The Greek newspaper: Kosovo separatist leaders posed with a map of "Greater Albania" showing Epirus and Corfu

Kurti i Osmani
Source: Twitter

The Greek newspaper, Greek City Times, wrote about the situation in Kosovo and highlighted the fact that Kosovo Prime Minister and President Albin Kurti and Vjosa Osmani, had posed with a map of "Greater Albania", which included the region of Epirus and the island of Corfu.

Serbia's ambassador to Greece, Dusan Spasojevic, commented on that news on Twitter, stressing that "even if a wolf grows old, his sheep do not change".

"Opportunists and nationalist populists, the 'prime minister' and 'president' of Kosovo, Albin Kurti, and Vjosa Osmani, promote the mega-nationalist plan of Greater Albania by annexing parts of Serbia and Greece. Even if the wolf grows old, his sheep have not changed,” Spasojevic wrote.

The newspaper, further describing the situation in the north of Kosovo, states that local elections were scheduled in four Serb-majority municipalities in the north after the representatives of the Serbs left the institutions due to Pristina's decision to ban license plates. As stated, those elections had been postponed to April 23 by the decision of Osmani in an attempt to calm the situation.

However, the paper continues, on Saturday the Serbs erected barricades and blocked the roads leading to the border crossing with Serbia, Jarinje, and Brnjak; the Kosovo police announced that they had been shot at, and the President of Serbia said that he would ask KFOR for permission to send the Serbian army to Kosovo.

"(Annalena) Baerbock said that someone had lowered tensions because they had postponed the elections, imagine the hypocrisy. That night you invaded with Special Forces and wanted to seize the municipal election commissions... You knew that there would be no elections, but you wanted to attack the Serbs by force” Vucic said.

Otherwise, the newspaper reminds that Article 4 of the UN Resolution 1244 allows the return of the Serbian army and police under certain circumstances, including marking/clearing minefields, maintaining a presence near Serbian heritage sites, and maintaining a presence at key border crossings.

On the terrain in the north, primary and secondary schools will remain closed in accordance with the decision made by Belgrade on Sunday evening because they fall under Serbian jurisdiction; roads are still blocked in Jarinje, Brnjak, and Rud. The KFOR forces are on the ground, but so far they have not tried to dismantle the blocks, the newspaper reminds.