Kosovo re-opens major border crossing with Serbia, easing standoff
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[December 29, 2022]
By Fatos Bytyci
MITROVICA, Kosovo (Reuters) - Kosovo re-opened its biggest border
crossing with Serbia on Thursday, hours after protesting Serbs in its
north promised to remove roadblocks, easing a surge in tensions that has
alarmed world powers.
Both the European Union and the United States have been pressing Kosovo
and Serbia to step back from a mounting confrontation that has seen
Serbia put its army on the highest combat alert.
Serbs in northern Kosovo, who have been erecting roadblocks since Dec.
10 in protest at the arrest of a former Serb policeman - the latest in a
long series of flashpoints - agreed to start taking them down after he
was moved to house arrest.
Many of the roadblocks still appeared to be in place on Thursday
morning, though officials had said the process might take some time.
Tensions remained high. Two burned-out trucks filled with gravel stood
on a bridge close to the ethically divided town of Mitrovica, some 50 km
from the reopened Merdare crossing. Kosovo police said they were
investigating an arson attack.
Around 50,000 Serbs living in northern Kosovo refuse to recognise the
government in Pristina or the status of Kosovo as a separate country.
They have the support of many Serbs in Serbia and its government.
Albanian-majority Kosovo declared independence with the backing of the
West following a 1998-99 war in which NATO intervened to protect ethnic
Albanian citizens.
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A view of Merdare border crossing
between Kosovo and Serbia which was closed by Kosovo after
protesters blocked it on the Serbian side to support their ethnic
kin in Kosovo in refusing to recognise the country's independence,
near Podujevo, Kosovo, December 28, 2022. REUTERS/Florion Goga/File
Photo
Kosovo police said they had reopened the Merdare crossing - the most
important for road freight that links the landlocked state with
western European countries - after roadblocks came down on the
Serbian side of the border.
They called on people from the diaspora to use the crossing, which
was closed at midnight on Tuesday, to come home for the holidays.
Two border other crossings with Serbia in Kosovo's north remain
closed since Dec. 10.
Kosovo has long been a source of tension between the West, which
backed its independence, and Russia, which supports Serbia in its
efforts to block Kosovo's membership of global organisations
including the United Nations.
The Kremlin on Wednesday dismissed accusations from Kosovo's
interior minister that Russia was influencing Serbia to destabilise
Kosovo, saying that Serbia was defending the rights of ethnic Serbs.
(Reporting by Fatos Bytyci; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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