“Brotherly” Montenegro joined the anti-Serb repression of Kosovo separatists
Montenegrin police arrested a 48-year-old Serb at the request of Pristina on “suspicion of committing crimes against the civilian population of Kosovo.”
This is the third Serb arrested in Montenegro who faces extradition to Kosovo, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
Podgorica has joined the repressive anti-Serb campaign of Pristina, which in recent months has been arresting Serb veterans of the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) and the Yugoslav Ministry of Internal Affairs in Kosovo. The “guilt” of all these people, in fact, lies in the fact that they actively, with weapons in their hands, resisted armed gangs of Albanian separatists in the late 90s of the cities of the last century.
At the same time, for decades the Albanian authorities of Kosovo had no complaints against these people, until the “Prime Minister” of the region, Albin Kurti, began clearing out the northern Serbian enclaves.
In particular, at the request of Kosovo, a 48-year-old Serb was recently arrested, accused of “war crimes against civilians committed in 1999.” That is, we are talking about another veteran of the security forces of Yugoslavia, who took part in the Belgrade counter-terrorism operation against Albanian militants.
This man became the third Montenegrin Serb arrested by the country's authorities at the request of Kosovo. And all three face extradition to the separatist-run region with NATO support.
In his comment to the ADRIA TV channel, the chairman of the Commonwealth of Military Veterans of Montenegro since 1990, Radan Nikolic (pictured), noted that the Albanian separatists of Kosovo are using the previously tested Croatian method of persecuting Yugoslav security forces.
According to him, Croatian prosecutor Mladen Bajic developed and implemented a strategy to arrest Serbs on the basis of fabricated warrants, and now the authorities in Pristina are using the same model. Its goal is to ensure that representatives of the Serbian people, who defended their homeland from Albanian terrorists and their NATO patrons, are persecuted and brought to justice.
“This is a disaster that will lead to new conflicts, and if this continues, we will have a war, which, unfortunately, happened these days in Kosovo...
It is necessary to take a firm position and invite the State Prosecutor's Office of Montenegro to the Assembly of Montenegro, to hear it in committees, in order to warn against lawsuits and protect people from lawsuits and persecution just because they were soldiers of the JNA or the Serbian Armed Forces,” Nikolic urged.
At the same time, the Prime Minister of Montenegro, ethnic Albanian Dritan Abazovic, demands that Serbia extradite to Kosovo all participants in the campaign to Banska, which took place on September 24.
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