The Borneo Post

Serbian troops on heightened alert at Kosovo border

- — AFP

BELGRADE: Serbian troops were on heightened alert Sunday at the border with Kosovo, the defence ministry said, accusing the territory of ‘provocatio­ns’ after it deployed special police to the area.

The special police units were sent to two border crossings in the north of Kosovo, an area mainly populated by minority ethnic Serbs who reject the authority of the ethnic Albanian-led government in Pristina.

The deployment, which angered the Serbs, came after the Kosovo government last Monday decided to require drivers with Serbian registrati­on plates to put on temporary ones when entering Kosovo.

Hundreds of ethnic Serbs have staged daily protests against the decision.

They parked trucks and other vehicles along the roads to block traffic toward the border crossings.

“After the provocatio­ns by the (special police) units... Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic gave the order to heighten the alert for some Serbian army and police units,” the defence ministry said in a statement.

Serbian fighter jets again

After the provocatio­ns by the (special police) units... Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic gave the order to heighten the alert for some Serbian army and police units.

Defence ministry

overflew the border region on Sunday after several sorties on Saturday, an AFP correspond­ent saw.

Early Sunday, Serbian Defence Minister Nebojsa Stefanovic visited troops at two military bases where they are on alert, including one that is just a few kilometres from the border.

Belgrade designates border crossings between Serbia and Kosovo as ‘administra­tive’ because it does not recognise its former province’s independen­ce, unilateral­ly declared in 2008.

Belgrade’s position is that the decision to mandate temporary plates implies its status as an independen­t nation.

Serbian ally Russia also does not recognise Kosovo’s independen­ce, but most Western countries do, including the United States.

Albania, for its part, said it was “concerned by the escalation of the situation” and called on Serbia to withdraw its troops from the border.

Kosovo President Vjosa Osmani cut short a visit to New York for the UN general assembly “because of developmen­ts in the north of the country”, her cabinet said.

Kosovo’s declaratio­n of independen­ce came a decade after a war between ethnic Albanian guerrillas and Serbian forces which claimed 13,000 lives, mostly ethnic Albanians.

The United States and the European Union have called for a de-escalation of tensions and for the two sides to return to normalisat­ion talks, which the EU has mediated for about a decade.

The Serbian president said the normalisat­ion process can resume only if Kosovo withdraws the special police forces from the north.

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