Serbia's defence ministry said in a statement late on Monday that in
response to the latest events in the region and its belief that
Kosovo was preparing to attack Serbs and forcefully remove the
barricades, President Aleksandar Vucic had ordered Serbia's army and
police to be put on the highest alert.
"There is no reason to panic, but there is reason to be concerned,"
Serbia's defence minister Milos Vucevic told RTS television late on
Monday.
Since Dec. 10, Serbs in northern Kosovo have erected multiple
roadblocks in and around Mitrovica and exchanged fire with police
after the arrest of a former Serb policeman for allegedly assaulting
serving police officers during a previous protest.
Around 50,000 Serbs live in the northern part of Albanian-majority
Kosovo and refuse to recognise the Pristina government or the state.
They see Belgrade as their capital and are backed by Serbia, from
which Kosovo declared independence in 2008.
"Kosovo cannot engage in dialogue with criminal gangs and freedom of
movement should be restored. There should not be barricades on any
road," the Kosovan government said in a statement on Monday.
It added police had the capacity and readiness to act but were
waiting for NATO's KFOR Kosovo peace-keeping force, which maintains
a neutral role, to respond to their request to remove the
barricades.
"We urge all sides to help enable security and freedom of movement
in Kosovo, and prevent misleading narratives from affecting the
dialogue process," KFOR said in a statement.
In Mitrovica on Tuesday morning trucks were parked to block the road
linking the Serb-majority part of the town with the
Albanian-majority part.
The local Serbs are demanding the release of the arrested officer
and have other demands before they will remove the barricades.
Ethnic Serb mayors in northern municipalities, along with local
judges and some 600 police officers, resigned last month in protest
over a Kosovo government decision to replace Serbian-issued car
license plates with ones issued by Pristina.
(Reporting by Fatos Bytyci and Ivana Sekularac, Editing by Alexandra
Hudson)
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