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<title>Tobacco Articles: country kosovo</title>
<link>http://www.tobacco.org/newsfeed/country/kosovo.rss</link>
<description>Latest top tobacco news headlines</description>
<language>en-us</language>
<item>
<title>Eve-Ann Prentice obituary : Doughty reporter who narrowly escaped death while covering the Kosovo war for The Times</title>
<link>http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article2546365.ece</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/252918.html</guid>
<description>Her death robs British journalism of a doughty, principled and brave reporter, whose own long fight against cancer always came second to her insistence on pursuing a story to the end. . . .

 In one of her last dispatches, in March last year, she wrote an account of her six-hour meeting with him in his prison cell. She had smuggled in two croissants, and Milosevic, courteous but pale and clearly in poor health, offered her in return one of his Davidoff cigarettes. . . .

her fairness, balance and refusal to be a propaganda outlet won her widespread respect: her disappearance after the Nato attack was front-page news.

Eve-Ann Page was born in 1952 . . .


impressing her colleagues with her passion for the plight of farm labourers in tied cottages, her dedication to smoking and her ability to drink a pint of Elgood's bitter in four and a half seconds. . . .

She died of cancer on September 20, 2007, aged 55



</description>
<source url="http://www.the-times.co.uk/">Times Of London </source>
<dc:coverage>Ireland</dc:coverage>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<dc:coverage>Serbia</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Fri, 28 Sep 2007 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>Kosovo mourns independence hero</title>
<link>http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,1692601,00.html</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/215382.html</guid>
<description>The future of Kosovo hangs in the balance after the death of Ibrahim Rugova, the leader of Kosovo's majority Albanian population.

Talks between the independence-seeking Albanians and the Serbian government were due to open in Vienna on Wednesday under the auspices of the Finnish statesman and UN mediator, Martti Ahtisaari. But the talks have been postponed until next month following Rugova's death. He was due to lead the Kosovan delegation.

Rugova, a chain-smoking, mild-mannered literature scholar who had spearheaded the drive for independence for 20 years, is almost impossible to replace. His death at 61, while expected after he was diagnosed with lung cancer, leaves a vacuum which analysts fear may be filled by more militant figures happy to stir up unrest and hasten Kosovan independence.

Rugova died at his villa in the Kosovo capital, Pristina, a few weeks after predicting that independence would finally arrive this year. Thousands of grieving Kosovans lit candles and laid wreaths of flowers in tribute to the lifelong pacifist.</description>
<source url="http://www.guardian.co.uk/">The Guardian </source>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Mon, 23 Jan 2006 05:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>Obituaries in the News: Ibrahim Rugova</title>
<link>http://customwire.ap.org/dynamic/stories/D/DEATHS?SITE=CAWOO&amp;SECTION=HOME&amp;TEMPLATE=DEFAULT</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/215363.html</guid>
<description>Kosovo President Ibrahim Rugova, who epitomized the province's decades-long struggle for independence from Serbia, died Saturday of lung cancer. He was 61. . . .


With his trademark scarf wrapped around his neck, Rugova had gained cult status among some ethnic Albanians. The chain-smoking politician, whose 2002 election made him the province's first president since the United Nations took over Kosovo's administration, was diagnosed with cancer in September.</description>
<source url="http://hosted.ap.org/">AP</source>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Sat, 21 Jan 2006 05:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>Kosovo president has cancer but won't quit</title>
<link>http://www.newsobserver.com/24hour/world/story/2688070p-11230370c.html</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/205542.html</guid>
<description>Kosovo President Ibrahim Rugova, linked for decades to the ethnic Albanian majority's anti-Serb struggle, said Monday he has lung cancer, but he pledged to stay in office as the U.N.-run province nears crucial talks on its future.

