NATO bombing of Belgrade streets
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article or section needs copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone or spelling. You can assist by editing it now. A how-to guide is available. (July 2007) |
NATO bombing of Belgrade streets | |
---|---|
Location | Belgrade, Serbia |
Date | May 1, 1999 3:00 AM |
Attack type | Missile attack |
Injured | 2 |
Perpetrator(s) | NATO |
The NATO bombing of Belgrade streets on May 1, 1999, was directed at the central Belgrade residential area, Vračar. Homes on Vardarska Street were completely destroyed. According to eyewitnesses, a bomb landed in a space between two homes and two family members were injured and taken to an Emergency Medical Center. They recovered from their injuries and survived.
The bomb made a two-meter-deep crater between the houses and destroyed the asphalt entry way, with the only thing remaining being a pillar with a street name sign on it.
Due to the powerful detonation, a white Yugo passenger car was thrown onto the ruins of the house - a pile of rafters, roof tiles and bricks. The missile exploded near the street water pipe, causing a temporary flood in a part of the Vardarska street. [1] [2]
[edit] NATO claim
NATO states it targeted the headquarters of the army, special police and the Ministry of Defence builidng in Belgrade. Additionally, NATO admitted one missile hit a residential area but said they were not aware of the civilian casualties reported by the Yugoslav media. [3]
[edit] References
- ^ "U petak, dva sata posle ponoći, najžešći napad na Beograd", Glas javnosti, 1999-05-1.
- ^ Picture: (But not all missiles hit military targets. A residential street was blown up) and (Under rubble: Belgrade civilians count the cost) (BBC)
- ^ [1] (BBC)
|