Imperial Valley Press

Serbia’s president seeks Putin’s advice on Kosovo crisis

- BY DUSAN STOJANOVIC AND FLORENT BAJRAMI

PRISTINA, Kosovo — Serbia’s president asked Russian President Vladimir Putin for advice Wednesday on how to counter Kosovo’s “violence and aggression” against Serbs — a developmen­t that could complicate Western attempts to find a peaceful solution to the crisis in the Balkans.

Aleksandar Vucic’s o ce said in a statement that he informed Putin about the “brutal attack” by Kosovo police on Monday against a senior Serb o cial who was arrested and expelled after entering the country without an o cial permit.

The statement also said that Vucic sought Putin’s counsel “because it’s perfectly clear that (Kosovo) Albanians have wide support of numerous Western states for their unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce” a decade ago.

The statement didn’t say whether Putin had o ered any specific guidance, but Vucic later told a Serbian TV station that after the conversati­on he concluded that Serbia can count on “full and crucial help from the Russian Federation.”

NATO troops have been stationed in Kosovo since 1999 when the alliance intervened to stop a Serb crackdown against Kosovo Albanian separatist­s. Serb military involvemen­t in Kosovo would create a major crisis with the West, especially if there is indirect support from Russia.

The Kremlin said in a statement that Putin and the Serbian president discussed the issue of Kosovo “in the context of the provocativ­e action by Pristina authoritie­s” against Marko Djuric, the head of the Serbian government office for Kosovo, who was briefly arrested and expelled on Monday after an interventi­on by Kosovo police.

While Russia supports Serbia’s claims over its former province, the U.S. and most Western states have recognized Kosovo’s independen­ce. Russia has been trying to expand its influence in the Balkans mainly through its traditiona­l Slavic ally Serbia.

Involving Russia in the Serbia-Kosovo conflict could complicate an EU-mediated effort to find a peaceful solution, and stall both countries’ proclaimed membership goals. Kosovo and Serbia must normalize ties in order to join the EU. Although Serbia formally seeks EU membership, it has lately been developing close political and military ties with Russia.

Kosovo’s Serb minority on Wednesday demanded that the country’s interior minister and police chief resign over the arrest and expulsion of Djuric, which refueled tensions between the Balkan foes.

Monday’s actions angered Serbia and Kosovo Serbs, who don’t recognize Kosovo’s 2008 declaratio­n of independen­ce from Serbia. The incident also has fueled fears of renewed instabilit­y in the region. The U.S. and the European Union have been trying to help resolve the disputes stemming from the Balkan Wars in the 1990s.

During Monday’s incident, Kosovo police fired tear gas and stun grenades to disperse protesters, and Djuric later said he was roughed up and humiliated by Kosovo police, and appeared at a news conference in Belgrade on Tuesday with bandaged hands. Kosovo Serbs say that more than 30 people were injured in the police interventi­on during Djuric’s arrest.

The Kosovo Serb minority also said that if Kosovo doesn’t launch an associatio­n of Serb-dominated municipali­ties within three weeks, they will form their own local administra­tions throughout Kosovo where Serbs live.

 ??  ?? Kosovo police escort Marko Djuric, a Serb o cial, to a police station in Kosovo capital Pristina after he was arrested in northern Kosovo town of Mitrovica, on Monday. Kosovo police arrested a Serb o cial after he was banned from visiting a divided...
Kosovo police escort Marko Djuric, a Serb o cial, to a police station in Kosovo capital Pristina after he was arrested in northern Kosovo town of Mitrovica, on Monday. Kosovo police arrested a Serb o cial after he was banned from visiting a divided...

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