Rugova, 61, said in a televised speech that he would continue to work toward his lifelong goal of Kosovo's independence from Serbian domination that ended only six years ago, when fighting against Serb troops ended and NATO and United Nations assumed control of the province.
</description>
<source url="http://www.news-observer.com/">Raleigh  News &amp; Observer</source>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Mon, 05 Sep 2005 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>Kosovo President Says He Has Lung Cancer, Raising Doubt Over Talks</title>
<link>http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/06/international/europe/06kosovo.html?ex=1126584000&amp;en=d4b9a4bcd2d0cf33&amp;ei=5099&amp;partner=TOPIX</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/205539.html</guid>
<description>
The president of the United Nations-administered province of Kosovo, Ibrahim Rugova, said yesterday that he was suffering from lung cancer, putting in doubt his participation in negotiations on the future of the region scheduled to begin this fall. 

Looking frail, the 61-year-old leader of Kosovo's ethnic Albanian majority appeared on the three main regional TV stations at midday to announce that he has &quot;localized lung cancer.&quot;</description>
<source url="http://www.tobacco.org/media.php?mode=display&amp;media_id=1004">New York Times</source>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Tue, 06 Sep 2005 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>Kosovo prepares to kick the habit</title>
<link>http://news.scotsman.com/international.cfm?id=466252005</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/196065.html</guid>
<description>The small internationally administered province, a third of the size of Wales and with an estimated population of 1.9 million Albanians and 100,000 Serbs, consumes a conservatively estimated 350 tons of cigarettes per month. . . .

Yet a draft smoking restriction law is sitting with the province&#226;?(TM)s Ministry of Health, one of many steps designed to bring the former Yugoslav province into line with European social practice. . . .


Keen to take its place in the slow, shuffling queue for EU accession, Kosovo&#8217;s proposed law would see smoking banned in public places such as schools and hospitals.  . . .


Another side-effect of banning cigarette smoking in public places is that if public consumption decreases, then it would make it easier for UN and Kosovo national customs officials to track down the estimated 200 tons of contraband cigarettes passing through the country every month.

</description>
<source url="http://www.scotsman.com">The Scotsman</source>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Sun, 01 May 2005 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>Kosovo Hikes Tobacco Excise: New tax on cigarettes is intended to reduce illegal sales to Serbia, but it won't stamp them out.</title>
<link>http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/bcr3/bcr3_200310_462_2_eng.txt</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/139612.html</guid>
<description>United Nations administrators have acted to reduce the huge volume of cigarettes smuggled out of the country  but the move is unlikely to stop the illicit trade, especially across the porous border to Serbia.

On October 1, the UN Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo, UNMIK, raised excise taxes by two-thirds as part of measures designed to combat cigarette smuggling in the Balkans.

Importers will now pay 10 euro for every 1,000 cigarettes they bring into the protectorate. This is the second and final stage of an excise reform which saw excise rates raised from two to six euro on July 1. . . 

The smugglers don't seem to be too worried by the changes. &quot;UNMIK is just trying to frighten us, nothing real will happen,&quot; IWPR was told by a man who is one of the biggest smugglers in Mitrovica, northern Kosovo. &quot;We will need two or three days to make fake banderols, and if you don't think we have our own people in UNMIK, you are wrong.&quot;

Another innovation is that health warnings on cigarettes intended for Kosovo will be in both Albanian and Serbian, which Robertson says will make them &quot;a far less attractive product for Serbian consumers&quot;. However, IWPR has seen packs marked in Albanian being sold openly in the Serbian town of Kursumlija, with little negative consumer reaction.

&quot;Dual health warnings will hardly stop cigarette smuggling into Serbia,&quot; said Nebojsa Medojevic, economic director at Montenegro's Centre for Transition, &quot;Foreigners would be naive to think that one can stop smuggling with the introduction of a marketing act.

&quot;Cigarette smugglers are very well connected across the region's de facto borders. They have almost reached EU standards in terms of free flow of goods and people in this region. Governments are lacking this level of cooperation.&quot;
</description>
<source url="http://www.iwpr.net/">Institute for War &amp; Peace Reporting </source>
<author>jon@iwpr.net (Tatjana Matic in Pristina and Hugh Griffiths in Sweden (BCR No 462, 03-Oct-03))</author>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Sat, 04 Oct 2003 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
</item>

<item>
<title>STEYN: Cambodians deserve better than the killing fields of tobacco</title>
<link>http://www.dailytelegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2003/07/05/do0503.xml&amp;sSheet=/opinion/2003/07/05/ixop.html</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/131415.html</guid>
<description>
Hard to say. But, as a general rule, whenever a great international crisis runs up against an anti-smoking policy, bet on the latter. That's been true ever since Hillary Clinton made Yitzhak Rabin go outside to smoke when he was at the White House for negotiations over the Oslo peace accords. (Mrs Clinton's husband remained in compliance with her smoking policy by keeping his cigar famously unlit.) 

