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  • Kosoli family, missing brothers ( from left, Kastriot, Kriste, Simon,Gjerg,Filip). One night the Serbian military invaded many homes in the Meje village. All the men were taken away and since then are missing. Their bodies have never been found.
    cinzia_widowsofwar05.jpg
  • Kosoli family, missing brothers ( from left, Kastriot, Kriste, Simon,Gjerg,Filip). One night the Serbian military invaded many homes in the Meje village. All the men were taken away and since then are missing. Their bodies have never been found.
    cinzia_widowsofwar07.jpg
  • Widows of war receive 60Euros for maintenance. With this meagre income they can hardly make ends meet. If they have sons, they normally take charge in the upkeeping of the family with their mum.
    cinzia_widowsofwar029.jpg
  • M. with her children. She is left a widow and receives 60 Euros<br />
a month for maintenance.  With this meagre income she can hardly make ends meet. Her eldest son has had to take charge in the upkeep of the family to help.
    cinzia_widowsofwar012.jpg
  • Maria Sokoli is 80 years old and has 5 members of her family missing: Simon, Krista, Filip, Kastriot and Pashka. Her niece Diana sitting next to her is looking after her.
    cinzia_widowsofwar040.jpg
  • In Kosovo, some of the villages like Meje has no men left.  The widows with their children have a difficult life.  Their homes are mostly unfinished after Ngos were sent away from the country and their meagre support of 60Euros is meant to support the whole family for a month.
    cinzia_widowsofwar025.jpg
  • In the village of Meje there are no men left. The official line is that they are missing. Diana points to her dad among the missing. Here, A. is pointing to the men of her family and her father that she has never seen again.
    cinzia_widowsofwar037.jpg
  • In Kosovo, some of the villages like Meje has no men left.  The widows with their children have a difficult life.  Their homes are mostly unfinished after Ngos were sent away from the country and their meagre support of 60Euros is meant to support the whole family for a month. A widow of Meje with 5 children.
    cinzia_widowsofwar022.jpg
  • Widows of war receive 60Euros for maintenance. With this meagre income they can hardly make ends meet. If they do have sons, they normally take charge in the upkeeping of the family with their mum.  Ngos like Medicos del Mundo have opened workshops rooms where the widows can engage in creating house wares like cloths, towels, etc. by knitting and sewing. They then sell their products. A woman says that overall there is more conformt in being together than in making an income as generally most women in Kosovo know how to sew or knit.
    cinzia_widowsofwar018.jpg
  • Widows of war receive 60Euros for maintenance. With this meagre income they can hardly make ends meet. Often if they have a son, he is going to work at an early age to help out the family.
    cinzia_widowsofwar031.jpg
  • Roma in the illegal camp of Zitkovac in the outskirts of Mitrovice.  The camp lies next to the rubbish dump of the town. Roma are unwanted by both the Serbian and the Kosovan side of the town. They survive with some support from humanitarian organisations and by selling things they found in the skips.
    cinzia_kosovoroma_09.jpg
  • Kosovan enjoying a family outing.
    cinzia_kosovo_07.jpg
  • Kalaj family sought refuge in the UK. After 5 years of living with the status of refugee, they still have no idea whether they will stay in the UK or they will be sent to Kosovo. Meantime their kids are going to school to the Uk, they know the language perfectly and the youngest is born in London.
    cinzia_kosovorefugees04.jpg
  • In Kosovo, some of the villages like Meje has no men left.  The widows with their children have a difficult life.  Their homes are mostly unfinished after Ngos were sent away from the country and their meagre support of 60Euros is meant to support the whole family for a month. A widow of Meje with 5 children.
    cinzia_widowsofwar024.jpg
  • In Kosovo, some of the villages like Meje has no men left.  The widows with their children have a difficult life.  Their homes are mostly unfinished after Ngos were sent away from the country and their meagre support of 60Euros is meant to support the whole family for a month. A widow of Meje with 5 children.
    cinzia_widowsofwar023.jpg
  • In Kosovo, some of the villages like Meje has no men left. The widows with their children have a difficult life. Their homes are mostly unfinished after Ngos were sent away from the country and their meagre support of 60Euros is meant to support the whole family for a month. A widow of Meje with 5 children.
