Serbian troops placed on alert after Kosovo police arrests | World Defense

Serbian troops placed on alert after Kosovo police arrests

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Serbian troops placed on alert after Kosovo police arrests
By DUSAN STOJANOVIC
an hour ago
28 May 2019

Kosovo police special unit members secure the area near the village of Cabra, north western Kosovo, during an ongoing police operation on Tuesday, May 28, 2019. A Kosovo police operation against organized crime in the north, where most of the ethnic Serb minority lives, has sparked tension, and Serbia ordered its troops to full alert. (AP Photo/Visar Kryeziu)

BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — Serbia put its troops on full alert Tuesday after heavily armed police in northern Kosovo entered Serb-populated Mitrovica, firing tear gas and arresting nearly two dozen people.

It was the latest flare-up in long-simmering tensions between Serbia and its former province, which declared independence from Belgrade in 2008 after a bloody

1998-99 war that ended only with NATO intervention. Ninety percent of population in northern Kosovo are Serbs who don’t want to be part of independent Kosovo. Action by Kosovo special police there is rare and always triggers Serb anger.

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic said Kosovo police arrested 23 Serbs and Bosnians after “bursting” into the northern area with armored vehicles. He said he had seen video of the police firing “live ammunition” over the heads of unarmed Serbs, and said the operation was designed to intimidate minority Serbs in Kosovo, whose population is mostly ethnic Albanians.

Vucic said he has ordered soldiers near the border to be on “combat alert” to protect Serbs if tensions escalate.

“Serbia will try to preserve peace and stability, but will be fully ready to protect our people at the shortest notice,” Vucic told parliament.
Serbian state TV reported movements of Serb troops stationed near the border. Any Serbian armed incursion into Kosovo would mean a direct clash with NATO-led peacekeepers there.

Kosovo’s prime minister, Ramush Haradinaj, confirmed on Twitter that police had carried out “an anti-smuggling and organized crime operation.” President Hashim Thaci called on the ethnic Serb minority to remain calm and support the police.

“Those involved in illegal activities will go behind bars,” he wrote on his Facebook page, insisting that the police operation was not targeting people from specific ethnicities.

The spokesman for the NATO peacekeeping mission, Col. Vincenzo Grasso, said the force is monitoring the situation and coordinating with authorities.
Serbia, and its allies Russia and China, do not recognize Kosovo’s 2008 declaration of independence. The United States and most other countries do. The dispute has stalled both countries’ efforts to become members of the European Union.

The two sides had been participating in an EU-facilitated dialogue, but Serbia walked away in November after Kosovo slapped a 100% tax on Bosnian and Serbian imports, saying it will be lifted only when the two countries recognize Kosovo’s sovereignty.
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AP writers Jovana Gec in Belgrade and Llazar Semini in Tirana, Albania, contributed to this report.

 

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The Latest: UN mission in Kosovo says 2 staff detained
31 minutes ago
28 May 2019

Kosovo police special unit members secure the area near the village of Cabra, north western Kosovo, during an ongoing police operation on Tuesday, May 28, 2019. A Kosovo police operation against organized crime in the north, where most of the ethnic Serb minority lives, has sparked tension, and Serbia ordered its troops to full alert. (AP Photo/Visar Kryeziu)

BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — The Latest on tensions between Serbia and Kosovo (all times local):

2:15 p.m.
The United Nations Mission in Kosovo, or UNMIK, has deplored the detention of two of its staff during an armed police operation in Kosovo’s Serb-populated north.

The mission said in a statement Tuesday the two U.N. staff members were injured the operation, which triggered Serb anger and sent regional tensions soaring.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry has said that one of the U.N. employees is Russian and condemned Kosovo for stoking tensions with neighboring Serbia. The nationality of the other employee is not immediately known.

UNMIK Ambassador Zahir Tanin called for their immediate release, adding “any harm to United Nations staff will be met with the highest degree of diplomatic and international legal responses.”

UNMIK was deployed in Kosovo in 1999 after NATO intervened to stop a bloody Serb crackdown on Kosovo Albanian separatists. It has a reduced mission after Kosovo’s 2008 declaration of independence.
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1:50 p.m.
Russia is demanding Kosovo authorities immediately release a Russian U.N. employee detained and injured during a police operation in northern Kosovo that has fueled tensions with Serbia.

Alexander Chepurin, the Russian ambassador to Belgrade, said Tuesday on Twitter that “we are revolted by the provocation.” Chepurin says the detained Russian citizen is an associate of the U.N. mission in Kosovo known as UNMIK.

He adds that “we are demanding immediate release of the Russian (citizen) and establishing the responsibility for all those responsible for this flagrant incident.”

Kosovo said Tuesday’s incursion in the Serb-dominated northern region was an operation against corruption and crime. Serbia warned it was a threat to peace and said it has put its troops on full alert.

Kosovo’s President Hashim Thaci said that the Russian citizen was “camouflaged under a diplomatic veil to hamper the police operation.”
Russia, a Serbian ally, does not recognize Kosovo’s declaration of independence from Belgrade in 2008.
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1:20 p.m.
Russia’s Foreign Ministry has accused Kosovo of stoking ethnic tensions with Serbia after heavily armed Kosovo police entered a Serb-dominated region in northern Kosovo and arrested some two dozen people.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said in a statement on Tuesday that Kosovo “provoked” Serbia by sending its police force to enter Serb-populated regions of the former Serbian province. Zakharova said the incursion “aims to stoke fears into the non-Albanian population” and “seize control over those areas by force.”