A couple of years later, Kosovo refugees arrived at military bases in Canada to discover that, although 98 per cent of Kosovars are smokers, the Canadian Red Cross refused to provide them with cigarettes (a breach of the Geneva Convention far crueller than anything Rummy's doing at Guant&#225;namo). . . 

People should be allowed to go about their business? As the Wall Street Journal's James Taranto remarked, try going into a New York gay bar and asking for a cigarette. Male life expectancy in Nanny's antiseptic city is 74.5 years. In Albania, where many of those Kosovar refugees lucky enough to escape Canada wound up, smoking's gone up 20 per cent in recent years . . . Yet life expectancy is 73. The New Yorker lives an extra 1.5 years, but loses all of it sitting in the Holland Tunnel going to New Jersey to buy cheap smokes. </description>
<source url="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/">Electronic Telegraph </source>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<dc:coverage>Cambodia</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Sat, 05 Jul 2003 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>20 million counterfeit cigarettes destroyed in Kosovo</title>
<link>http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/news/archive/2003/03/11/international1023EST0546.DTL</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/119500.html</guid>
<description>Customs agents destroyed 20 million counterfeit Marlboro cigarettes in a crackdown on smuggling and organized crime in Kosovo, an official said Tuesday.

Countries across the Balkans lose millions of dollars in tax revenue annually because of tobacco smuggling, according to official estimates. Fighting the phenomenon has become a top priority.

The cigarettes were smuggled into Kosovo from Serbia and seized last year. A United Nations investigation, conducted with Marlboro maker Philip Morris, found them to be counterfeit, European Union spokeswoman Monique de Groot said.</description>
<source url="http://hosted.ap.org/">AP</source>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Tue, 11 Mar 2003 05:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Finally: the truth: Last night's superlative documentary, The Fall of Milosevic, will force us to totally rethink our views on the Balkan conflict. Not a moment too soon, says Allan Little</title>
<link>http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv_and_radio/story/0,3604,869210,00.html</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/113220.html</guid>
<description>In November 1995 Bill Clinton leaned across a desk at an air force base at Dayton, Ohio and handed a Cuban cigar to Slobodan Milosevic. Not much more than three years later Clinton sent bombers to drive the Serb leader out of Kosovo. The two events bookend the grandeur of Milosevic's epic fall from grace and his descent into self-destruction. . .  --The Fall of Milosevic continues on Sunday, 7.30pm, BBC2

</description>
<source url="http://www.guardian.co.uk/">The Guardian </source>
<dc:coverage>UK</dc:coverage>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<dc:coverage>Serbia</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Mon, 06 Jan 2003 05:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>UNMIK official describes illegal cigarette factory as &quot;local crime&quot;</title>
<link>http://hoovnews.hoovers.com/fp.asp?layout=displaynews&amp;doc_id=NR20020602670.2_caad0001724cdaf6</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/95099.html</guid>
<description>The investigation into the production of illegal cigarettes in Gjilan has produced one suspect - an Albanian citizen - so far, police sources in Gjilan confirmed today.

Detectives are continuing with the investigation, said Roman Ulanovskiy, a media officer of the Gjilan (East) Region. He described the tobacco seizure as being a local economic crime.

