Russians film Hollywood for the invasion of Slatina Airport, KLA's KLA genocide and organ trafficking (Video)

A Russian-Serbian film is making a fuss and is being recommended in social networks on Kosovo's war. He has even received a 7.8 assessment on the IMDB page. According to the “Russian Beyond”, he refers to real events that took place in Kosovo in 1999 when Albanians planned genocide against the local Serb population. To help Serbs, [...]
A Russian-Serbian film is making a fuss and is being recommended in social networks on Kosovo's war. He has even received a 7.8 assessment on the IMDB page.
According to the “Russian Beyond”, he refers to real events that took place in Kosovo in 1999 when Albanians planned genocide against the local Serb population. To help Serbs, Russian peacekeepers were ordered to take a sudden and quick trip from Bosnia to Kosovo, and to take control of the Slatina airport before NATO troops arrived, Periscopi translates.
The movie in question is called the Balkan Line “and shows the achievement of peacekeepers and fierce confrontations between a small stone of Russian special forces and hundreds of Kosovo Albanian military forces. Though they seem desperate, the site writes, they manage to keep to the end by preserving the airport for their friends.
“Balkan Lines” has been well received in Russia and Serbia because it intensifys patriotic feelings and revives the friendship between these two countries.
The removal and trafficking of human organs by Serbian military members are also involved.
The director of this terrible propagandistic film is Andrey Volgin, while Emir Kusturica also attends.












