Drecun: Kurti will continue with anti-Serb policy

milovan drecun
Source: Kosovo Online

Milovan Drecun, President of the Defense and Security Committee of the Serbian Parliament, said today that Albin Kurti will not abandon his anti-Serb policies, but will instead try to prevent the Serb List from using the capacity it gained thanks to the trust of more than 90 percent of voters from Serb communities, and to block that anti-Serb policy within institutions, seeking to obstruct it wherever possible, especially if he manages to “push” Nenad Rasic into parliament.

“Kurti will not abandon his anti-Serb policy in Kosovo, because he wants to finish the job. He now has a bone stuck in his throat, the return of Serbs to institutions in the four northern municipalities, but his main goal is to create conditions for members of the KSF to be permanently stationed in the north, and to obtain approval for that from KFOR,” Drecun said.

That is why, he explains, new incidents would suit Kurti best, similar to Banjska, which he could stage and, under the pretext of intervention, attempt to deploy the KSF.

“He will certainly continue to prevent the state of Serbia from helping Serbs, as well as to carry out institutional and physical terror against Serbs, because he does not want to respect the electoral will of the Serb people. He will try to prevent the Serb List from using the capacity gained through the trust of 90 percent of the Serb people, and from blocking that anti-Serb policy within institutions. He will not be ready for any kind of political cooperation with the Serb List, which in any case has no reason to cooperate with him, but he will openly work against Serbs, tripping them up wherever he can, so that they cannot exercise even a minimum of rights, and to create an illusion of multiethnicity. Especially if he pushes Rasic into parliament,” Drecun said for TV Informer.

He also questioned how it is possible that Nenad Rasic’s party received more than 300 votes in Prizren, where only a few Serbs live.

The situation is, he says, given the preliminary results, bad for Serbs, precisely because Kurti is close to forming the executive authorities.

According to projections, Self-Determination could have 56 seats in parliament, which, Drecun recalls, is eight more than after the February elections.

“Now there will certainly be attempts to push Rasic into parliament, because every mandate is valuable to Kurti. With Rasic, he would have 57, and he would still be missing four more, which he could ‘obtain’ from minorities, Turks, Bosniaks, Roma. That majority would not be very stable, but it is easier to bargain with someone who has a small number of seats than to reach a political agreement with the Serb List, which has great strength and is the only legitimate and legal representative of the Serb people,” Drecun said.