Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Serbs seek Putin advice, vow to protect Kosovo kin

- GORDANA FILIPOVIC AND MISHA SAVIC Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Boris Cerni of Bloomberg News.

BELGRADE, Serbia — Serbia vowed to protect its ethnic kin in Kosovo after seeking Russia’s advice on how to respond to a spike in tensions, a move that risks escalating the East-West struggle for influence in the Balkans.

President Aleksandar Vucic asked Russian President Vladimir Putin how to “confront violence and aggression” by Kosovo officials after Monday’s arrest and expulsion of Marko Djuric, Serbia’s chief negotiator in talks sponsored by the European Union, the Kremlin said late Wednesday. It added that the call was initiated by Vucic after the incident, in which police used tear gas and stun grenades to break up a protest when Djuric entered Kosovo without permission.

The conversati­on underscore­s the approach Vucic has taken as he tries to push Serbia toward European Union entry next decade. While he has engaged with the bloc, he has also kept strong ties with Russia and refused to acknowledg­e Kosovo’s declaratio­n of independen­ce in 2008, almost a decade after NATO warplanes forced Serb troops out of Kosovo. Djuric argued that Serbs in Kosovo were being denied their rights.

“Let no one be mistaken: Serbia will protect its people in Kosovo by all available means,” Djuric told reporters Thursday.

Five years after signing a pact aimed at normalizin­g ties — which Serbia must do to join the EU — the neighbors are still struggling to make it work, and Vucic has depended on Russia to help block Kosovo’s recognitio­n in internatio­nal bodies.

For its part, Putin’s government is trying to counter the further expansion of the EU into former communist Europe and increase Russia’s influence through investment, military support and other means in the Balkans, the site of conflicts in the 1990s that were Europe’s bloodiest since World War II.

After the clash Monday, ethnic Serbs in the Kosovo Cabinet resigned in protest against Djuric’s “humiliatin­g” expulsion. They called for Kosovo Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj to step down, but he refused. The U.S. State Department condemned the events, saying they “unnecessar­ily heighten tensions and threaten regional stability.”

At the heart of the latest dispute is an EU-brokered agreement Serbia and Kosovo signed in 2013. A part of it would allow Serbs in Kosovo to form an associatio­n of municipali­ties that would give them some autonomy. The Serbs say they fulfilled their part of the deal but Kosovo hasn’t.

Djuric said Serbs would wait until April 20, and if they received no response from the Kosovo government, the municipali­ties would form the associatio­n unilateral­ly. Haradinaj’s office said that would not be allowed.

“No initiative not based on the democratic laws and procedures of the Republic of Kosovo will be implemente­d or respected,” it said in a statement.

Vucic has morphed from a nationalis­t politician in the 1990s, when he served as informatio­n minister during the war with Kosovo, to one pledging to lead Serbia into the EU. The 28-member bloc has set 2025 as a possible date for entry. The president will postpone the announceme­nt of a proposed solution by a month to late April or early May, the Belgrade-based Danas newspaper reported, citing sources it didn’t name. Still, Vucic said Thursday that his main goal was to avoid conflict.

“Serbia wants to preserve peace, and that’s our most important goal and vital interest,” he said in a live broadcast after attending a military exercise.

A majority of Serbs would drop EU membership if it meant accepting the independen­ce of Kosovo, considered the cultural cradle of their nation, surveys show.

“The only way out is dialog and a search for a solution, including the formation of the associatio­n of Serbian municipali­ties,” said Srdjan Majstorovi­c, the chairman of the European Policy Center in Belgrade.

 ?? AP/VISAR KRYEZIU ?? Officers carry Serbian negotiator Marko Djuric to a police station in Mitrovic in northern Kosovo on Monday after he was arrested during a protest when he entered the country without permission.
AP/VISAR KRYEZIU Officers carry Serbian negotiator Marko Djuric to a police station in Mitrovic in northern Kosovo on Monday after he was arrested during a protest when he entered the country without permission.

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