Yugoslavia

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Ethnic cleansing in Slovenia
More than 18,000 Slovenians suddenly found there was no record they even existed.
Safe area America
Graphic novelist Joe Sacco goes back to Sarajevo with his powerful new book "The Fixer" -- and talks about why the entire U.S. population should be tried for war crimes.
How the mighty have fallen
For human-rights workers, the mere presence of Milosevic in the dock is a triumph that was unimaginable when Serbian forces were slaughtering thousands.
Milosevic's moment of judgment
The former Yugoslav president stands accused of crimes against humanity as the most important international trial since Nuremberg begins.
Milosevic goes to The Hague
Yugoslavia's former dictator will face war crimes charges in an unprecedented international trial.
Robert Kaplan
The controversial "Balkan Ghosts" put him on the map. His opinionated, darkly seductive reports of an unraveling world have kept him there.
Waiting for Slobo
Has Milosevic really been arrested? While The Hague waits to try him, a ragged troop of loyalists still stands behind the fallen dictator.
Dictator downturn
It just isn't as easy being a tyrant as it used to be.
Radioactive fallout
Did exposure to American depleted-uranium-tipped weapons cause the cancer deaths of some European peacekeepers who served in the Balkans?
Peacekeeping's pitfalls
Growing tensions along the border between Kosovo and southern Serbia could mark the first challenge for President-elect Bush's foreign policy team.
Trail of blood
A leaked document links Serbian secret police to the assassination of a journalist for the first time -- and threatens to blow apart Serbia's shaky peace.
Serbia's culture shock
With the media liberated from Milosevic's control, the nation begins to face its demons -- but propagandists and journalists are in a tug of war.
Propping up the walls
As international support for Kosovar independence wanes, hatred still seethes between Albanians and Serbs. And the U.N. oversees their division.
Milosevic fights back
The resurgence of loyalists to the deposed Yugoslav president brings Belgrade back to the brink of danger.
"He's finished"
By Alex Todorovic
Serbia is liberated, Milosevic disappears
By Laura Rozen
The long road back for Yugoslavia
With the revolutionary fervor subsiding, new President Vojislav Kostunica must now figure out how to govern a country where Slobodan Milosevic is still a political force.
The end of the affair
Russia's support for the ouster of Slobodan Milosevic reflects a desire to cut its losses, not a pro-Western change of heart.
Playing the "dum-dum" card
Tired of having their man labeled a liar, the Gore campaign asks why Bush can't "string together a coherent sentence."
In Belgrade, now what?
The world gets to know Yugoslav President-elect Vojislav Kostunica, and ponders Milosevic's fate.
Serbia is liberated, Milosevic disappears
A long-suffering people celebrates the apparent end of the regime. But where has their dictator gone?
The ABCs of Balkan nationalism
Do the recent elections in Yugoslavia and Croatia mark a shift away from the psychology that led the region into conflict?
"He's finished"
Milosevic goes into hiding after hundreds of thousands of outraged Serbs seize Parliament and the state-run media. A report from the Battle for Belgrade.
Charles Simic
"We were so poor..."
Milosevic lashes out as his power disintegrates
In a scene reminiscent of Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu's demise, thousands of ordinary Serbs overpower police to support striking coal miners.
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