Kosovo declared independence from Belgrade in 2008 after a bloody war. Belgrade and its allies Russia and China do not recognize Kosovo’s statehood, while the United States and most of the Western states do.

Zakharova said on Tuesday that the incident wipes away the progress made in reconciliation between Serbia and Kosovo and called on Kosovo’s “foreign patrons to rein in Kosovar and Albanian radicals.”
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1 p.m.
Kosovo’s president has rejected as “populist” Serbia’s warnings about putting troops on alert in reaction to an armed police operation in a Serb-populated area in Kosovo.

Hashim Thaci said that the Kosovo police operation early Tuesday in Mitrovica, in northern Kosovo, was fully legal and “directed against no community.”

Thaci said that those arrested included “Albanians, Serbs, Bosnians and also a Russian who was camouflaged under a diplomatic veil to hamper the police operation.”

He called for Belgrade’s support “because organized crime is not local but regional.”

Serbia regarded the operation as a threat to peace. It said Serbian troops have been ordered to be on alert and would act if tensions escalate.
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11:40 a.m.
Serbia’s president is warning that his country will act to “protect our people” in neighboring Kosovo amid soaring tensions with its former war-time foe.

Aleksandar Vucic confirmed reports Tuesday that Serbian troops have been placed on alert after armed police in Kosovo, a former Serbian province, entered Serb-populated regions and made a number of arrests.

Vucic says Kosovo police so far have arrested 23 people after “bursting” into the northern region with armored vehicles. He told Serbia’s parliament that Kosovo police have used force against “unarmed Serbs” and fired shots in the air.

Vucic says Serbia will “struggle to preserve peace and stability but we will be fully ready in a shortest possible period to protect our people.”

Any intervention from Serbia would result in direct confrontation with NATO peacekeepers stationed in Kosovo. Vucic says that “we are aware of all the consequences.”
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11 a.m.
The NATO-led Kosovo Force mission is calling on all people in the country to stay calm, adding that it is closely monitoring a police operation in the north.

KFOR spokesman Col. Vincenzo Grasso told The Associated Press on Tuesday that they are monitoring the situation and coordinating with the authorities, but NATO troops are not on alert.

“We are aware of the ongoing police operation. We are monitoring the situation and invite everybody to stay calm and not to escalate to the use of violence,” he said by phone.

A Kosovo police operation against organized crime in the north, where most of the ethnic Serb minority lives, has sparked tension, and Serbia ordered its troops to full alert.

The Kosovapress news agency reported that three police officers were injured, one seriously.
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10:20 a.m.
Kosovo’s president is calling on the ethnic Serb minority to remain calm and support the police fight against organized crime, which he says will speed up the country’s process toward integration with the West.

Hashim Thaci on Tuesday called for calm after a police operation in the area of Mitrovica, where most of the ethnic Serb minority lives, sparked concern, and led Serbia to order its troops to full alert.

“Those involved in illegal activities will go behind bars,” he wrote on his Facebook page, adding that the police operation was not targeting ethnicities. He invited the Serb minority “to support the fight against organized crime.”

Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj called on Belgrade “not to undermine our efforts to tackle (crime).”

Serbia has suspended European Union-facilitated dialogue with the Kosovo government after Pristina in November slapped a 100-percent tax on Bosnian and Serbian imports, saying it will only be lifted when the two countries recognize Kosovo’s sovereignty.
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10:05 a.m.
Serbia’s state TV says a meeting is underway of the country’s top security body following tensions in Kosovo over arrests in the Serb-populated north.

The report says President Aleksandar Vucic will speak in the parliament later on Tuesday about the latest developments. It says Vucic has warned the European Union that Serbia will react if Kosovo does not pull its special police out of northern Kosovo.

RTS TV also says “movements” of Serbian troops in the direction of Kosovo have been spotted after the country put the security forces on alert earlier on Tuesday.

Serbia’s National Security Council includes top army and police officers and government officials.

Kosovo police have said they have arrested several people in an action in northern Kosovo against crime and corruption. Serbia insists the action is aimed at intimidating Serbs in Kosovo.
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9:55 a.m.
Kosovo police and media say two officers have been injured during a police action in the north of the country that has triggered tensions with Serbia.

A statement said Tuesday’s action followed a months-long investigation of criminal groups involved in smuggling, abuse of power, bribery and illegal trade. The lives of the injured officers are not in danger.

Police faced resistance, especially in the commune of Zubin Potok, where they arrested the top policeman, an ethnic Serb. Local Serbs tried to block the road but police broke through.

The police statement said those arrested Tuesday included several police officers and citizens, but didn’t specify how many.

Agim Bahtiri, the ethnic Albanian mayor of the commune of Mitrovica, said the operation was against no nationality “but those people who have done harm.”
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8:50 a.m.
Serbia has ordered its troops to full alert after reports that Kosovo police entered Serb-populated regions of the former Serbian province.

Serbia’s state TV said Tuesday that Kosovo’s special police “burst into” northern Kosovo and made several arrests. There was no confirmation of the action from Pristina.

Serbian government official Marko Djuric says the Kosovo police action is designed to intimidate and expel Serbs from Kosovo and presents a “not only a threat to stability but the most direct threat to peace.”

Serbia lost control over Kosovo after a NATO intervention in 1999. It does not recognize Kosovo’s 2008 declaration of independence.
State TV says Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic ordered a full state of alert for Serbian troops.

 
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