Saturday, May 26, 2012


News / From Our Bureaus

Kosovar Serbs In Cat-And-Mouse Game With NATO On Border

NATO peacekeepers in Mitrovica
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NATO peacekeepers in Mitrovica
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MITROVICA -- NATO peacekeepers are busy blocking "alternative" border crossings into Serbia set up by Kosovar Serbs as they continue to protest the presence of Kosovo police and customs officials on the border, RFE/RL's Balkan Service reports.
 
The Serbs have reverted to using back roads to cross into Serbia and bring food and other supplies to the territory they control in the north of Kosovo since NATO-led KFOR troops helped Kosovo and EU officials take over the main Jarinje and Brnjak crossings on September 16.
 
One of the alternative roads winds around the Jarinje crossing and to the village of Rudnica in southern Serbia. The Serbs cleared the path and prepared to asphalt it on September 22, but KFOR moved in and ringed the border with barbed wire to prevent people from using it.
 
Afterward the Serbs unloaded truckloads of gravel around KFOR troops to prevent them from using the road, just as they had previously done at the official Jarinje and Brnjak crossings, which remain unpassable.
 
Krstimir Pantic, a local Serbian leader, told RFE/RL on September 23 that the Serbs have begun using another back road to alleviate "a small humanitarian crisis because it is not possible to transport food, medicine, and fuel into the north of 
Kosovo."
 
"That road is open for traffic of passenger cars and to my knowledge it is not  used for the transport of commercial goods," he said. "We are fully ready for a compromise with [Kosovar] Albanians and the international community but we cannot alow that there are [official] border crossings between Serbia and the north of the province [of Kosovo]. All other issues are open for negotiation."
 
Serbia and Kosovar Serbs do not recognize Kosovo's independence, which was declared in 2008. But 83 countries do recognize Kosovo as an independent state.
 
KFOR officials said they are working on a solution to the dispute.
 
"At the moment we are working on [some measures to] resolve it. I am sure we will find a solution," KFOR spokesman Ralf Adametz told RFE/RL.
 
The situation with the crossings has affected the implementation of a customs-stamps agreement between Kosovo and Serbia.
 
The continuation of talks between Kosovar and Serbian officials on technical issues is due to resume on September 27-28.
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Comment Sorting
Comments
     
by: Mike from: Canada
September 23, 2011 19:56
One has to ask themselves why the KFOR are so desperately trying to lock out the Serbs. It is afterall, historically always been their land. The Serbs are the only people who actually have a right to be there. Not the UN, KFOR, or any other outsiders including the Albanians.

by: PEN from: United Kingdom
September 24, 2011 10:04
KFOR is beginning to resemble an occupying army. They're preventing the local inhabitants from living as they please on their own land. All this rubbish about parallel structures and criminality is a joke. The local Serbs have elected their own leaders to represent them. Why should they be governed by a hostile administration in Albanian dominated Pristina. The Serbs in the north are free to move about and associate as they wish, unlike the Serbs south of the Ibar who live in wretched ghettoes in fear of assault. As for smuggling, what of the uncontrolled line between Kosovo and Albania. Or of the criminal clans running the rest of Kosovo. It's time for the so-called international community to stop insulting our intelligence.

by: Anonymous
September 24, 2011 12:24
Problem is another

what will be Kossovo without UN EU Kfor USA ?

And if a state is not able to stay on

ALONE

what kind of country can it be ?

by: François from: Versailles
September 24, 2011 16:32
NATO-Albanian action is illegal under international law and UN Resolution 1244. But who cares. Might is right. And besides, the Albanians regularly contribute suitcases full of drug & prostitution earned cash to "Western" politicians. Gotta keep that flowing!

by: gary from: USA
September 25, 2011 15:41
Careful what you wish for you just might get it, an Islamic state in europe. A greater Albania do we really need this. Why is it good for Albanians to have independence but not Serbs? Why does Kosovo get Independence but not Republic Serbska? Why does Kosovo get Independence without UN but the US won't let Palestinians even get a vote in the UN? Who's paying the US to do all this Arabs?

by: Ruben-NYC from: New York
September 26, 2011 00:37
A lot of hate here for NATO.

NATO is there to protect the interests of the local Serbs who are held hostage by political gangsters paid by Belgrade.

The local Serbs, just like their fellow Albanians want to live a normal life. The time is up for Serbia to stop using the local Serbs in Northern Kosova as pawns of their failed political games.

The same goes for Serbs from the diaspora who are quick to make senseless comments in this site. Easy for them to lecture from here about what should happen in the Balkans.
In Response

by: François from: Versailles
September 26, 2011 19:40
NATO is in Kosovo and Ex Yugoslavia to make sure a resurgent Russia doesn't establish bases in the Adriatic. NATO is in Kosovo and ex Yugoslavia because regional NATO powers (Germany and Turkey) have old scores to settle and dream of re-establishing their long gone empires. NATO is in Kosovo and ex Yugoslavia because money so dictates (drugs, arms sales to Muslim states, arms deals with Germany, ...).

NATO is most definitely NOT in Kosovo, in ex Yugoslavia or in ANY other part of the world because of humanitarian reasons. Why doesn’t NATO go on a humanitarian mission to help the Kurds live normal lives in Turkey, or the Palestinians live normal lives in Palestine, or the Yemenis live normal lives in Yemen, or the poor civilians of Misrata live normal lives in Lybia, or how about the Iraqis living normal lives in Iraq, ... or... or...

Wherever NATO has gone, it has only brought destruction and economic hardship to the local populations.
In Response

by: Milan from: Mitrovica
September 28, 2011 16:08
I am a local Serb from Kosovo, and living with a "fellow" Albanian that burned my house and is still not in jail, actually far from it, he lives a good life by selling pillaged goods from serbian homes, including my own, btw. he is a local politician also. Everytime I see him, when I go and visit my "ruins", he makes a "friendly" remark of chopping my head off like the rest of the Serbs. "Life is normal, we are pawns" Wake up for gods sake, do you have any idea what WAR is, and who is the prime minister in there? Belgrade doesn't do anything, they got bombed like rest of Serbia because of our suffering.

by: Andrew from: Canda
September 28, 2011 08:45
@ Mike
hey Mike how much do you have knowledge of history? Kosova have always been populated my Albanians
In Response

by: Milan from: Mitrovica
September 28, 2011 16:12
Always meens, since 1941 and the fascist occupation, aswell as ethnical cleansing of non-fascists. Btw. Kosovo aswell as Pristina, aswell as any other name of anything in Kosovo (and Metohija) is not albanian. And if Albanians always lived there, how come there is no albanian heritage in that land? Please people, we do not urge you to like us, but it would be nice to read and think before speaking and writting.

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