![]() |
Their arrival on Saturday came amid growing fears about violence, with Kosovo Albanians returning to the province seeking revenge on Serbs.
Pristina airport had been closed since about 200 Russian soldiers beat Nato forces into Kosovo two weeks ago, provoking a stand-off between the two sides.
The Russian Illyushin was immediately followed by a French C-130 Hercules, carrying supplies to reequip the airport.
![[ image: width=150]](/olmedia/375000/images/_379041_plan_2_150.jpg)
K-For commander General Sir Mike Jackson greeted officers descending from the two arriving planes, starting with the Russians.
Another 12 flights - half of them Russian and half Nato - are expected over the next week, after which the airport should be fully operational for military and humanitarian flights.
More Russian troops are expected to arrive on Monday.
Uncertainty about role
It is still not clear where the Russian troops, who will eventually number around 3,000, will be stationed in Kosovo.
A senior Russian Defence Ministry official, General Leonid Ivashov, said that in the case of "political complications" concerning disarmament or the arrest of indicted war criminals, a decision would be taken in Moscow, possibly even with the consent of President Yeltsin.
Many ethnic Albanians are nervous at the thought of a Russian presence, and there are concerns that if the Russians are assigned to prodominantly Serb districts, it could lead to a de facto partition of Kosovo.
Russian K-For troops are "creme de la creme"
(26 Jun 99 | Monitoring)
Analysis: How Yugoslavia hid its tanks
(25 Jun 99 | Europe)
When society breaks down
(25 Jun 99 | Europe)
Reward for Milosevic capture
(25 Jun 99 | Europe)
Serbs: 'Where is K-For?'
(25 Jun 99 | Europe)
Nato
Serb Ministry of Information
Kosovo Crisis Centre
UNHCR: The Kosovo Crisis
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Violence greets Clinton visit
Russian forces pound Grozny
EU fraud: a billion dollar bill
Next steps for peace
Cardinal may face loan-shark charges
Vodafone takeover battle heats up
(From Business)
Trans-Turkish pipeline deal signed
French party seeks new leader
Jube tube debut
Athens riots for Clinton visit
UN envoy discusses Chechnya in Moscow
Solana new Western European Union chief
Moldova's PM-designate withdraws
Chechen government welcomes summit
In pictures: Clinton's violent welcome
Georgia protests over Russian 'attack'
UN chief: No Chechen 'catastrophe'
New arms control treaty for Europe
Mannesmann fights back
(From Business)
EU fraud -- a billion-dollar bill
New moves in Spain's terror scandal
EU allows labelling of British beef
UN seeks more security in Chechnya
Athens riots for Clinton visit
Russia's media war over Chechnya
Homeless suffer as quake toll rises
Analysis: East-West relations must shift