The warning by Kosovo’s Special Prosecution that it will file an indictment over the crimes against the Jashari family did not escape Serbian disinformation on Monday either. According to The Geopost, the Sputnik outlet published an article titled, “The hunt against Serbs continues: Pristina files indictment over the ‘killing’ of Adem Jashari.”
In this article, the Sputnik portal distorts the events in Prekaz and, through a selective choice of information as well as unconfirmed claims, tries to cast doubt on the announced indictment by Kosovo’s Special Prosecution regarding the events in Lower Prekaz in March 1998.
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During the last war in Kosovo, 55 people were killed in the Jashari neighborhood in Prekaz. Of them, 22 were close family members of the legendary commander Adem Jashari, who had long been a target of the Serbian state. Nevertheless, Sputnik places the word “killing” in quotation marks, in an attempt to distort the facts.
Claim 1: “The hunt against Serbs continues: Pristina files indictment over the ‘killing’ of Adem Jashari”
Analysis and rebuttal:
Sputnik presents the announced indictment as a continuation of a “hunt against Serbs,” portraying the judicial process as ethnically motivated persecution against the Serbian people.
However, there is no evidence that Kosovo’s Special Prosecution is conducting a “hunt” against any people. The investigations concern war crimes and individual criminal responsibility.
Even the wording “The hunt against Serbs continues” has an emotional and accusatory character. It does not constitute a verifiable fact, but a political interpretation suggesting the existence of a systematic campaign against Serbs. In this way, the reader is steered from the headline toward a particular conclusion.
Claim 2: The word “killing” of Adem Jashari placed in quotation marks
Analysis and rebuttal: Placing the word “killing” in quotation marks is not neutral. By focusing on the procedural announcement of the indictment, the article is used to distort the events in Prekaz and to minimize the weight of the accusations related to the deaths of dozens of members of the Jashari family.
This is a well-known propaganda technique, often used to cast doubt on a documented event or to relativize responsibility for it.
The operation by Serbian forces in Lower Prekaz on March 5-7, 1998 ended with the killing of dozens of members of the Jashari family, including women, children and the elderly. Human Rights Watch has documented that among the victims were 13 women and 8 children, a fact also reflected in reports by international organizations.
Later international documentation, as well as materials used in proceedings at The Hague Tribunal, also treat the attack on Prekaz as one of the key events of the conflict in Kosovo, in which nearly 60 members of the Jashari family were killed.
During the operation in Lower Prekaz in 1998, dozens of members of the Jashari family were killed.
Claim 3: “He mercilessly forced his relatives to fight…” as well as the claim that he supposedly “created a human shield with women and children to buy time…”
Analysis and rebuttal: Under the standards of professional journalism, such a claim cannot be presented as fact in the absence of documents, verified testimony or court rulings supporting it.
In the reports of Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and in the documentation used by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), there is no verified finding that Adem Jashari used civilians as a human shield.
Likewise, this claim has not been confirmed by any international judgment or by any recognized report of international human rights organizations.
Instead of verified evidence, this accusation usually appears in official Serbian narratives and in media that rely on them. It is precisely the lack of independent evidence that leaves this claim unconfirmed.
Kosovo conflict | Summary & Facts | Britannica
Claim 4: “he killed his nephew out of fear”
Analysis and rebuttal:
The claim that Adem Jashari killed one of his nephews “out of fear” constitutes one of the most serious accusations circulating in some Serbian propaganda narratives.
This accusation has appeared in some wartime narratives and in some media outlets, but it has not been proven by independent international sources or by court proceedings in international tribunals.
Therefore, there is no report by Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, the OSCE, or any other recognized international organization that confirms this claim.
Likewise, there is no judgment by The Hague Tribunal or any other international court that has found that such an event occurred.
As long as court documents, verified testimony and independent investigations that would support this accusation are lacking, presenting it as fact constitutes disinformation or, at the very least, the treatment of an unconfirmed claim as true.
An analysis of the text published by the Sputnik portal clearly shows that this outlet does not report objectively on judicial processes, but uses methods of hybrid disinformation and political framing.
The article contains several features characteristic of propaganda and disinformation, as events are presented selectively, with emotional language and without the necessary context.
In the same article, Sputnik presents only the version of Serbian institutions regarding the events of March 1998.
It leaves out the essential facts: that the operation in Prekaz ended with the killing of dozens of members of the Jashari family; that among the dead were women, children and the elderly; that the event is considered a massacre; and that it has been the subject of international analyses and reports.
In conclusion, when only one side of the story is presented, we are dealing with manipulation through the selection of information.
This once again reminds us that Sputnik functions as a platform for rewriting historical events and spreading propaganda, where legal processes are exploited to build political narratives while bypassing official documents and reports of international institutions.
