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<https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/news/russia-supports-serbia-over-eu-dubbed-terrorist-attack-in-north-kosovo/>
  


Russia supports Serbia over EU-dubbed 'terrorist attack' in north Kosovo


Alice Taylor

5–6 minutes

  _____  

The Russian Foreign Ministry, a government spokesperson and the Russian Embassy 
in Belgrade have all reacted in support of Serbia over what the European 
Commission has called a cowardly terrorist attack in the north of Kosovo on 
Sunday.

In the early hours of Sunday morning, a Kosovo police patrol was ambushed by 
some 30 heavily armed gunmen, accompanied by armoured vehicles, leaving one 
officer dead and another wounded. The men fled to a local monastery, where they 
barricaded themselves in and traded gunfire with police for hours.

While the death toll was one officer and three terrorists on Sunday, this 
increased to five on Monday as Prosecutor Naim Abazi announced another two 
terrorists were found dead.

On Monday, just hours after the attack, Serbian President Aleksander Vucic met 
the Russian Ambassador to Serbia, Alexander Bocan-Harchenko. Vucic said he had 
informed the ambassador of the ‘brutal ethnic cleansing organised by Albin 
Kurti with the support of part of the international community’.

Russian government spokesman Dimitry Peskov also commented on the situation and 
supported Serbia.

“The situation is extremely difficult. In Kosovo, we see a traditionally biased 
attitude towards the Serbs… The situation is very, very tense and potentially 
dangerous, we are monitoring it very closely,” he said at a news briefing.

Later in the day, the Russian Foreign Ministry issued a strong statement 
against Prime Minister Albin Kurti.

“There is no doubt that yesterday’s bloodshed is a direct consequence of Albin 
Kurti’s course to incite conflict and cleanse the territory of Serbs. He 
intends to create international pressure on Serbia to recognise the 
independence of Kosovo”, the statement reads.

Russia and Serbia have long enjoyed a close relationship, and Belgrade has 
consistently refused to align itself with EU and Western foreign policy 
objectives, including sanctions over the invasion of Ukraine. Instead, it has 
fostered closer ties, sending delegations to Moscow and signing cooperation 
agreements.

This included security chief Aleksander Vulin, sanctioned by the US State 
Department over alleged ties to corruption, destabilisation, and organised 
crime in the region, attending the Moscow Security Conference.

Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Donika Gervalla-Schwarz called out the EU’s chief 
diplomat, Josep Borrell, for his choice of words when commenting on the 
situation in an initial statement on Sunday.

“Terrorists kill police, and you call on ‘all actors’? Now, a word of support 
for the police? Not even against terrorists? Did you also refer to terrorist 
attacks in Spain as ‘hostilities’? What a shame. How can EU members tolerate 
this cynicism any longer,” she asked.

Borrell’s statement called the siege “ongoing hostilities” and “attacks” and 
called on “all actors” to “de-escalate”, shying away from the word “terrorist”.

But a subsequent statement from Borrell referred to a “terrorist attack” and 
was echoed in a post by the EU Delegation in Pristina.

German Ambassador Jorn Rohde went one step further and called out Srpska Lista, 
the ethnic Serb political party in Kosovo, to “stop its silence and join us all 
in our clear stance against this murderous attack.”

Meanwhile, President Vjosa Osmani declared Monday a day of mourning for 
Bunjanku, with all institutional flags, including those of the US embassy and 
the EU delegation building, flying at half-mast. A memorial service was also 
held in the Albanian capital, Tirana, in one of the main squares.

Bunjanku was also declared a “Hero of Kosovo” by Osmani, who passed the honour 
on to his family members.

“On behalf of the citizens, I award the order “Hero of Kosovo” to sergeant 
Afrim Bunjaku. He has fallen heroically in defence of the country”, declared 
the president.

The daughter of Bunjaku gave a eulogy at his funeral, saying, “ I promise you, 
Dad, I will always be proud of you. I will always follow your path. We will 
always remember you with longing and conviction. My hero. My Dad.”

An advert in Times Square, New York, also paid tribute to the police officer 
and thanked the Kosovo police force for their work.

In northern Kosovo, those on the ground say the situation remains tense, and 
civilians are scared following the terrorist attack.

“There is a strange silence in the city. This is the most difficult moment 
since the war’s end,” Marko Jakšić, a lawyer and politician, told Euractiv.rs.

(Alice Taylor | Euractiv.com, Milena Antonijević | Euractiv.rs)


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