Seal: Sénna needs Russians to return to Kosovo by force, enough Serbs born there

Serbia's Interior Minister, Aleksandar Vulin, says Serbia, to return strongly to Kosovo, would not need Russians or any other foreigner, as for that, Serbs in Kosovo would, according to him. Voulin has thus responded to former Kosovo Security Force Commander Kadri Kastrati's statement. [...]
Volin has thus responded to former Kosovo Security Force Commander Kadri Kastrati's statement, who said there is information that Serbia is recruiting Russian mercenaries to bring to northern Kosovo.
When fear and an unclean conscience speak to Albanians, they usually slander Serb aggression and Russian danger and begin to complain about how dangerous Vuciqi is. Neither President Vuciq nor I are preparing or seeking Russian volunteers. If Serbia wants hard to return to northern and southern Kosovo, there would be no need for Russians or any other foreigners, Kosovo-born Serbs” will suffice, Voulin said.
He added that for this, Albanians have been convinced when special Kosovo Police Forces withdrew from the north after the agreement reached between Kosovo and Serbia in Brussels.
He said NATO was forced to seize weapons for Kosovo to fight for Albanians, since, as he said, the “only Albanians “could never win”.
Even in this statement, Vulin used the offensive term “client”, thus referring to Kosovo Albanians when discussing any issues.
Declarations with offensive terms of Volin had resumed since October last year, following the joint meeting of the two governments -- of Albania and Kosovo -- held on 2 October.
Albania's prime minister, Edi Rama, had declared that the ambition of both governments is to remove the border between the two countries, and that an agreement between the two governments leads the direction for the Durres Port to be transformed into Kosovo port.
But, in a communiqué of Serbia's Ministry of Defense Technical Protection, Voulin calling Kosovo Albanians with the term "interpretative" “shitar”, had it that what is given to the latter, cannot prevent Serbia. Vulin has also stressed that Prime Minister Edi Rama is continuing with his efforts to create a “Greater Albania”.
Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama had immediately reacted, who had called on Serbia's president, Aleksandar Vuciq, to condemn the Vulin's statement. Addressing Vuciqi, Rama had stressed that it wishes that the Vulin's statement would be a joke, “otherwise it would be a desperate display of miserable thinking”, which the Serbian president must condemn “without any doubt”.
Vulin had reacted to Prime Minister Rama himself, again with the offensive term “scoptari”, saying they “are an intermediate people who have given Esat Papa Toptan”.
Serbian Minister Aleksandar Vulin, calling Albanians with the offensive term “siptar” ignores the court's decision in Serbia, under which the term “is politically incorrect and offensive”.











