Saturday, May 26, 2012


Kosovo

NATO: Video Shows Kosovar Serbs As Leaders Of Attacks

Zvonko Veselinovic
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Zvonko Veselinovic
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PRISTINA -- The commander of NATO troops in Kosovo has identified an ethnic Serb businessman and his brother as the leaders of recent attacks on international forces in northern Kosovo, RFE/RL's Balkan Service reports.

NATO-led peacekeepers clashed with angry ethnic Serbs in northern Kosovo at the end of November as Kosovo Force (KFOR) troops began dismantling barricades erected by the Serbs near a disputed border crossing with Serbia.

Dozens of KFOR soldiers were injured during the dismantling efforts, some of them by bullets fired by the Serbs.

NATO General Erhard Drews of Germany said KFOR has video of the Serbian businessman, Zvonko Veselinovic, and his brother, and has given it to EULEX, the EU mission on rule of law in Kosovo, for further investigation. He said EULEX is cooperating with the authorities in Serbia on the issue.

In a meeting with a group of journalists from Serbia on December 12, Drews added that Veselinovic was unfortunate as he was wounded in the neck by a rubber bullet and is currently "out of the game."

He was last seen in public in northern Kosovo on December 11.

Little is known about Veselinovic, who has described himself as a construction company owner. Some reports claim he is involved in controversial business dealings.

Veselinovic's name initially came up when Kosovar Serbs in the north reacted violently to the Kosovo government's efforts to seize control of the border with Serbia on July 25.

EULEX declined to provide any information on the ongoing investigation.

Serbian Interior Minister Ivica Dacic denied that EULEX is cooperating with law-enforcement authorities in Belgrade on this case involving problems along the Kosovar-Serbian border.

"This is a lie," he said. "The center of the crime is in Pristina and Albania. The Albanian mafia is the most powerful in the world and these are not my claims, but those of Russian, German, and American secret services..."

Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in February 2008 and has been recognized by 85 countries. Belgrade considers Kosovo to be a UN-administered territory of Serbia.
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Comment Sorting
Comments
     
by: PEN from: United Kingdom
December 14, 2011 11:16
If you're going to be taken seriously as a news provider you really should know, by now, that Ivica Dacic is not a 'she.' At least he wasn't when I last checked. Furthermore, aping the usual NATO/EU line about 'parallel structures' in the Serbian north while ignoring the far more dangerous criminal structures in Pristina is disingenuous. Thaci's regime has an appalling reputation. But as it's propped up by Washington and Berlin, nobody gives a hoot. Step out of the loop sometimes RFE/RL and give us all something insightful to read about.
In Response

by: Moderator
December 14, 2011 11:50
Thank you for drawing this typo to our attention. The error has since been corrected. -- Web Team
In Response

by: Frank
December 14, 2011 12:39
That particular has been changed, unlike the biased RFE/RL former Yugoslav reporting and commentary as noted above by PEN.

BTW, UNSCR 1244 doesn't contradict the notion of "parallel structures," inclusive of Belgrade having a limited presence (including military and police) in Kosovo.
In Response

by: Mark from: Australia
December 14, 2011 23:48
PEN,

Serb minorities have tended to show themselves as disloyal citizens, placing the irredentist concerns of a neighbouring state above the civic duties they owe to the communities they reside in.

What they are doing in Kosovo follows the same pattern to that done in Croatia and Bosnia in the 1990s:
- blocking roads (log revolutions)
- provoking conflicts with local police/security services who go to unblock transport routes vital for trade and commerce
- complaints from Belgrade who then send their army in as an "honest broker" even though it was all engineered from Belgrade.

The strategy is not unique to the Serbs - it was employed by the Indonesian armed forces during East Timor's declaration of independence.

What the incidents have shown is that Serbia remains unreconstructed and playing the same strategy as during Milosevic's era. Indeed, it reflects the general thinking in Serbia that Serbia's reputation was not tarnished because of the mass murders and senseless destruction committed by the JNA and Serb irregulars, but because the other side had better PR.

This is why Serbia has not been granted candidate status and why the EU is looking for progress on Nth Kosovo because this will be the indicator of a break with the past.
In Response

by: Frank
December 15, 2011 12:51
Will add that Mark's comments are one-sidedly inaccurate.

Non-Serb nationalists contributed greatly to the violent breakup of Yugoslavia

In Response

by: Mark
December 17, 2011 23:10
Yes Frank, it's biased because you said so. Yes, how dare the non-Serb nationalists refuse to submit to the Greater Serbia plan and defend themselves when attacked.

by: Freedom
December 14, 2011 21:49
These Serbs are barbaric and uncivil, they deserve nothing. They think that causing violence, harming innocent people and taking things that don't belong to them is not a problem as long as they(serbs) prosper.
In Response

by: Frank
December 15, 2011 02:18
"Freedom" exhibits the kind of bigoted stupidity that's unofficially encouraged by RFE/RL.

by: Zirb
December 15, 2011 09:38
Nothing free about RFE/RL, just another NATO sounding board for the US state department. The Kosovo attackers are NATO and the Albanian mafia they so eagerly protect making Kosovo the rotting cesspool it is south of the Ibar river.

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