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The Serbian and federal interior ministry buildings which were hit are close to a major hospital complex and several apartment blocks.
The latest assault came as tens of thousands of refugees continued to pour out of Kosovo. Nato says more than a third of the population has fled the province since the start of the conflict last year.
![[ image: width=150]](/olmedia/310000/images/_310897_belgradedayl.150.jpg)
Serbian television showed pictures of fires raging out of control in Belgrade and women clutching babies being evacuated from a maternity ward.
A series of loud explosions rocked the capital around 1 a.m. local time (2300 GMT), about 20 minutes after air raid sirens wailed over the city.
Within minutes scores of ambulances had rushed to the scene, but a BBC correspondent in the city quoted doctors saying the only casualties were firemen and policemen hit by falling glass.
The Pentagon said eight Cruise missiles were launched on the city from British and American vessels in the Adriatic Sea, but one missile fired by the submarine HMS Splendid did not explode.
The ministries are situated on a street known as Embassy Row with the US, British, German and Canadian embassies all close by.
Nato says they were targeted because they control the security forces accused of committing atrocities against Kosovo's Albanian population.
Yugoslav Deputy Prime Minister, Vuk Draskovic, condemned the Nato attack as "a crime against the Serbian nation''.
"Downtown Belgrade is on fire on the biggest Christian day of Easter,'' he told the British satellite station Sky. ''The last time Belgrade was on fire [over] Easter was in 1941 when Hitler bombed it."
Russian condemnation
Russian State Duma Deputy Speaker Sergey Baburin, who is in Belgrade, said the latest Nato raid showed ''a cannibal'' had appeared in Europe.
"This cannibal must be stopped and the Russian president, parliament and government are already taking steps to do that," added Mr Baburin after seeing the gutted buildings.
But a Pentagon spokesman said: "There should be no surprise about what has happened in Belgrade. We have said there is no sanctuary and this action is consistent with a continued and sustained policy."
Air raid sirens also sounded in Novi Sad, Nis, Kragujevac and Bor and there were reports of attacks north west of Belgrade.
Refugee crisis
Aid agencies are warning of a humanitarian disaster in Yugoslavia's neighbours not seen in Europe since the Second World War.
The United Nations refugee agency, the UNHCR, says the situation is reaching nightmare proportions. It estimates more than 180,000 people have crossed into Macedonia, Albania and Montenegro in the last 10 days.
But the Yugoslav Government blamed the exodus on the Nato bombings and appealed to Kosovans not to leave.
In a statement issued by the Yugoslav mission to the United Nations, Belgrade said only terrorists were not wanted in Yugoslavia.
![[ image: width=150]](/olmedia/310000/images/_310674_wheel150.jpg)
US President Bill Clinton said it was clear Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic wanted to rid Kosovo of its ethnic Albanian population and retain control of the province. ''We cannot let this happen with impunity," he added.
Mr Clinton is sending his Deputy Secretary of State, Strobe Talbott, to the region where he will try to persuade other countries to accept refugees.
Western officials say they also have evidence that Mr Milosevic is plotting to oust the democratically-elected president of Montenegro, which - together with Serbia - forms Yugoslavia.
Milosevic remains defiant
Meanwhile, the Serbian authorities have begun collecting evidence for proceedings against three US soldiers captured by the Yugoslav army on the border between Macedonia and Kosovo.
Yugoslavia has said the three will be treated humanely.
Mr Milosevic has asked Moscow for military aid during a meeting in Belgrade with Russian MPs headed by Mr Baburin,
So far Russia has ruled out giving military support. But President Milosevic said: "We will defend our country,'' he said. ''If we have assistance, then we will defend it more easily, and if we have none, then defending it will be harder, but we will definitely defend it."
The US told Russia it would be a grave mistake to give Yugoslavia any sort of military assistance against Nato.
The warning came as a Russian reconnaissance ship made its way to the Mediterranean to monitor events in the Balkans. Moscow says the vessel will stay out of the conflict and not share intelligence with Belgrade.
A US Navy aircraft carrier is also approaching the Mediterranean. Defence officials said USS Theodore Roosevelt was likely to be deployed in the conflict.
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Europe Contents
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Country profiles
Serbia closes B92 radio station
(02 Apr 99 | Monitoring)
Tension builds in refugee camps
(03 Apr 99 | Europe)
UK Cruise missile 'failed'
(03 Apr 99 | UK)
Nato warns Milosevic off Montenegro
(02 Apr 99 | Europe)
'Driven from our homes'
(02 Apr 99 | Europe)
Analysis: UN left on sidelines
(03 Apr 99 | Americas)
Milosevic's weapons plea
(02 Apr 99 | Europe)
Serbia keeps world guessing on US soldiers
(02 Apr 99 | Europe)
Captured soldiers bring crisis home
(02 Apr 99 | Americas)
Serbian Ministry of Information
Kosova Press
OSCE
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
International Crisis Group
Institute for War and Peace Reporting
Nato
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