Investigations of police who arrested Marko Djurich crash MPB deputy ministers

On March 26th, the chief of the Office for Kosovo in Serbia's Government, Marko Djuric, had entered Kosovo without permission, what the country's institutions immediately reacted to by arresting him. Dozens of Kosovo Police took part in the action, but it was the Special Intervention Unit that seized Djuric during the rally he was holding with [...]
On March 26th, the chief of the Office for Kosovo in Serbia's Government, Marko Djuric, had entered Kosovo without permission, what the country's institutions immediately reacted to by arresting him.
Dozens of Kosovo Police members participated in the action, but it was the Special Intervention Unit that seized Djuric during the rally he was holding with northern Serbs, writes Indexline.
The conduct of Kosovo police officers had complained of Deputy Interior Minister Milan Radojevic, under whom officials used force during the arrest.
Following Radojevic's complaint, Kosovo Police Inspectorate, the Department of Investigations has, respectively, started collecting information today about allegations of eventual violations by police officials.
“About the case of the arrest of Marko Djuric, the IPK has, respectively, begun with the collection and gathering of information about allegations of eventual violations by Kosovo Police officials. Regarding this police operation, The IPK has received a complaint from deputy. Minister of Internal Affairs. Milan Radojevic, about some suspicions of overuse of force by police officials”, says the IPK communiqué.
Thoughts unlike Radojevic has another deputy minister of Internal Affairs, Izmi Zeka. He, in a pronouncement for Indexline, has said Kosovo Police that day have conducted a professional and reform action on Kosovo laws.
Kosovo's “Police in the Djuriqi case have done the work professionally, and not only do we say it as the Minister of Internal Affairs, but NATO and international mechanisms have proved it. After the Serbian community's deputy minister's complaint, the police inspectorate is in some form obliged not only to deputy minister, but also when any citizen complains, to lead as a procedure and complete it (the investigation)”, Zeka has said.
That assessment for the police, Zeka said, is not individual, but that is how the entire Ministry of Internal Affairs of Kosovo thinks.
“I don't want to interfere in the matter of the Inspectorate, because it's a body that has an independence, but we still believe the police have been correct and carried out a action that has been the decision of Kosovo Police and Institutes Director Marko Djuric to return from where he came from because he entered the Republic of Kosovo with no permission, Zeka stressed.