    cinzia_widowsofwar09.jpg
  • Meje is a village in the district of Gjakova, which has no men left as a consequence of the war. Maria Sokoli, 80 years old has 5 members of her family missing: Simon, Krista, Filip, Kastriot and Pashka. Her niece Diana sitting next to her is looking after her
    cinzia_widowsofwar06.jpg
  • Widows of war receive 60Euros for maintenance. With this meagre income they can hardly make ends meet. If they do have sons, they normally take charge in the upkeeping of the family with their mum.  Ngos like Medicos del Mundo have opened workshops rooms where the widows can engage in creating house wares like cloths, towels, etc. by knitting and sewing. They then sell their products. A woman says that overall there is more conformt in being together than in making an income as generally most women in Kosovo know how to sew or knit.
    cinzia_widowsofwar019.jpg
  • In Kosovo, some of the villages like Meje has no men left.  The widows with their children have a difficult life.  Their homes are mostly unfinished after Ngos were sent away from the country and their meagre support of 60Euros is meant to support the whole family for a month.
    cinzia_widowsofwar026.jpg
  • Widows of war receive 60Euros for maintenance. With this meagre income they can hardly make ends meet. If they do have sons, they normally take charge in the upkeeping of the family with their mum.  Ngos like Medicos del Mundo have opened workshops rooms where the widows can engage in creating house wares like cloths, towels, etc. by knitting and sewing. They then sell their products. A woman says that overall there is more conformt in being together than in making an income as generally most women in Kosovo know how to sew or knit.
    cinzia_widowsofwar021.jpg
  • Widows of war receive 60Euros for maintenance. With this meagre income they can hardly make ends meet. If they do have sons, they normally take charge in the upkeeping of the family with their mum.  Ngos like Medicos del Mundo have opened workshops rooms where the widows can engage in creating house wares like cloths, towels, etc. by knitting and sewing. They then sell their products. A woman says that overall there is more conformt in being together than in making an income as generally most women in Kosovo know how to sew or knit.
    cinzia_widowsofwar020.jpg
  • Widows of war receive 60 Euros for maintenance. With this meagre income they can hardly make ends meet. Often if they have a son, he is going to work at an early age to help out the family.
    cinzia_widowsofwar014.jpg
  • Vera Kalaj is a Kosovo refugee living in London Uk. She escaped Kosovo whilst pregnant with her second child, born in the UK. After 5 years of living with the refugee status she has still not heard from the Home Office is she is going to stay permamently in the Uk.
    cinzia_kosovorefugees07.jpg
  • Roma in Kosovo, enclave Zitkovac in the outskirt of Pristina.  Roma are segregated and unwanted. They are forced to live in enclaves.  They don´t have access to any health, education, employment and they rely on humanitarian support for food and assistance.
    cinzia_kosovoroma_22.jpg
  • Serbian enclave in Kosovo.  Some children are born in the enclave and never been outside of it.
    serbianenclave_ 015.jpg
  • oma in Kosovo, enclave Zitkovac in the outskirt of Pristina.  Roma are segregated and unwanted. They are forced to live in enclaves.  They don´t have access to any health, education, employment and they rely on humanitarian support for food and assistance.
    cinzia_kosovoroma_25.jpg
  • Widows of war receive 60Euros for maintenance. With this meagre income they can hardly make ends meet.  If they do have sons, they allowed them to take charge in the upkeeping of the family.
    cinzia_widowsofwar030.jpg
  • oma in Kosovo, enclave Zitkovac in the outskirt of Pristina.  Roma are segregated and unwanted. They are forced to live in enclaves.  They don´t have access to any health, education, employment and they rely on humanitarian support for food and assistance.
    cinzia_kosovoroma_24.jpg
  • Roma in Kosovo, enclave Zitkovac in the outskirt of Pristina.  Roma are segregated and unwanted. They are forced to live in enclaves.  They don´t have access to any health, education, employment and they rely on humanitarian support for food and assistance.
