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Saturday.

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crane_rainstorm_varna-bg_8june2002.jpg

A man passes a pillar crane, toppled by a rain storm in Varna, 469 kilometers (296 miles) northeast of Sofia on Saturday, June 8, 2002. A rain storm swept through Bulgaria's largest sea port on Saturday toppling two pillar cranes and several cargo containers but causing no injuries. (AP Photo/Petar Petrov)

rainstorm_bg_drowning-car_8june2002.jpg

People stand around a car, half-submerged in a pit made by a rain storm in Varna, 469 kilometers (296 miles) northeast of Sofia on Saturday, June 8, 2002. A rain storm swept through Bulgaria's largest sea port on Saturday toppling two pillar cranes and several cargo containers but causing no injuries. (AP Photo/Petar Petrov)

Heavy Fighting Erupts in Arachinovo.
 
Antiwar - Reality Macedonia
By Christopher Deliso in Skopje
June 8, 2002

Heavy gunfire erupted at 9:00 PM local time in Arachinovo, the embattled suburb of Skopje that reportedly still retains a strong NLA presence. The fighting, which lasted approximately 45 minutes and included heavy machine gun fire from the NLA and return mortar fire from the Macedonian army, is believed to have resulted from an Albanian "celebration" gone wrong. Today marks the one-year anniversary of the NLAs "free zone" declaration, which temporarily brought Arachinovo under full NLA control.

While the commemoration could have transpired without much fanfare, neither NATO nor the Macedonian army had been informed, according to Dutch journalist Peter John Bosse, who watched the battle from his rooftop, barely half a mile from Arachinovo. Bosse alerted the local and international authorities moments after the fighting began. He learned from NATO sources and Albanian witnesses inside Arachinovo what was going on: "as the Macedonian security forces were not told about this anniversary party, they felt threatened and returned fire from their nearby checkpoints. And then from their positions in the mountains around Arachinovo, they also returned fire with mortars there were lots of lights it was like New Years."

By 10:00 PM, the fighting had subsided, but sporadic gunfire continued and from new areas. Heavy machine-gun fire was heard by this reporter from Aracinovo, as well as from several other Albanian villages on the eastern edge of Skopje. The howling of dogs and whining call to prayers from Albanian mosques lent an air of the surreal to this sultry night in Skopje.

One hour later, the situation remains tense, and the main road to Arachinovo has been blocked by Macedonian police since 9:05. Bosse tried to get to the suburb shortly thereafter, but was turned back by police due to the fighting.

Albanian sources within Arachinovo, contacted by telephone, reported that the streets were filled with heavily armed Albanian fighters, dressed in black vests but without their usual NLA patches. Arachinovo, and nearby villages like Opae and Slupchane, remain heavily pro-NLA.

Arachinovo was the scene of the most controversial battle during last years war. After the NLA threatened to attack Skopje airport in late July, the Macedonian army commenced a punishing three-day assault, which was only ended when NATO forces evacuated the heavily armed Albanian fighters on buses. While journalists and Macedonian army members claimed to have seen American military trainers evacuated with the NLA fighters, NATO denied it. This latest round of fighting indicates that Arachinovos potential for future conflict and controversy remains high.

 
Storm topples cranes in Bulgarian sea port.
 
AP
 
SOFIA, Bulgaria - A rain storm swept through Bulgaria's largest sea port on Saturday, toppling two pillar cranes and several cargo containers but causing no injuries, an official said.
 
"The wind gusted at some 180 kilometers (110 miles) per hour," said Mitko Georgiev, the civil defense chief at the Black Sea port of Varna, 469 kilometers (296 miles) northeast of Sofia.
 
Authorities did not immediately give an estimate for damage in the region.
 
(pu/vz/djk)

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