COLUMN ONE
Doing a Number on Violators
Patrick Ball has pioneered the use of databases to expose atrocities.
At tribunal, he blames Milosevic for Kosovo 'ethnic cleansing.'
From the LATimes.com, MARCH 14, 2002
By ROBERT LEE HOTZ, LA TIMES STAFF WRITER
BOSTON -- As Patrick Ball scrawled equations across a conference-room
white board, his talk was of regression analysis, matching methodologies
and capture probabilities.
His numbers were the equivalent of blood spatters at a crime scene.
For three years, Ball traveled back and forth to Kosovo, systematically
culling data on civilian deaths from refugee reports, exhumations and
witness accounts. Building on that evidence, he and his colleagues
compiled a database documenting the ebb and flow of "ethnic cleansing" of
ethnic Albanians during the spring of 1999 in Kosovo, a province of
Serbia, Yugoslavia's main republic. The statistical portrait of the
displaced, missing and killed reveals the timing and ferocity of fatal
blows that fell across an entire province. This numerical pattern of
death and panic exonerates some people; it points toward others.
Now, the statistics that Ball calculated on a Boston white board have
become evidence in a war crimes trial. On Wednesday, in an international
courtroom in The Hague, Ball confronted the man he believes is responsible
for the deaths--former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic.
The evidence Ball laid out as an expert witness for the prosecution
represents the newest infusion of technical expertise into the human
rights movement--an effort to harness information science to track
the beatings, rapes, killings and mass executions of systematic political
violence.
Milosevic has argued strenuously in his own defense that NATO airstrikes
or the ethnic Albanian guerrillas of the Kosovo Liberation Army, or
KLA, could have been responsible for the estimated 11,000 civilians
killed between March and June 1999. The statistical analysis, Ball
testified, demonstrates that neither is possible.
The numbers, he said, establish a clear pattern: The culprit was an
organized campaign of "ethnic cleansing" by Yugoslav military
and paramilitary forces under the command of Milosevic.
"When we looked systematically and really carefully at the killing
data, I found this pattern," Ball said during an interview before
his testimony. "My jaw dropped through the floor. It blew me away."
Negotiating a Minefield of Unreliable Data
Ball, the deputy director of the science and human rights program
at the American Assn. for the Advancement of Science in Washington,
has spent a decade perfecting the use of computer technology in the
service of human rights.
To arrive at their conclusions about Kosovo, he and his team had to
negotiate a minefield of technical uncertainties and unreliable data.
In all, more than 800,000 ethnic Albanians fled Kosovo in 1999, in
the largest mass expulsion of people in Europe since the 1940s.
No one knows exactly how many died. International prosecutors and
human rights activists allege that as many as 11,000 men, women and
children were killed in a campaign of terror by the Yugoslav government
designed to trigger panic and cause people to flee their homes. Atrocities
in more than 500 towns and villages have been documented.
The worst of the killing took place during the 11 weeks of NATO airstrikes
in Yugoslavia, from March into June 1999, when there were few outside
observers in Kosovo who could independently document human rights violations.
To complicate any subsequent investigation, military and paramilitary
forces routinely confiscated identity papers from the fleeing refugees.
Sensitive government records were purged. Houses were burned and belongings
scattered. Mass graves were obliterated. Bodies disappeared.
Beginning with a knapsack full of registries he rescued from the rubble
of an Albanian border crossing, Ball gathered as much information as
possible about the number of people leaving Kosovo, where they came
from and when they reached the border. The one knapsack contained files
on 272,000 people.
From that set of records and other reports, Ball could map the timing
and source of the surges of refugees. Next, he sought to estimate how
many civilians had been killed, and where and when they may have died.
Working independently of the U.S. government, Ball and his colleagues
drew information from 15,000 interviews and exhumation reports conducted
by four different humanitarian groups. Thousands of duplicate or misspelled
names had to be culled.
Ball's team reliably identified 4,400 people who had been killed.
They then used a standard population sampling technique to estimate
the total dead--10,356 Kosovo Albanians, with an error margin of several
hundred people more or less.
By comparing the refugee movements against the death records, Ball
discovered the numbers rose and fell in the same pattern in the same
parts of the country, suggesting that they shared a common cause.
Then Ball compared records of the flight of the refugees to daily
military action reports and tallies of the dead. To ensure fairness,
he used the records from Milosevic's government of NATO airstrikes
and KLA ground actions.
He lined all the patterns of behavior up against one another and created
graphs of the results.
The peaks of refugee flight consistently occurred during and after
intense activity by Serbian forces, he found. Actions by the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization and the KLA generally happened after the
surges in refugees and killings, not before them.
"I find the data are consistent with the explanation that Yugoslavian
forces conducted a systematic campaign of 'ethnic cleansing.' The data
reject the hypothesis that KLA or NATO activity was responsible," Ball
said.
Several experts called the statistical analysis "particularly
innovative."
UC Berkeley demographer Ronald Lee, who reviewed the work, said: "There
are very subtle and difficult statistical questions about how to draw
these conclusions. I thought what they did was very impressive, very
valid . . . persuasive."
A Scientific Application 'Born of Desperation'
Ball's work is an application of science "born of desperation," said
independent human rights scholar Louise Spirer in Stamford, Conn. "The
reason for the push is that we have to come up with a means to show
what happened when there aren't any records."
In World War II, Nazi officials who orchestrated the death camps meticulously
documented their work. Allied armies captured almost 14 tons of such
files, which were then used as evidence at war crimes trials involving
90,000 cases.
