The confession amid the tears of the Serbian lawyer following his resignation: Kurt's wrong decisions led to this situation

An employee of the Foundation Court in Mitrovica says she has been forced to resign after 20 years of service after 5 November, at a meeting with Serbian List Chairman Goran Rakic, it is decided that members of the Serb community will collectively resign from Kosovo institutions in the country's north. The cause is [...]
Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti's right violation of Serbian rights has been highlighted as the cause, or is required to be canceled Reregistering Decision of vehicles issued by Serbia's license plates, which have city acronyms in Kosovo, and form Association of Serb-run municipalities.
No one has a plan for how to fix this. All they said was sign the resignations, which we had to sign. Although they say this has been voluntary, it has not been voluntary at all”, the official of the Foundation Court in Mitrovica, who agreed to speak only under anonymity.
Emotional divisions
On the other hand, lawyer Marko Jaksic, who by November 7th was an employee at the Constitutional Court in Mitrovica, told Radio Free Europe that his resignation was very emotional and that all in that judicial institution co-operated, regardless of ethnic affiliation.
“S together we built that court for the benefit of all citizens of this region, Albanians, Serbs, but all the others”, he said, and added that the wrong “ ” of Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti “so far that people cry in tears like rain, regardless of which ethnic affiliation they belong to<5>.
He stressed that court employees will remain friends among themselves, despite the political situation, writes N1.
They haven't argued with each other, but they're the ones who were on Friday, colleagues and friends. Such will remain”, Jaksic said, and added he believes he will not remain without income.
Kosovo institutions' exit of Serbs occurred after dismissal Police director for the northern region, Nenad Djurovic, because he refused to implement the Government's decision to reregister cars.












