2001 Vejce massacre


The Vejce massacre, also known as the Vejce ambush, was carried out by the National Liberation Army against a convoy consisting of Macedonian special forces near the village of Vejce during the 2001 insurgency in Macedonia. During the attack, eight members were killed.

Ambush

On 28 April 2001, 16 Macedonian soldiers and police officers were carrying out a routine patrol. At approximately 5:45 p.m., ethnic Albanian militants carried out an ambush on the convoy positioned between the villages Selce and Vejce. Out of the 16 members, 8 were killed, half of the total.
The killed officers Marjan Božinovski, Kire Kostadinovski, Boško Najdovski and Ilče Stojanovski were members of the special police unit from Bitola. The killed soldiers Robert Petkovski, Boban Trajkovski, Igor Kosteski and Mile Janevski were sergeants. A Humvee and a Lada Niva were destroyed, and other two vehicles sustained damage. According to Macedonian news sources and the Macedonian Ministry of Internal Affairs, the soldiers were mutilated and burned alive.

Aftermath

According to Amnesty International, the Macedonian government labeled the Vejce ambush as a crime against humanity. The Macedonian Ministry of Internal Affairs also designated it as a terrorist attack. Per Macedonian news sources, autopsies were carried out in a military morgue. Subsequently, news of the deaths fueled local unrest, sparking riots against ethnic Albanians in several towns and cities across Macedonia. These disturbances encompassed the burning and vandalizing of shops and mosques. A war crime inquiry regarding the ambush was launched by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in November 2001. The ICTY returned the case to the local Macedonian courts on 2007.
The killed members of the state forces were commemorated for the first time in 2002 at their graves. Memorial plaques were also set up in their birthplaces. In 2009, the Makedonska Kamenica Municipality named an elementary school in honor of Mile Janevski and affirmed the day of the ambush as the school's patron day. A monument has been created in the center of Bitola, while a memorial also opened in Dračevo, Skopje, in 2013. Ethnic Albanians reacted negatively to the commemorations and in 2003, a group of them blocked a convoy of participants commemorating. Some monuments were destroyed.

Reactions

The Secretary General of NATO at the time, George Robertson, [Baron Robertson of Port Ellen|George Robertson], condemned the ambush, stating: "I condemn the cowardly acts of the extremists and my message is simple: the violence must end and their tactics will not be successful." The attack was also condemned by the European Union's foreign policy chief Javier Solana. Anthropologist Vasiliki Neofotistos wrote of "the gruesome event that came to be known as the Vejce massacre" and its aftermath:
According to Nikola Dimitrov in an interview with The Guardian:
The leader of the NLA at the time, Ali Ahmeti, claimed that the ethnic Albanian fighters had not attacked the Macedonians, stating they were acting in self-defense and were fired on first by the Macedonian patrol. The claim was not independently confirmed. The United Nations Security Council condemned the ambush, calling it "cowardly" and "brutal".