Attempts at concealment were half-hearted at best, said Richard Pierre
Claude, an expert on human rights and government at Princeton University,
who is author of the forthcoming book "Science in the Service
of Human Rights."
Today, by contrast, those who use terror and mass murder as tools
of statecraft take pains to cover their tracks "to preserve plausible
deniability," said Yale University international law expert Harold
Hongju Koh, who was U.S. assistant secretary of State for democracy,
human rights and labor from 1998 to 2001.
So often too, both sides in a conflict can muster victims of atrocities.
Statistical analysis holds out the hope of a reliable way to determine
relative guilt.
"What we can do with statistical analysis that you can't do with
anecdotes is make overall scientifically valid estimates," said
human rights activist Herbert Spirer, an international law and information
management expert at Columbia University and husband of Louise Spirer. "We
don't have to sit and look at a single mass grave and try to decide
how many people died in an entire country."
During truth commission proceedings in Guatemala, which were convened
to investigate abuses from more than 35 years of civil war, human rights
statisticians analyzed 7,500 cases compiled from 11,000 depositions
documenting 24,910 killings.
In rural areas, the number crunchers proved, native people were killed
by government death squads at rates five to eight times greater than
rates among other ethnic groups, offering a statistical hint of genocide.
In South Africa, researchers digested interviews with more than 21,000
witnesses covering 49,000 incidents during the latter decades of apartheid.
By comparing rates of death among groups of people in different parts
of the country, they developed statistics demonstrating that police
were responsible for the overwhelming majority of the killings and
that most of the victims were young black men.
By matching a database of 9,000 witness accounts of beatings and killings
in El Salvador against comprehensive career records of military and
police officials, statisticians showed how units became more violent
when certain officers were placed in charge. The analysis helped get
those officers banned from government service.
But in Kosovo, the high technology of human rights may face its severest
challenge yet.
Rarely has a government worked so effectively to mask its operations
against civilians, several experts said. Never has so much high technology
been marshaled in the effort to uncover evidence of sustained human
rights violations.
Said Koh, who helped lay the groundwork for the technical evidence
being presented against Milosevic: "Kosovo is what I consider
the state of the art.
"You want an undeniable scientific account of what happened," Koh
said. "Getting out the historical record is as important as holding
someone accountable. These advances help make it impossible to erase
history."
A 'Hacktivist' Who Thinks in Code
Ball, 36, is a "hacktivist," employing his programming skills
in the service of human rights. A sociologist by training, he has been
writing computer software since high school.
"I think in code," he said.
He worked his way through graduate school at the University of Michigan
by writing computer databases. His passion for dBase, Fox and Paradox
code was more than matched by a sense of political outrage. He wrote
his dissertation on human rights movements in Ethiopia, Pakistan and
El Salvador.
When Ball found himself in El Salvador as that country's civil war
was ending in 1991, he heard that a local human rights group "needed
someone who could hack a database."
He volunteered.
In the years since, every truth commission or major human rights investigation
in the world has in some way drawn on his computer skills.
"It is an odd line of work," Ball said.
For a decade, he has been pioneering the use of computer databases
and statistical analysis to document human rights abuses. With his
colleagues at the American Assn. for the Advancement of Science's science
and human rights program, Ball recently published a hacktivist manual.
It teaches activists around the world how to design computer entry
screens, questionnaires and databases that can be used to track human
rights abuses.
Helped initially by the American Statistical Assn., a 162-year-old
professional group that advocates the use of statistics in science,
a global network of documentation specialists has spread information
management techniques to human rights activists in 150 countries.
With solar-powered laptops, activists log testimony of abuses from
survivors hiding far from any power outlet. They use the precision
navigation capacities of the Global Positioning System to pinpoint
the coordinates of mass graves they find. They combine databases and
integrated mapping software to chart the geography of terror.
To protect the integrity of the information they are collecting, they
code it with encryption software and secure it behind Internet firewalls.
They create virtual havens for witnesses on Web sites.
To further evade surveillance, they communicate with each other through
anonymous e-mailing techniques that disguise the location and identity
of the sender.
In the computerized pursuit of justice, analysts like Ball employ
the same census and data-mining techniques used by marketing experts
to analyze purchasing habits, naturalists to estimate wildlife populations
and medical experts to document epidemics.
Instead of consumer profiles, herd counts or public health warnings,
however, the product of Ball's work is compelling circumstantial evidence
of official brutality.
Just as pathologists can use forensic DNA techniques to restore the
identities of those exhumed from anonymous mass graves, human rights
statisticians can reveal much of what is hidden to the individual eye.
What they are creating, said Spirer at Columbia, is "the epidemiology
of horror."
Traditional Activists Uneasy With Statistics
Other more traditional human rights activists are made queasy by so
many formulas. They recognize the power of statistics as an analytical
tool, but they are uncomfortable with it because abstract mathematical
modeling can rob the victims of their humanity.
"You turn this into something you quantify--a smear of refugees--and
you have to be careful about dehumanizing it," said Eric Stover,
director of the Human Rights Center at UC Berkeley. "The real
testimony is the body with the single gunshot to the head and the hands
tied behind the back."
For Ball, however, the anonymity of numbers is a saving grace.
One afternoon during the data entry phase, Ball found one of his co-workers
Net surfing. She was building a bookmark file in the database of Internet
links to online photographs of the dead. He was dismayed.
"Stop. Don't look," Ball told her.
"She was useless for the next two days," he recalled. "All
she could do was cry.
"This is data. Numbers. This is a technical problem. Otherwise,
you're done. Burned out. Gone.
"Crying."
Reprinted from LATimes.com.
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