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While Serbs in Kosovo live without institutions, Albanians are opening shops


N1 Belgrade

3–4 minutes

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Institutions in northern Kosovo remain blocked. Buildings that once housed 
Serbian municipal administrations have been taken over by police, and it seems 
increasingly unlikely that employees will be allowed to return. As a result, 
citizens may soon need to travel to central Serbia, not only for currency 
exchange but also for basic administrative services. The only remaining Serbian 
institutions in the area are healthcare and educational facilities, which 
continue to operate despite numerous challenges. 

Instead of being at their workplaces, employees are now protesting outside the 
buildings where they used to work. They have asked the police when they can 
return and on what legal grounds the premises were taken over.

„We received no formal notice, no explanation, no warning,“ said Sasa Petrovic, 
an employee of the Municipal Administration.

„We are not a parallel institution; we provide services to all citizens 
regardless of race, religion, or nationality,“ Vucina Jankovic, head of the 
Mitrovica district, added.

Kosovo authorities consider these institutions illegal, but residents of 
majority-Serb areas still rely on their services.

„If a child is born today, there’s nowhere to register the birth. If someone 
dies, there’s nowhere to report it. Social benefits, student loans, any 
document—everything is affected,“ Dusan Radakovic from the NGO „Center for 
Advocacy of Democratic Culture,“ explained.

No alternative exists at the moment, as Kosovo institutions do not provide the 
same services that are offered within the Serbian system. Meanwhile, more 
Albanian businesses have started opening in northern Kosovo. Several new shops 
have been established in the past ten days, often in properties managed by the 
Kosovo Privatization Agency. The first to open was „Meridian,“ a store in North 
Mitrovica, marking the 45th branch of the chain in Kosovo.

„We speak both Serbian and Albanian, so Serbian customers will have the best 
shopping experience in our store,“ said Anton Gashi, Executive Director of 
Meridian Express.

Some local businesses owned by Serbs have closed due to the ban on Serbian 
goods and other operational difficulties. Serbian customers rarely, if ever, 
visit the newly opened Albanian shops.

„Serbs don’t have an issue buying from Albanians. Just 300 meters from here is 
ETC, where Serbs might buy more than Albanians do. But these new shops were 
opened for political reasons, under pressure from the ruling structure in 
Pristina,“ said Dusan Radakovic.

He expressed concerns that the opening of these shops is intended to change the 
ethnic composition of northern Kosovo. As tensions rise, relations between 
Serbs and Albanians in the area are deteriorating further.



 

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