To the question of how it was possible for large quantities of tobacco to enter Kosova [Kosovo] undetected by customs, Ulanovskiy said that in the East region there are only two legal crossing points but dozens of illegal ones where goods can enter and this is a big problem.
</description>
<source url="http://www.hoovers.com/">Hoover's</source>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Sun, 31 Mar 2002 05:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>The Government prevents, not supports cigarette smuggling</title>
<link>http://www.serbia-info.com/news/2001-09/04/25313.html</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/74246.html</guid>
<description>The Serbian Finance Ministry refuted accusations that it supported tobacco smuggling and insisted that the Decree on tax accounting with Kosovo-Metohija prevented the smuggling of goods with excise tax labels because &quot;a deposit in the amount of total entrance duty for the goods is charged when entering the FRY.&quot;

According to the Decree, a deposit or a bank guarantee for excisable goods for Kosovo must be provided at the entrance to the FRY. The deposit is returned on the border between Serbia proper and Kosovo, said Serbian Deputy Finance Minister Dejan Popovic at today's news conference.

Popovic said that this was the third decree of the Serbian government that dealt with settling public revenues with the Autonomous Province of Kosovo-Metohija. </description>
<source url="http://www.serbia-info.com">Serbia Ministry of Information</source>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<dc:coverage>Serbia</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2001 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Aid: Among U.S. Donations, Tons of Worthless Drugs</title>
<link>http://search.nytimes.com/search/daily/bin/fastweb?getdoc+site+iib-site+35+2+wAAA+smoking%7Eor%7Etobacco%7Eor%7Ecigarettes</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/23511.html</guid>
<description>Last month, Project Hope, the American medical charity, shipped
$1.5 million worth of emergency supplies to the Kosovo refugees.
But relief workers desperate for syringes, penicillin and insulin
found many of the hundreds of boxes instead contained Chap Stick,
Preparation H and anti-smoking inhalers  --  given by U.S. companies
that got a tax break for the donations. . . Project
Hope said . . . 
that all of its donations were reviewed by the Ministry of Health
in Macedonia, which requested the items  --  including the Nicotrol
inhalers for use in a pilot anti-smoking program. [This graph only]</description>
<source url="http://www.tobacco.org/media.php?mode=display&amp;media_id=1004">New York Times</source>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jun 1999 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>NATO stops cigarette smugglers entering Kosovo</title>
<link>http://infoseek.go.com/Content?arn=a1851LBY802reulb-19990618&amp;qt=smoking+or+tobacco+or+cigarettes&amp;sv=IS&amp;lk=noframes&amp;col=NX&amp;kt=A&amp;ak=news1486</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/23055.html</guid>
<description>NATO soldiers, urged on by the Kosovo Liberation Army, on Friday began cracking down on Albanian cigarette profiteers trying to enter Kosovo along with thousands of refugees.

The former KLA fighters turned customs officials, who handed over the Morina border post to German NATO troops on Wednesday and are now unarmed in civilian clothes, do not want smugglers exploiting refugees as they make the long trek home.

German soldiers weeded out the cigarette sellers from the heaving mass of several thousand refugees and told them to hand over the contraband or go back to Albania.</description>
<source url="http://www.reuters.com/">Reuters</source>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Fri, 18 Jun 1999 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>Russia Confronts Results of Hasty Deployment in Kosovo: Military: Shortages hit troops. Back home, legal experts say dispatching them violated constitution.</title>
<link>http://www.latimes.com/search/searchcgi?action=View&amp;VdkVgwKey=%2E%2E%2F%2E%2E%2Fvol7%2FCNS%5FDAYS%2F990616%2Ft000054031%2Ehtml&amp;DocOffset=1&amp;DocsFound=32&amp;QueryZip=cigarettes+%3COR%3E+%28author+%3CCONTAINS%3E+cigarettes%29&amp;Collection=Hunter&amp;SortSpec=Modified</link>
<guid>http://tobacco.org/news/22869.html</guid>
<description>Russian news services reported Tuesday that the paratroopers holding
the airport outside Pristina, Kosovo's capital, were running low on food
and fuel only four days into their standoff. Even worse, the soldiers had
already run out of cigarettes.
[This graph only]</description>
<source url="http://www.tobacco.org/media.php?mode=display&amp;media_id=120">Los Angeles Times</source>
<dc:coverage>Kosovo</dc:coverage>
<pubDate>Wed, 16 Jun 1999 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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