NATO soldiers injured in Kosovo clashes with Serb protesters
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[May 30, 2023]
By Fatos Bytyci
LEPOSAVIC, Kosovo (Reuters) - Around 25 NATO peacekeeping soldiers
defending three town halls in northern Kosovo were injured in clashes
with Serb protesters on Monday, while Serbia's president put the army on
the highest level of combat alert.
KFOR, the NATO-led peacekeeping mission to Kosovo, condemned the
violence.
"While countering the most active fringes of the crowd, several soldiers
of the Italian and Hungarian KFOR contingent were the subject of
unprovoked attacks and sustained trauma wounds with fractures and burns
due to the explosion of incendiary devices," it said in a statement.
Hungary's defense minister Kristof Szalay-Bobrovniczky said that 7
Hungarian soldiers were seriously injured and that they will be taken to
Hungary for treatment. He said 20 soldiers were injured. Italian
soldiers were also injured in clashes.
"What is happening is absolutely unacceptable and irresponsible,"
Italy's Giorgia Meloni said in a statement. "It is vital to avoid
further unilateral actions on the part of the Kosovar authorities and
that all the parties in question immediately take a step back to ease
the tensions."
Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic said that 52 Serbs were injured,
three of them seriously.
Kosovo President Vjosa Osmani accused Serbian counterpart Aleksandar
Vucic of destabilising Kosovo.
"Serb illegal structures turned into criminal gangs have attacked Kosovo
police, KFOR (peacekeeping) officers & journalists. Those who carry out
Vucic's orders to destabilise the north of Kosovo, must face justice,"
Osmani tweeted.
Vucic accused Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti of creating tensions. He
called on Serbs in Kosovo to avoid clashes with NATO soldiers.
The tense situation developed after ethnic Albanian mayors took office
in northern Kosovo's Serb majority area after elections the Serbs
boycotted - a move that led the U.S. and its allies to rebuke Pristina
on Friday.
In Zvecan, one of the towns, Kosovo police - staffed by ethnic Albanians
after Serbs quit the force last year - sprayed pepper gas to repel a
crowd of Serbs who broke through a security barricade and tried to force
their way into the municipality building, witnesses said.
Serb protesters in Zvecan threw tear gas and stun grenades at NATO
soldiers. Serbs also clashed with police in Zvecan and spray-painted
NATO vehicles with the letter "Z", referring to a Russian sign used in
war in Ukraine.
In Leposavic, close to the border with Serbia, U.S. peacekeeping troops
in riot gear placed barbed wire around the town hall to protect it from
hundreds of angry Serbs.
Later in the day protesters threw eggs at a parked car belonging to the
new Leposavic mayor.
Vucic, who is the commander-in-chief of the Serbian armed forces, raised
the army's combat readiness to the highest level, Defence Minister Milos
Vucevic told reporters.
"This implies that immediately before 2:00 p.m. (1200 GMT), the Serbian
Armed Forces' Chief of the General Staff issued additional instructions
for the deployment of the army's units in specific, designated
positions," Vucevic said, without elaborating.
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A trash container burns after NATO
Kosovo Force (KFOR) soldiers clashed with local Kosovo Serb
protesters at the entrance of the municipality office, in the town
of Zvecan, Kosovo, May 29, 2023. REUTERS/Laura Hasani
NATO peacekeepers also blocked off the town hall in Zubin Potok to
protect it from angry local Serbs, witnesses said.
Igor Simic, deputy head of the Serb List, the biggest
Belgrade-backed Kosovo Serb party, accused Kosovo Prime Minister
Albin Kurti of fuelling tensions in the north.
"We are interested in peace. Albanians who live here are interested
in peace, and only he (Kurti) wants to make chaos," Simic told
reporters in Zvecan.
TEAR GAS
Serbs, who comprise a majority in Kosovo's north, have never
accepted its 2008 declaration of independence from Serbia and still
see Belgrade as their capital more than two decades after the Kosovo
Albanian uprising against repressive Serbian rule.
Ethnic Albanians make up more than 90% of the population in Kosovo
as a whole, but northern Serbs have long demanded the implementation
of an EU-brokered 2013 deal for the creation of an association of
autonomous municipalities in their area.
Serbs refused to take part in local elections in April and ethnic
Albanian candidates won the mayoralties in four Serb-majority
municipalities - including North Mitrovica, where no incidents were
reported on Monday - with a 3.5% turnout.
Serbs demand that the Kosovo government remove ethnic Albanian
mayors from town halls and allow local administrations financed by
Belgrade resume their work.
On Friday, three out of the four ethnic Albanian mayors were
escorted into their offices by police, who were pelted with rocks
and responded with tear gas and water cannon to disperse the
protesters.
The United States and its allies, which have strongly backed
Kosovo's independence, rebuked Pristina on Friday, saying imposing
mayors in Serb-majority areas without popular support undercut
efforts to normalise relations.
Kurti defended Pristina's position, tweeting after a weekend phone
call with the European Union's foreign policy chief: "Emphasized
that elected mayors will provide services to all citizens."
Serbian Foreign Minister Ivica Dacic told RTS it was "not possible
to have mayors who have not been elected by Serbs in Serb-majority
municipalities".
After meeting Kurti, U.S. ambassador to Kosovo Jeffrey Hovenier told
reporters: "We are concerned about reports today about violence
against official property."
"We've seen pictures of graffiti against KFOR cars and police cars,
we've heard about attacks on journalists, we condemn that, that is
not appropriate response."
(Reporting by Fatos Bytici; Additional reporting by Miodrag Draskic
and Angelo Amante in Rome; Writing by Ivana Sekularac and Daria
Sito-Sucic; Editing by Mark Heinrich, Giles Elgood and Mark Potter)
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