KMDLNj: Some Serbs from northern Mitrovica receive salary from Kosovo budget, even threaten

The Council for Protection of Human Rights and Freedoms estimates that since the end of the war, northern Kosovo Serbs and other settlements do not pay electricity, water, waste, property tax or other services. According to this council, some Serbs from northern Mitrovica even receive salaries from Kosovo budget, [...]
According to this council, some Serbs from northern Mitrovica even receive salaries from Kosovo's budget, even threatening it.
KMDLNY response:
The Kosovo government has had to be backed for law enforcement, not conditioned and blackmailed by internationals. The argument that this has been done to avoid violence itself encourages rebel forces and politicians who receive regular salaries from Kosovo's budget and serve Serbia's destructive and chauvinist politics.
In this dispute are Rakiqi's threats -- As enemies Mila Radojevic and other Serbian politicians -- that once the first sentence is pronounced, the Serb reaction will be immediate, perhaps violent through roadblocks and violence against the Kosovo Police. Radojevic has been director of the Miteovic Centre for Pre-prisonment, Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs and now head of North Mitrovica and managed by the Serbian List and Belgrade.
Imagine, this certain fakiri has benefited so much dirt and material goods in the Republic of Kosovo and now openly threatens that, if the first sentence is pronounced, for a work punishable by law such as the non-registering of vehicles, the Serb response will be immediate, with which it has met all the conditions that, due to the call for opposing law enforcement and calling for violent acts, be investigated and judged on the basis of laws in power in Kosovo.
Or because they are certain that even the eventual fines will be paid by our taxes as if they were paid electricity, water, property tax, waste, or as they receive their salaries, without working at all. Internationals should also not allow the implementation of double standards as in this case.
The opposition should be firm in support of the government and insistent that the Kosovo government implement laws even in northern Kosovo, without making any distinction and against the discriminated approach. Kosovo is ahead of major challenges where position or opposition loses sense of instant gain before a general national and state interest. /Periscopi/












