Serbs Agree to Dismantle Barricades after Talk

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Tension between Serbia and Kosovo appear to have eased following a decision to remove barricades blocking the main border crossing.

Ethnic Serbs in Kosovo began erecting the blocks on 10 December in protest at an ex-police officer’s arrest.

The decision to end the blockade was made after protesters held late night talks with Serbia’s president.

However, Aleksandar Vucic has warned that mistrust among Kosovo’s Serbian minority remains high.

He has said that “dismantling all the barriers could take days.”

However, Kosovo police said that Merdare, Kosovo’s primary border crossing with Serbia, had been reopened after roadblocks came down on the Serbian side.Tensions between Belgrade and Pristina have ebbed and flowed since Kosovo’s unilateral declaration of independence from Serbia in 2008.

But they have been running particularly high over the past few months, with ethnic Serbs withdrawing all co-operation with Kosovo authorities.

The trigger was a row over number plates. The government in Pristina demanded that ethnic Serbs should surrender the Serbian-issued vehicle licence plates that they had continued to use and replace them with “Republic of Kosovo” plates.

However, only a few people complied with the order before the given deadline and Pristina’s plan to impose fines on the holdouts sparked a mass resignation of ethnic Serbs from all of Kosovo’s national institutions in November.

This included police, with more than 600 ethnic Serb officers handing in their badges.

Attempts by the European Union, Nato (which has peacekeeping troops deployed in Kosovo) and the US to mediate the situation had failed to make a diplomatic breakthrough.,,

Then, an ethnic Serb former police officer, Dejan Pantic, was arrested earlier this month on suspicion of attacking the Kosovo force, re-escalating the tensions.

The move comes just days after the Serbian army said it was at its “highest level of combat readiness” over increased tensions with Pristina.

Kosovo, which has an overwhelmingly ethnic Albanian majority, broke away from Serbia after a war in 1998-99.

Serbia does not recognise Kosovo as an independent state, nor do the ethnic Serbs who live there.

Tensions between Belgrade and Pristina have ebbed and flowed since Kosovo’s unilateral declaration of independence from Serbia in 2008.

But they have been running particularly high over the past few months, with ethnic Serbs withdrawing all co-operation with Kosovo authorities.

The trigger was a row over number plates. The government in Pristina demanded that ethnic Serbs should surrender the Serbian-issued vehicle licence plates that they had continued to use and replace them with “Republic of Kosovo” plates.

However, only a few people complied with the order before the given deadline and Pristina’s plan to impose fines on the holdouts sparked a mass resignation of ethnic Serbs from all of Kosovo’s national institutions in November.

This included police, with more than 600 ethnic Serb officers handing in their badges

Attempts by the European Union, Nato (which has peacekeeping troops deployed in Kosovo) and the US to mediate the situation had failed to make “a diplomatic breakthrough.” 

Then, an ethnic Serb former police officer, Dejan Pantic, was arrested earlier this month on suspicion of attacking the Kosovo force, re-escalating the tensions.

 

 

 

BBC /Jide Johnson

 

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