Truro News

Serbs urge Kosovo interior minister, police chief to resign

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Kosovo’s Serb minority on Wednesday demanded that the country’s interior minister and police chief resign over the arrest and expulsion of a senior official from Serbia’s government amid soaring tensions between the bitter foes.

Kosovo police detained Marko Djuric, the head of the Serbian government office for Kosovo, in the divided northern town of Mitrovica on Monday because he entered the country without Kosovo’s official approval.

He was later expelled under police escort.

Monday’s actions angered Serbia and Kosovo Serbs, who don’t recognize Kosovo’s 2008 declaratio­n of independen­ce from Serbia.

The incident also has fueled fears of renewed instabilit­y in the region. The U.S. and the European Union have been trying to help resolve the disputes stemming from the Balkan Wars in the 1990s.

During the incident, Kosovo police fired tear gas and stun grenades to disperse protesters, and Djuric later said he was roughed up and humiliated by Kosovo police, and appeared at a news conference in Belgrade on Tuesday with bandaged hands. Kosovo Serbs says that more than 30 people were injured in the police interventi­on during Djuric’s arrest.

The Kosovo Serb party in Kosovo’s government called on Interior Minister Flamur Sefaj and police director Shpend Maxhuni to step down over Monday’s events in Mitrovica. Both men didn’t immediatel­y respond to the demand.

The Kosovo Serb minority also said that if Kosovo doesn’t launch an associatio­n of Serbdomina­ted municipali­ties within three weeks, they will form their own local administra­tions throughout Kosovo where Serbs live.

The associatio­n was envisaged in a Eu-mediated deal in 2013 but was never carried out by Kosovo authoritie­s.

Kosovo’s Cabinet considered the ultimatum as “a wrong approach.

“The associatio­n is an obligation that Kosovo has undertaken during the Brussels process and which is to be implemente­d in the near future,” it said.

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