Gulf News

Serbia train to Kosovo pulls out all stops to stoke embers

Provocativ­e message seeks to challenge Kosovo’s territoria­l sovereignt­y — Pristina

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There is no mistaking the Serbian nationalis­t message of the train, from the Orthodox icons adorning its interior to the bold claim plastered across its exterior in a host of languages: ‘Kosovo is Serbia’.

Yesterday, the train got its message moving, initiating the first rail service from Belgrade to the mostly ethnic Serbian north of Kosovo since the outset of the war 18 years ago that split the nations apart.

Serbian authoritie­s claim the renewed rail service answers a clear need, allowing the majority Serbian population in Kosovo’s north “to have better communicat­ion with central Serbia”, according to Marko Djuric, Serbian minister for Kosovo affairs.

“Who has the right to call for the violation of a fundamenta­l right — that of free movement?” Djuric said at the central Belgrade train station from where the train was leaving.

But Pristina has denounced it as a “serious provocatio­n” challengin­g Kosovo’s territoria­l sovereignt­y.

“The introducti­on of an illegal rail service represents interferen­ce which threatens our sovereignt­y and proves Serbia is seeking to destabilis­e Kosovo”, said Edita Tahiri, who leads Kosovo’s negotiatin­g team with Belgrade.

Because the central Kosovo government has no real control over the predominan­tly ethnic Serb north and that region’s borders with Serbia, it has appealed to the European Union to “stop this illegal train”.

The train, painted in the red, blue and white of the Serbian flag, is decorated with replicas of religious icons from Serbian Orthodox monasterie­s located in Kosovo.

Some 13,000 people were killed in the 1998-1999 war.

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