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Salut,
Sunt Florin A. din Bucuresti si te-as ruga f. mult daca ai putea sa-mi dai ceva detalii despre Grecia (as vrea sa merg ptr.prima data)mai ales ptr.insula Thasos. Cat costa drumul pana acolo (benzina), feribotul cat face, mancarea cat e ,cazare unde si cat.etc...am vazut ca ai Logan si eu la fel, care e sfatul tau sa cumpar bilet prin agentie de turism sau sa meg pe cont propiu.Pe unde m-ai povatui sa merg. Multumesc foarte mult pentru raspuns.email.: microro@gmail.com
NATO used speeded-up film to excuse civilian deaths in Kosovo: newspaper BERLIN, Jan 6 (AFP) -
Videotape shown by NATO to explain the killing of at least 14 civilians aboard a train on a bridge in Serbia last April was shown at triple its real speed, the German daily Frankfurter Rundschau reports in its Thursday edition. The alliance had sought to excuse the killing of the civilians by saying the train had been traveling too fast for the trajectory of the missiles to have been changed in time. NATO warplanes fired two missiles at the 50 metre (yard)-long bridge over the Juzna Morava River at Grdelica Klisura, some 300 kilometers (180 miles) south of Belgrade on April 12 during its campaign to force Belgrade's troops to leave Kosovo. NATO's supreme commander in Europe, US General Wesley Clark, shortly afterwards showed two videotapes of the train appearing to be traveling fast on the bridge, and said it had then been impossible to alter the missiles' trajectories. The Frankfurt newspaper said the two videotapes were both shown at three times normal speed. A spokesman for NATO'S military command in Mons, Belgium, acknowledged in a telephone interview with AFP that those images had been altered by "a technical problem." The footage, recorded by a camera installed in the warhead of one of the missiles that destroyed the bridge and train were altered during the process of being copied for screening, said the spokesman. He said NATO was aware of the problem since last October but did not consider it "useful" to disclose it. The Frankfurt newspaper said the US air force, which carried out the bombardment, had not noticed for some months that the tape had been speeded up, and also attributed it to a technological error. "We did not deem it useful to go public with this information after we noticed it," the newspaper quoted a US air force spokesman in Europe as saying.
Doru Gruba's conversations
Jedan od rafinerijskih pontona potopljenih u NATO bombardovanju 1999,
Sta tata nesme ni u mali bazen ? Pozdrav od Steve iz Luke Novi Sad
Bernandinac Boža, maskota Goča više od decenije ipo.
Salut, Sunt Florin A. din Bucuresti si te-as ruga f. mult daca ai putea sa-mi dai ceva detalii despre Grecia (as vrea sa merg ptr.prima data)mai ales ptr.insula Thasos. Cat costa drumul pana acolo (benzina), feribotul cat face, mancarea cat e ,cazare unde si cat.etc...am vazut ca ai Logan si eu la fel, care e sfatul tau sa cumpar bilet prin agentie de turism sau sa meg pe cont propiu.Pe unde m-ai povatui sa merg. Multumesc foarte mult pentru raspuns.email.: microro@gmail.com
NATO used speeded-up film to excuse civilian deaths in Kosovo: newspaper BERLIN, Jan 6 (AFP) - Videotape shown by NATO to explain the killing of at least 14 civilians aboard a train on a bridge in Serbia last April was shown at triple its real speed, the German daily Frankfurter Rundschau reports in its Thursday edition. The alliance had sought to excuse the killing of the civilians by saying the train had been traveling too fast for the trajectory of the missiles to have been changed in time. NATO warplanes fired two missiles at the 50 metre (yard)-long bridge over the Juzna Morava River at Grdelica Klisura, some 300 kilometers (180 miles) south of Belgrade on April 12 during its campaign to force Belgrade's troops to leave Kosovo. NATO's supreme commander in Europe, US General Wesley Clark, shortly afterwards showed two videotapes of the train appearing to be traveling fast on the bridge, and said it had then been impossible to alter the missiles' trajectories. The Frankfurt newspaper said the two videotapes were both shown at three times normal speed. A spokesman for NATO'S military command in Mons, Belgium, acknowledged in a telephone interview with AFP that those images had been altered by "a technical problem." The footage, recorded by a camera installed in the warhead of one of the missiles that destroyed the bridge and train were altered during the process of being copied for screening, said the spokesman. He said NATO was aware of the problem since last October but did not consider it "useful" to disclose it. The Frankfurt newspaper said the US air force, which carried out the bombardment, had not noticed for some months that the tape had been speeded up, and also attributed it to a technological error. "We did not deem it useful to go public with this information after we noticed it," the newspaper quoted a US air force spokesman in Europe as saying.
View from villa Aleksandros yard.