Vuciqi's warning, Djuric's Brnabiqi for humanitarian disaster that pushed itself north

Despite warnings for today that in protest the stores in northern Kosovo will be shut down due to Serbia's lack of goods, there are no signs that the situation will change. Seven months after the tax is imposed on Serbia's products, there is less and less food and herbs produced in Serbia, says [...]
Seven months after the tax is imposed on Serbia's products less and less there are food and herbs produced in Serbia, says the so-called director of Serbia's Kosovo government office Marko Djuric and orders that “understands why businesspeople from the north of Kosovo have warned of shutting their stores”. Serbian officials say Serbian goods will again reach Kosovo, but do not show how.
So far goods from Serbia to Kosovo have been transported across alternative smuggling routes, avoiding legal border crossings. Serbia's President Aleksandar Vuciq has ordered “that people not be worried, because they will not remain my”.
“The situation is difficult for us when we talk to the representatives of our people, and we will do so after Vidovdan (28 June), then we will see how we will do and what measures we will take”, Vuciq said on June 23rd.
He has also promised <x0 strict measures against Kosovo after St George (6 May)”, but those measures have not yet been undertaken.
The “will be these comprehensive, serious, calibrated, more precise measures that will strike separatists in the Autonomous Kosovo and Metohija Wing, but we will not reveal”, Marko Djuric said on May 24th.
Now some critics mean that Serbia's government is using alternative routes for smuggling, the illegal economy. As you wish, but we want to ensure the Serbs in Kosovo have products from Serbia”, Serbian Prime Minister Anna Brnabiq said on 19 June.
“President Vuciq says Kosovo is our legitimate province, but when flour is exported there, it cannot do so, so it is not our legitimate province. It is a pity what those poor people in Kosovo are enduring, because of the political games in Serbia that happen behind their “backs”, estimates Bozidar Andrijevic, editor in the Serbian newspaper “Danas”.











