Vucic handed Stoltenberg eight documents about Kurti's terror against the Serbs in Kosovo

Predsednik Srbije Aleksandar Vučić i generalni sekretar NATO Jens Stoltenberg
Source: Kosovo Online

The President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vucic, handed over to NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg at a meeting in Brussels, on Thursday, eight documents in which the chronology of the terror suffered by the Serbs in Kosovo since Albin Kurti came to power in Pristina and detailed data on as many as 383 ethnically motivated attacks, in which children were the target 15 times, Novosti reported.

In the first half of this year alone, there were more incidents than were recorded on average before Kurti's arrival as Prime Minister.

In several documents, which were handed to Stoltenberg by the head of state in Brussels, and which Novosti had access to, the harassment, intimidation, and arrest of the Serbs, as well as the violent imposition of the mayors in the north, which led to tensions, is described in chronological detail.

In the folder that was handed over to the Secretary General of NATO, there are eight documents: a Chronology of Kurti's terror in Kosovo, a List of Serbs shot by Kurti's forces during 2023, a Report on the attack on two children in Zitkovac, List of the Serbs who have been unjustly arrested since Kurti came to power, Ethnically motivated attacks, Pristina's measures against healthcare, Attacks on the SOC believers and facilities from 2021 to 2023 and Ethnic motive attacks on Serbian children.

"Brother and sister Dara and Kristijan were attacked and beaten while they were driving a quad bike and going to a cottage. Kristijan was kicked on the body, knocked to the ground, and held in a kneeling position. The mother found her son being held on his knees on the ground, and her daughter barefoot who collapsed several times from stress and fear," the report states detailing the attack by ROSU Special Forces on Serbian children in Zitkovac, who were stopped and harassed by Kosovo Forces only because they had caps under their helmets.

In a part of the Serbian delegation's report, it was also underlined that from the fall of 2022, ROSU had begun to establish a permanent presence in the north of Kosovo, through the construction of bases and illegal checkpoints. Since the beginning of the year, 11 special ROSU actions have been registered, which could be defined as incursions into the north of Kosovo, while there have been 24 since 2021. The documents also contain information about how Pristina, despite the opposition of the Serbs, conducted illegitimate elections in municipalities with a majority Serb population in containers.

"The ROSU units used the trip to the large public rally "Serbia of Hope" to forcibly occupy the remaining municipal buildings in the north of the province, and when breaking up the peaceful gathering, they used tear gas, shock bombs, and firearms. In Zvecan, the ROSU escalated the situation by kidnapping several Serbs, which led to riots in which 26 members of KFOR and more than 50 civilians were injured. The Serbs were subsequently declared arrested, one of whom was brutally beaten, inflicting him serious bodily injuries," the report states.

Through the list of the Serbs who were shot by members of the Kosovo Police, Stoltenberg was, among other things, familiarized with the attack on the brothers Stefan (11) and Milos (21) Stojanovic from Gotovusa near Strpce, on Christmas Day, as well as with the fact that their attacker, member of the KSF Azem Kurtaj, had been charged only with causing general danger and had been released under house arrest.