The Daily Telegraph

Hunting for illegal roads on Europe’s tensest border

Kosovo ramps up security as fears grow that Serbia’s president is planning an invasion aided by Putin

- By Danielle Sheridan DEFENCE EDITOR in Kosovo

BEFORE the Kosovan police begin their patrol of the border with Serbia, they load up the car with weaponry: AK-47S are strapped to the back of car seats, handguns dropped in the footwells, and drones and bulletproo­f vests stuffed in the Land Rover’s boot.

This is now standard protocol on one of the most volatile frontiers on the European continent.

When people ask Venton Elshani, the deputy police commander of North Kosovo, what the situation is like, he simply shows them the preparatio­ns he takes for patrol. “You see the weapons?” he said, before taking The Telegraph out to the border, “these are for police officers to carry. The situation is not good.”

Since Kosovo won independen­ce from Yugoslavia in a war that ended in 1999, it has played host to a small community of ethnic Serbs in the northern border region. Tensions with the ethnic Albanian majority have surged lately. Aleksandar Vucic, the president of Serbia, has hinted at an invasion – nationalis­ts urge him to act to “protect” the Serbs forced to live under Kosovan rule.

Fears of a fresh war spiked in 2023 when a group of Serbian gunmen stormed across the border into the northern village of Banjska and barricaded themselves in its monastery. Three of a suspected 30 militants were killed in a shoot-out. One of Commander Elshani’s men lost his life in the cross-fire.

Since that day, the officer and his team have conducted daily patrols in the Serbian-dominated border region, hunting for illegal roads into Serbia of the kind used by the gunmen in their assault.

“We know these roads better than anyone,” Commander Elshani told The Telegraph as the patrol wended its way through the mountains.

“The Serbs can’t make a road we won’t find.”

At the last count, police officers identified 65 illegal roads, all of which have been blocked with large ditches cut through the concrete.

A further 10 roads are kept under constant surveillan­ce, mainly via drones.

Having a constant presence in the Serb-majority region sends a message to Belgrade that Kosovo is protecting its borders, Commander Elshani said.

“Banjska changed the game, put the game into another level because of the deaths,” he explained.

“When the blood is shed, then it’s a problem.”

Analysts have warned that Kremlin propaganda is fuelling unrest in the north in a nation where 93 per cent are Albanian and 4 per cent are Serb. The majority of Serbs in Kosovo still regard Belgrade, which has never recognised Kosovo’s independen­ce, as their

‘It’s not a surprise Vucic wants to invade. They can shoot us, but they can’t scare us’

government. After the siege, authoritie­s uncovered a huge arms cache the attackers had stashed in disused buildings around the northern villages.

Only a few weeks ago, they discovered five more rocket launchers, a sign of the scale of the planned attack.

In an interview with The Telegraph,

Albin Kurti, Kosovo’s prime minister, warned that Mr Vucic planned to invade.

He said that Serbia had built up forward operating bases around the border in a “horseshoe shape” to “defend Belgrade and attack Kosovo”.

Based on Mr Vucic’s own words, Mr Kurti believes the Serbian president is biding his time for an opportunit­y to invade.

Mr Vucic’s friendship with Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, is well known, and Mr Kurti believes it is in the Russian leader’s interest for Serbia to invade Kosovo as it would distract from his own invasion currently raging in Ukraine.

Back down the mountain, at the Mitrovica Bridge which straddles the River Ibar, Serbia’s red, white and blue flag flutters everywhere. Once this bridge was a “hot spot” – an informal division between Kosovo’s northern border region and the ethnic Albanian south. Things appear peaceful as pedestrian­s walk freely between the two sides. But there is an undercurre­nt of tension.

Some ethnic-serbian residents from the north view anyone who crosses into the south as a traitor betraying the unhealed wounds from the bloodshed of the 1990s.

Cars are still not permitted to drive over the bridge, prevented by a blockade and the 24/7 presence of two police Land Rovers, one parked facing south and the other north.

Police said that these precaution­s were essential to maintain stability in the area.

Rumours swirl that Putin has recruited Serbians to fight in his military against Ukraine and as The

Telegraph travelled around the north, the solidarity with Russia was omnipresen­t.

The letter “Z” had been graffitied onto the sides of shop, cafes and local homes.

Mr Kurti said: “This is the pool from where they [Russia] will recruit future Wagner wannabe paramilita­ries for Ukraine and the Balkans.”

On one road sign, someone had stencilled the words “F--- You Nato”, marking a warning to the bloc’s Kfor-peacekeepi­ng presence, which has been stationed in Kosovo since 1999.

Like the police, the peacekeepi­ng officers conduct patrols, keeping an eye on what they refer to as the administra­tive border line, a 237-mile stretch of land dividing Kosovo and Serbia.

First Lieutenant Caldwell of Georgia’s National Guard, which makes up America’s contributi­on to KFOR, said that their task was to detect anyone intending to pursue hostile activity.

First Lieutenant Caldwell stressed the importance of “cutting up” illegal roads to stop smugglers crossing into Kosovo. He said more were being built whenever possible.

For Elshani, his men are in training for an attack.

“It’s not a surprise Vucic wants to invade,” he said. “They can shoot us, but they can’t scare us.”

 ?? ?? A KFOR patrol by the Georgia National Guard of the US Army, on the border with Serbia and Kosovo
A KFOR patrol by the Georgia National Guard of the US Army, on the border with Serbia and Kosovo
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