The Reçak Massacre: The Truth Under Attack by Serbian Narratives

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Photo:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Re%C3%A7ak#/media/File:Kosovo_adm_location_map.svg

On January 15, 1999, Serbian police and military forces launched an attack on the village of Reçak in the Shtime municipality of Kosovo. Within hours, 45 unarmed Albanian civilians were brutally executed, marking one of the most horrifying atrocities of the Kosovo War. Known as the Reçak Massacre, this act shocked the international community and galvanized support for NATO’s military intervention.

Yet, 26 years later, the Reçak Massacre remains under attack, not due to a lack of evidence, but because of a relentless disinformation campaign led by Serbian officials and media outlets. This campaign seeks to rewrite history, framing the massacre as a fabrication and portraying it as a pretext for NATO’s intervention against the former Yugoslavia.

On January 15, 2025, several Serbian media outlets reignited false narratives about the Reçak Massacre. Through these articles, they claimed that the massacre was nothing more than a clash between Serbian police and members of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA).

The Serbian public broadcaster “RTS.rs” published an article titled “Reçak, 26 Years Later – William Walker and the Controversial Report That Changed the Truth.” The article alleged that an armed conflict took place in the village of Reçak on January 15, 1999, between Serbian police and KLA members. “Following the conflict between Serbian police and Albanian extremists, the bodies of 45 Albanians were found in the village of Reçak. This was followed by accusations, particularly pushed by William Walker, claiming a ‘civilian massacre’ had occurred,” wrote the outlet, denying the facts and photographic evidence presented by credible international media and organizations, which had clearly established it as a crime against the civilian population.

Similar narratives were amplified by Serbian politicians. Milovan Drecun, chairman of the Serbian Parliamentary Committee for Defense and Internal Affairs, reiterated claims that the Reçak Massacre was a “counterterrorism operation” targeting a KLA brigade, accusing Kosovo authorities of spreading false propaganda. “It was clear that there were no crimes against civilians, but rather a confrontation and counterterrorism action in a village where the headquarters of the terrorist brigade was located,” Drecun stated.

Other Serbian media outlets, such as Sputnik.rsEuronews.rsVesti-online.com, also published articles denying the crimes committed in Reçak.

What is the truth of Reçak?

Contrary to these claims, extensive investigations by international organizations have determined that the events in Reçak constituted a massacre of unarmed civilians.

On January 15, 1999, Serbian police and military forces entered the village of Reçak, where, within a few hours, they killed 45 Albanian civilians. At the time, Human Rights Watch dismissed the Yugoslav government’s claims that the victims were Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) soldiers. “As has happened on numerous occasions in the Kosovo conflict, once the KLA retreated, government forces moved in and committed atrocities against the residents of the village. While it is possible that some residents may have defended their homes in the morning, most were clearly not involved in any armed resistance. At least twenty-three people were summarily executed by the police while offering no resistance — a clear violation of the laws of war, and a crime punishable by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY).” the Human Rights Watch report stated. According to the organization, the attack on civilians in Reçak was part of a broader pattern of war crimes committed by the military and police of the former Yugoslavia.

On the morning of February 16, 1999, William Walker, then head of the OSCE Verification Mission in Kosovo, arrived in Reçak. “Unfortunately, I have no words to describe my personal revulsion and that of everyone who was with me at the site of what can only be described as an unspeakable atrocity,” Walker stated after witnessing the bodies of the victims. Once again, Walker has been the target of accusations and attacks from Serbia.

The denial of the Reçak Massacre is not new. Serbian officials and media have long pursued a strategy aimed at undermining the credibility of evidence and testimonies, portraying the massacre as a Western fabrication.

By portraying the massacre as a fabrication, Serbian leaders have continuously avoided accountability for the war crimes committed under Slobodan Milosevic’s regime.

Denial narratives are also used as a tool to delegitimize Kosovo’s statehood and the international interventions that supported its independence.

Coordinated efforts on social media, amplified by government-linked media in Serbia and Russia, aim to spread disinformation, targeting both local and international audiences.

This is done with the aim of opposing and framing NATO’s 1999 intervention as “aggression” against Serbia, deliberately ignoring the fact that Serbia was bombed because of Milosevic’s crimes against innocent civilians, not only in Reçak but throughout Kosovo.

For the families of the victims and for Kosovo, these narratives represent an ongoing challenge in the pursuit of justice for war crimes.

The distortion of historical truths in post-war societies, through disinformation and narratives like those about Reçak, risks undermining efforts toward reconciliation.

*This article is published as part of the Western Balkans Regional Initiative against disinformation. “Western Balkans Anti-Disinformation Hub: exposing malign influences through watchdog journalism.”