Serbs unblock roads in Kosovo as NATO moves to end car plate row
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[October 02, 2021]
JARINJE, Kosovo - Serbs removed
trucks and cars used to block the border with Kosovo on Saturday as NATO
troops moved in under a European Union mediated deal to end a dispute
between the neighbouring countries over car licence plates.
Kosovo special police are also expected to withdraw from the border
crossing in the north of the country nearly two weeks after Serbs
blocked roads when Kosovo introduced temporary licence plates for all
cars from Serbia.
The Kosovo government said the move was in retaliation for Serbian
measures taken against drivers from Kosovo since 2008, when Kosovo
declared independence from Serbia.
Serbia does not recognise Kosovo's independence and therefore its right
to take actions such as registering cars, and this month's confrontation
had boiled over into violence.
However the two countries, with mediation by EU special envoy Miroslav
Lajcak, struck a deal on Thursday to use stickers on licence plates to
cover state symbols, and allow NATO, which has some 3,000 troops in
Kosovo, to control the area.
Local Serbs on Saturday chatted with Slovenian soldiers, who are part of
the NATO force, as they removed barricades while Kosovo police vehicles
stood at the border crossing.
The deadline for their withdrawal is 4 p.m. (1400 GMT).
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Kosovo ethnic Serbs pass through barricades near the border crossing
between Kosovo and Serbia in Jarinje, Kosovo, September 28, 2021.
REUTERS/Laura Hasani
Serbia, which lost control over Kosovo after NATO
bombing in 1999, does not recognise Kosovo's independence and
therefore its right to take actions such as registering cars.
But as Serbia moves towards EU membership it has to resolve all
outstanding issues with Kosovo. The two parties agreed to an EU
mediated dialogue in 2013, but little progress has been made.
Kosovo's independence was backed by Western countries including
United States and Britain, but it is still not recognised by five EU
member states and its membership of the United Nations is blocked by
Serbia's traditional ally Russia.
(Reporting by Fatos Bytyci; Editing by Ivana Sekularac and Alexander
Smith)
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