![]() |
In a speech at the Lord Mayor of London's Easter Banquet, Mr Cook said standing by while Serbian forces engaged in violent ethnic cleansing would have seen fascism re-born in Europe for the first time since World War Two.
'Never again'
Mr Cook said: "In 1945 we surveyed what we found in Europe - the death camps, the indecent bureaucracy of the extermination programme, the pathetic survivors and the millions of victims and we said never again.
"It was a pledge on which the modern Europe was built. It is a pledge we must redeem in Kosovo."
![[ image: width=150]](/olmedia/315000/images/_319551_cook150.jpg)
He continued saying: "In the past two weeks we have borne witness to forced movements by train, to thousands starving in squalid camps, to pathetic masses shorn of their homes and their papers for no other reason than their ethnic identity.
"These are the sights we said we would banish from our continent forever."
He added: "Had we done nothing, we would have been complicit in that evil.
"Had we done nothing, we would have betrayed the modern Europe we are trying to build."
The foreign secretary also re-stated Nato's terms for the end to the air strikes.
All Serbian forces would have to be withdrawn from Kosovo and refugees allowed to return to their homes under the protection of an international peace keeping force, he said.
Scores dead in 'refugee air strike'
(14 Apr 99 | Europe)
Kosovo initiative on the table
(14 Apr 99 | Europe)
Simpson answers your questions
(14 Apr 99 | Forum)
Nato
The Foreign and Commonwealth Office
The Serbian Ministry of Information
The OSCE
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Links to other UK Politics stories