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Kosovo Police Fire Tear Gas at Serb Protesters, Detain Serbian Official


Kosovo police escort Marko Djuric a Serb official to a police station in Kosovo capital Pristina after he was arrested in northern Kosovo town of Mitrovica, Monday, March 26, 2018.
Kosovo police escort Marko Djuric a Serb official to a police station in Kosovo capital Pristina after he was arrested in northern Kosovo town of Mitrovica, Monday, March 26, 2018.

Kosovo police fired tear gas on Monday to scatter hundreds of nationalist Serb protesters outside a round-table meeting on improving relations between Belgrade and Pristina, and briefly detained a hardline Serbian government official.

The incident occurred in the town of Mitrovica in a volatile, mainly minority Serb pocket of northern Kosovo still unreconciled to the independence decade ago of the ethnic Albanian-majority country from Serbia.

The round table was part of a dialogue towards normalization Serbia is conducting with Kosovo, its former province that went to war against repressive Serbian rule in the late 1990s, to help fulfil conditions for European Union membership.

Djuric detained

But shortly after the round table began, Marko Djuric, head of the Serbian government office on Kosovo, was detained by police because he had been banned from entering the country over nationalist remarks Pristina regarded as inflammatory.

Kosovo police also fired tear gas to disperse local Serbs who gathered outside the meeting venue in protest.

Djuric was brought to the Kosovo capital Pristina in a police van and, booed by Kosovo Albanian onlookers, walked in handcuffs into the main police station, a Reuters witness said. But shortly afterwards Djuric was taken to a border crossing and freed to cross back into Serbia.

Kosovo police units used

Kosovo had sent special police units in the morning to the small Balkan state’s north to enforce an entry ban on Djuric and fellow hardline Defense Minister Aleksandar Vulin. Vulin heeded the ban and did not show up at the border.

Twenty years after the ethnic Albanian uprising that eventually led to Kosovo’s statehood, some 50,000 Serbs have clung to homes in territory that remains politically loyal to Serbia and is largely in the grip of Serb criminal gangs.

Serbia does not recognise the independence of Kosovo but is under pressure to normalise relations before it completes accession talks with the EU. But tensions remain high.

Handball match called off

On Friday, Serbia cited security reasons in scrapping an international women’s handball match between that would have been the first between Serbia and Kosovo.

Kosovo won independence after NATO bombed Serbian security forces to halt the killing and expulsion of ethnic Albanians from the region in a counter-insurgency campaign.

The landlocked country of 1.8 million people is recognised by 116 nations but is not a United Nations member because of objections from Serbia, some EU states, Russia and China.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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