Kosovo demands Serbia withdraw troops from their common border

Kosovo police officers patrol the village of Banjska following a shooting incident on Sept 27. PHOTO: REUTERS
Kosovo police officers patrol a road to the Banjska monastery in the aftermath of a shooting incident near Zvecan on Sept 27. PHOTO: REUTERS

PRISTINA - Kosovo on Saturday demanded that Serbia withdraw its troops from their common border, saying it was ready to protect its territorial integrity.

Tensions between the two countries have been high since last Sunday when Kosovo police fought around 30 heavily armed Serbs who stormed the Kosovo village of Banjska and barricaded themselves inside a Serbian Orthodox monastery. Three attackers and one police officer were killed.

The gun battle prompted new international concern over stability in Kosovo, which has an ethnic Albanian majority and declared independence from Serbia in 2008 after a guerrilla uprising and a 1999 Nato intervention.

“We call on President Vucic and the institutions of Serbia to immediately withdraw all troops from the border with Kosovo,” the Kosovo government said in a statement.

“The deployment of Serbian troops along the border with Kosovo is the next step by Serbia to threaten the territorial integrity of our country.”

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic told the Financial Times he did not intend to order his forces to cross the border into Kosovo because an escalation of the conflict would harm Belgrade’s aspirations to the join the European Union.

On Friday, the United States said it was monitoring a troubling Serbian military deployment along the Kosovo border that is destabilising the area.

“Kosovo, in coordination with international partners, is more determined than ever to protect its territorial integrity,” the Pristina government said.

“This deployment also includes the deployment of anti-aircraft systems and heavy artillery.

“The Government of the Republic of Kosovo has been in constant contact with the USA and the EU countries regarding this serious threat from Serbia.”

Nato, which still has 4,500 troops in Kosovo, said on Friday it had “authorised additional forces to address the current situation”. REUTERS

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