Times Colonist

NATO troops clash with Serb protesters in Kosovo

- RADUL RADOVANOVI­C and LLAZAR SEMINI

The NATOled peacekeepi­ng force said on Monday that 25 of its troops were injured in clashes with ethnic Serbs in northern Kosovo after they tried to take over the offices of one of the municipali­ties where ethnic Albanian mayors took up their posts last week.

The Serbs clashed with NATO troops and Kosovo police in the municipali­ty of Zvecan, 45 kilometres north of the capital. The soldiers fired tear gas and stun grenades to protect the Kosovar officers and disperse protesters, according to witnesses. The assembled Serbs responded by throwing rocks and other hard objects at them.

“Several soldiers of the Italian and Hungarian KFOR contingent were the subject of unprovoked attacks and sustained trauma wounds with fractures and burns due to the explosion of incendiary devices,” NATO peacekeepe­rs said in a statement.

Some Kosovo police vehicles and one belonging to journalist­s were damaged and sprayed with Serb nationalis­t symbols.

Addressing the nation late Monday, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic said he would spend the night with his troops on the border with Kosovo who were placed on the highest state of alert last week. He said 52 Serbs were injured in the clashes, three seriously, and four were detained.

Vucic put the sole culprit in the clashes was Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti, calling the Albanian forces in the north Kosovo “occupiers.”

“I beg the internatio­nal community to make sure Albin Kurti sees reason,” Vucic said. “If they don’t, I am afraid it will be too late for all of us.”

The violence was the latest incident as tensions soared over the past weekend, with Serbia putting the country’s military on high alert and sending more troops to the border with Kosovo, which declared independen­ce from Belgrade in 2008.

Kosovo and Serbia have been foes for decades, with Belgrade refusing to recognize Kosovo’s sovereignt­y.

The United States and the European Union have stepped up efforts to help solve the KosovoSerb­ia dispute, fearing further instabilit­y in Europe as Russia’s war rages in Ukraine. The EU has made it clear to both Serbia and Kosovo they must normalize relations if they’re to make any progress toward joining the bloc.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov described the situation in Kosovo as “worrisome,” blaming the U.S. and NATO for claiming dominance in that part of the world.

“A big ‘explosion’ is brewing in the centre of Europe, in the very place where, in 1999, NATO carried out aggression against Yugoslavia,” he said from Nairobi, Kenya, referring to the NATO-led interventi­on in 1999 that stopped a bloody Serb crackdown against ethnic Albanian separatist­s.

 ?? MARJAN VUCETIC, ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. soldiers, part of the peacekeepi­ng mission in Kosovo, guard a municipal building in the town of Leposavic, northern Kosovo, on Monday.
MARJAN VUCETIC, ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. soldiers, part of the peacekeepi­ng mission in Kosovo, guard a municipal building in the town of Leposavic, northern Kosovo, on Monday.

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