted of associating with separatist guerrillas and jailed for 12 years on terrorism charges in a trial widely condemned as a sham. She was released after the fall of Slobodan Milosevic as Yugoslav president in a popular revolt last year. APPEAL TO SERBS Brovina has urged Kosovo's beleaguered Serbs to cast their ballots for the new 120-seat assembly to be set up after the November 17 election, which in turn will elect a president, arguing the vote is a great opportunity for them too. "Serbs are citizens of Kosovo and they have to be part of Kosovo," Brovina, blonde, elegantly dressed in black and showing no trace of her difficult 19 months in jail, said in an interview late on Monday. Popular among many Kosovo Albanians, she will still face an uphill struggle in the race for the largely symbolic post of president against veteran political leader Ibrahim Rugova. Brovina insisted that despite her time in prison and atrocities committed agai nst her people, she did not seek revenge. Serbs too were victims of Milosevic, she said. Many Serbs oppose the vote, arguing it will be a step to independence for Kosovo and also that their living conditions are so miserable they should boycott the poll in protest. Brovina said independence was inevitable, a "life or death" issue for Kosovo, but she said it would be positive for Serbs as well as it would lead to better times for the impoverished economy. Fearing Albanian reprisals, about 180,000 Serbs fled Kosovo after government forces withdrew following 11 weeks of NATO bombing. Many of those remaining, numbering about 100,000, live in enclaves protected by heavily armed NATO-led peacekeepers. Brovina, 51, vowed to fight such "ghettos." "An independent Kosovo will guarantee the minorities equality," she said. But Brovina accused Belgrade's new leadership of continuing to manipulate the province's Serbs. Milosevic may be awaiting trial at the U.N. war crimes court in The Hague for atrocities in Kosovo, but "Milosevic's system is still in power in Belgrade," she said. 05:15 11-13-01 Submitted by Katarina Tepesh Copyright 2001 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. distributed by CROWN (Croatian World Net) - CroworldNet@aol.com
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