    cinzia_kosovoroma_23.jpg
  • Roma in Kosovo, enclave Zitkovac in the outskirt of Pristina.  Roma are segregated and unwanted. They are forced to live in enclaves.  They don´t have access to any health, education, employment and they rely on humanitarian support for food and assistance.
    cinzia_kosovoroma_20.jpg
  • Roma in Kosovo, enclave Zitkovac in the outskirt of Pristina.  Roma are segregated and unwanted. They are forced to live in enclaves.  They don´t have access to any health, education, employment and they rely on humanitarian support for food and assistance.
    cinzia_kosovoroma_21.jpg
  • Roma in Kosovo, enclave Zitkovac in the outskirt of Pristina.  Roma are segregated and unwanted. They are forced to live in enclaves.  They don´t have access to any health, education, employment and they rely on humanitarian support for food and assistance.
    cinzia_kosovoroma_19.jpg
  • The majority of refugees that arrive in the Uk are offered provisional housing, vouchers to buy food and are not allowed to seek employment.  This situation meant to be temporary often takes years to settle.  Many kosovan families even after years do not know whether they have their right to stay permanently in the UK.  Refugees see themselves as living in a limbo, unable to look for work and to move freely.  Often the bond between their community is the only attachment that they form, partly because of their common plight and partly because of a need to ascertain their cultural identity.
    cinzia_kosovorefugees013.jpg
  • In the village of Meje there is no men left. They were taken away by the Serbian police in a night raid. Since then most families don't know where they were taken to. The official line is that they are missing.
    cinzia_widowsofwar07.jpg
  • In the village of Meje there is no men left. They were taken away by the Serbian police in a night raid. Since then most families don't know where they were taken to.  The official line is that they are missing.
    cinzia_widowsofwar038.jpg
  • In the village of Meje there is no men left. They were taken away by the Serbian police in a night raid. Since then most families don't know where they were taken to.  The official line is that they are missing.
    cinzia_widowsofwar039.jpg
  • A roma community in the outskirts of Pristina.  Roma are heavily discriminated and forced to live in an enclave. They have not access to education, health and proper housing.
    roma_05.jpg
  • The majority of refugees that arrive in the Uk are offered provisional housing, vouchers to buy food and are not allowed to seek employment.  This situation meant to be temporary often takes years to settle.  Many kosovan families even after years do not know whether they have their right to stay permanently in the UK.  Refugees see themselves as living in a limbo, unable to look for work and to move freely.  Often the bond between their community is the only attachment that they form, partly because of their common plight and partly because of a need to ascertain their cultural identity.
    kosovorefugees.jpg
  • The majority of refugees that arrive in the Uk are offered provisional housing, vouchers to buy food and are not allowed to seek employment.  This situation meant to be temporary often takes years to settle.  Many kosovan families even after years do not know whether they have their right to stay permanently in the UK.  Refugees see themselves as living in a limbo, unable to look for work and to move freely.  Often the bond between their community is the only attachment that they form, partly because of their common plight and partly because of a need to ascertain their cultural identity.
    cinzia_kosovorefugees012.jpg
  • The Meja massacre was the mass execution of at least 377 Kosovo Albanian civilians of whom 36 were under 18 years old. It was committed by Serbian police and Yugoslav Army forces in the Reka Operation which began after the killing of six Serbian policemen by the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA). The executions occurred on 27 April 1999 in the village of Meja near the town of Gjakova, during the Kosovo War. The victims were pulled from refugee convoys at a checkpoint in Meja and their families were ordered to proceed to Albania. Men and boys were separated and then executed by the road.[2][3] It is one of the largest massacres in the Kosovo War.[4] Many of the bodies of the victims were found in the Batajnica mass graves. The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia has convicted several Serbian army and police officers for their involvement.
    cinzia_widowsofwar017.jpg
  • The majority of refugees that arrive in the Uk are offered provisional housing, vouchers to buy food and are not allowed to seek employment.  This situation meant to be temporary often takes years to settle.  Many kosovan families even after years do not know whether they have their right to stay permanently in the UK.  Refugees see themselves as living in a limbo, unable to look for work and to move freely.  Often the bond between their community is the only attachment that they form, partly because of their common plight and partly because of a need to ascertain their cultural identity.
    cinzia_kosovorefugees011.jpg