Serbian List leaves for Serbia, emergency meeting with Vuciqi after Djuric's arrest

The Serbian list has already travelled towards Serbia to meet with the Serbian president and to share the news that it is abandoning the Government of Kosovo. Thus have they revealed sources of B92. According to this television, Kosovo Serb representatives today have a meeting with Aleksandar Vucicin. During a media conference last night in Belgrade, [...]
The Serbian list has already travelled towards Serbia to meet with the Serbian president and to share the news that it is abandoning the Government of Kosovo.
Thus have they revealed sources of B92. According to this television, Kosovo Serb representatives today have a meeting with Aleksandar Vucicin.
During a media conference last night in Belgrade, the first Serbian state said the decision to leave the Kosovo government primarily belongs to the Serbian List.
Serbia's President Aleksandar Vuciq has suggested to the Serbian List that he will not make a decision instead regarding the initiative to leave the Kosovo government, following the arrest of Marko Djuric, who entered Kosovo without permission.
“won't make decisions for them, and this belongs to them, but must decide with a cold head”, Vuciq said.
This meeting is held following events that occurred yesterday in northern Mitrovica.
A group of top officials of Serbia yesterday made their way to Kosovo, though some of them did not have permission to join the country. Among them was the director of the Office for Kosovo in Serbia's Government, Marko Djuric, who, without permission, entered northern Mitrovica through illegal routes.
He had come to hold a meeting with Serbs in that part of Kosovo. But, once he understood his goal, the Kosovo Police Unit took the necessary steps to maintain order and law on Kosovo's territory.
Outside the Culture House in the north, where Djuric was holding the meeting, groups of Serbs who pressured journalists and reporters who were there to present the course of the opinion event. Serbian hooligans were the ones who even attacked Indexline photoreporter Blerim Uka. And they didn't allow Indexline's cameraman, Sopa lives to film their protest.
Before the intervention was carried out, sirens were heard in the north warning of a state of emergency. People had gone to balcony to see the situation.
It was the Kosovo Police unit that quickly carried out Djuric's arrest. He entered the car and was brought to Pristina Police Station Centre. After a few hours, he was sent back to Merdare, where he surrendered to Serbian authorities.
They were Secretary General in Serbian President Aleksandar Vuciq's cabinet, Nikola Selakovic, and Marko Djuric who did not have permission to enter Kosovo. While, Culture Minister Vladan Vukossavljevic had permission, he was back.












