Glas Javnosti, Belgrade, Yugoslavia
January 6, 2001
Lack of rain, electricity also blamed on NATO bombers
"Angel of mercy" tears up the skies over Balkans

"Weather changes in the Balkans have just begun. To blame for the severity of the present drought is depleted uranium which tore up the electromagnetic protective belt above Serbia, claims engineer Milan Stevancevic"

Since the bombing of 1999 the electromagnetic field above the Balkans looks like a sieve full of holes. Through the moved apart lines of the magnetic field, powerful energy from solar radiation has begun to filter due to which almost all of Europe is suffering in different ways. While we have an artificially produced drought, Western and Eastern Europe are getting the rain "meant" for us and with it - flooding.

From the direction of Libya on December 28 of last year enormous wet air masses arrived in the Balkans. To the tremendous surprise of the experts, something unprecedented occurred; over Kosovo these wet air masses separated into eastern and somewhat weaker western cloud formations, leaving Kosovo and the land all the way to Belgrade with very few clouds.

"The area from Kosovo to Novi Sad was neatly circumvented by the large storm clouds like a river going around a river island. Rainfall was significantly less than expected. It takes a lot of energy in order to deflect cloud formations bearing millions of tons of water.

"This cloud movement was repeated on December 31 when in the evening hours an entire cloud formation, upon arriving above Kosovo, headed to the east, again leaving the area from Kosovo to Novi Sad without a drop of rain. And these were enormous wet air masses which in the east of Kosovo brought as much as 200 mm of rain per square meter."

During earlier months it would happen that the rains would circumvent our country south of Kosovo but it was never this apparent. The weather situation on January 1, 2001 clearly showed that there were no large cloud formations above Serbia; everything went east."

Apparently the energy from the depleted uranium which NATO bombed "sowed" throughout Serbia is maintaining a disturbance in the magnetic field this long. The precipitation which Serbia "received" during the past few days at first may appear to represent a great improvement but at the same time engineer Milan Stevancevic warns that weather changes have just begun.

"If we take into account the half-life of depleted uranium which is measured in the billion of years, chances are great that the state of drought which Serbia is presently experiencing will continue. And what is worst of all, with high temperatures, a lack of rain means that lack of drinking water, irrigation water and electricity is something we should count on for a long time," claims engineer Stevancevic.

S. Majdak

Translated by S. Lazovic (Jan. 7, 2001)