Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NATO adding troops in Kosovo

Bloc responds after clash with ethnic Serbs injures 30 troops

- ZENEL ZHINIPOTOK­U AND LLAZAR SEMINI Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Dusan Stojanovic, Jovana Gec, Lorne Cook and Nicole Winfield of The Associated Press.

PRISTINA, Kosovo — NATO will send 700 more troops to northern Kosovo to help quell violent protests after clashes with ethnic Serbs there left 30 internatio­nal soldiers wounded, the alliance announced Tuesday.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g said an additional reserve battalion would be put on high readiness in case additional troops are needed.

“These are prudent steps,” said Stoltenber­g, who made the announceme­nt in Oslo after talks with the Norwegian prime minister.

The NATO-led peacekeepi­ng mission known as KFOR currently consists of almost 3,800 troops. A battalion typically ranges from 300 to around 1,000 troops.

Earlier Tuesday, KFOR’s multinatio­nal peacekeepe­rs used metal fences and barbed-wire barriers to reinforce positions in a northern town that has become a hot spot.

The troops sealed off the municipal building in Zvecan, where unrest on Monday sent tensions soaring and raised fears of instabilit­y amid increased Western efforts to resolve a long-simmering dispute.

A former province of Serbia, Kosovo’s 2008 declaratio­n of independen­ce is not recognized by Belgrade. Ethnic Albanians make up most of the population, but Kosovo has a restive Serb minority in the north of the country bordering Serbia.

Stoltenber­g condemned the violence and warned that NATO troops would “take all necessary actions to maintain a safe and secure environmen­t for all citizens in Kosovo.”

He urged both sides to refrain from “further irresponsi­ble behavior” and to return to EU-backed talks on improving relations.

Tensions increased over the past weekend, after ethnic Albanian officials elected in votes overwhelmi­ngly boycotted by Serbs entered municipal buildings. When the Serbs tried to block them, Kosovo police fired tear gas to disperse the crowd.

In response, Serbia put the country’s military on the highest state of alert and sent more troops to the border with Kosovo. The Serbs protested again Monday, insisting both ethnic Albanian mayors and Kosovo police must leave northern Kosovo.

The confrontat­ions worsened when Serbs tried to enter the municipal offices in Zvecan, 28 miles north of the capital, Pristina.

They clashed first with Kosovo police and then with the internatio­nal peacekeepe­rs who deployed in Zvecan.

In a video message issued Tuesday evening, Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti said the mayors elected in the April 23 voting “are the only ones who have the legitimacy to be at the municipal buildings and to the citizens’ service.”

Instigator­s of the violence have been identified, according to the prime minister, who named some Serb businessme­n who oblige their employees to protest.

“In Kosovo, power is won through elections, not with violence and crime,” he said.

EU PEACE EFFORTS

The flareup has triggered internatio­nal efforts to calm the situation.

The United States and the EU recently stepped up their work to negotiate an agreement between Serbia and Kosovo, fearing instabilit­y as Russia’s war rages in Ukraine. The EU has made it clear to both Serbia and Kosovo that they must normalize relations if they’re to make any progress toward joining the bloc.

“We have too much violence in Europe already today. We cannot afford another conflict,” the EU’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, told reporters Tuesday in Brussels.

As a first step to easing tensions, he said, Kosovo police should suspend the operation focusing on municipal buildings in the north, and violent protesters should “stand down.”

In response to the recent unrest, NATO has decided to increase its KFOR troops with the deployment of “operationa­l reserve forces” for the Western Balkans, a statement said, without specifying a number. Another unit will be on standby “to be ready to reinforce KFOR if necessary.”

A statement issued Tuesday by KFOR said 30 soldiers — 11 Italians and 19 Hungarians — were hurt, including fractures and burns from improvised explosive incendiary devices.

Three Hungarian soldiers were “wounded by the use of firearms,” but their injuries were not life-threatenin­g, the statement added.

Serb officials said 52 people were injured, including three seriously. Four protesters were detained, according to Kosovo police.

“Both parties need to take full responsibi­lity for what happened and prevent any further escalation, rather than hide behind false narratives,” KFOR commander Maj.-Gen. Angelo Michele Ristuccia said.

Belgrade and Pristina have blamed each other for the escalation.

DIPLOMATS IN SERBIA

Meanwhile, ambassador­s from the so-called Quint countries — France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom and the U.S. — met Monday with Kurti in Pristina and Tuesday with Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic in Belgrade.

Vucic later also met with the ambassador­s in Serbia from Russia and China.

In a statement from his office, Vucic expressed “immense dissatisfa­ction and strong concern” over what he described as internatio­nal “tolerance” of Kurti’s actions that fueled violence against Serbs.

Urgent measures to guarantee the security of the Serbs in Kosovo are a preconditi­on for any future talks, Vucic insisted.

Kurti has thanked KFOR troops for “valiant action to preserve peace in the face of violent extremism.”

“The border between Kosovo and Serbia is one of those dangerous places where a spark could set off a fire,” Italian Defense Minister Guido Crosetto said.

 ?? (AP/Marjan Vucetic) ?? Polish soldiers, part of the peacekeepi­ng mission Tuesday in Kosovo KFOR, rest in front of a municipal building in the town of Zvecan, northern Kosovo.
(AP/Marjan Vucetic) Polish soldiers, part of the peacekeepi­ng mission Tuesday in Kosovo KFOR, rest in front of a municipal building in the town of Zvecan, northern Kosovo.

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