Where is the border between Serbia and Kosovo

Serbian television reporter TV Prva, Zelko Tvrdissic, has entered from Serbia on Kosovo territory along with the cameraman from the crossing in Leposaviq, but, as heard by B92, he “has not understood” to have entered another state. Says “I don't know what it says on paper, but when [...]
It says that “doesn't know what it says on paper, but when it comes here it doesn't know where the limit is” between Serbia and Kosovo.
The reporter in his Serbian language pronounces this content, Time broadcasts.
This is Dren in the Leposavich municipality.
By 1960, the administrative line between Kosovo and Serbia has been here. Late in the years, the decision was made in the Republic of Serbia for the border to be moved from here to Panic's May. From here about 15 kilometers is the Jarinje crossing. Kosovo police and Kosovo customs officers are stationed there, and according to the letters from that point the Kosovo border begins. But if from that point on we head towards Mitrovica, in practice it is quite something else. Here, Serb tricolored flags wave and the Serbian language is widely spoken. In this territory the money for which trade is done is only the Serbian dinar. People recover in Serbian health institutions. Youth teaches in schools and faculties working with Serbia's educational system programmes.
From Jarinje to this bridge over Iber, which divides North Mitrovica with the South, Serbs make up the majority. The cars are made of Serbian license plates and with these recordings to this point (the Ibri Bridge) you can, but beyond, in the south you do not only theoretically but also in practice, because there is the Republic of Kosovo. Some are probably asking “where is the limit?”












