KFOR: Kosovo police need to inform us of all their movements

Following the recent Kosovo Police action in the country's north, KFOR has stressed the need for consultation and co-ordination of any action that could affect regional security. However, KFOR has said that Kosovo Police have no duty to inform them of all their movements across the country. In [...]
However, KFOR has said it is not up to the Kosovo Police to announce all their movements across the country.
In a response to Dukagjin, KFOR, as it quoted NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, has made it clear that any movement or deployment of the Kosovo Security Force in the country's north requires their approval.
“Position NATO is clear and consistent. Kosovo police do not need to inform the KFOR commander of all its movements across Kosovo. But as the Secretary General made clear NATO Jens Stoltenberg on his visit to Kosovo last November: “Stability in the region depends on all sides choosing diplomacy rather than violence and respecting existing commitments. Any delocation of the Kosovo Security Force in northern Kosovo requires KFOR's reconciliation; and we expect long-term consultations on any action of the Kosovo Security Force or the Kosovo Police that can affect regional security”, KFOR's response to Dukagjin says.
According to the official police announcement on Action Day, it is said that in addition to the closure of six illegal units of “Savings Post Bank”, various material evidence was confiscated, including some 74 million dinar, about 1 million and 600 thousand euros, 19 thousand and 500 francs, and about 13 thousand and 800 US dollars.
The Kosovo police action came a week after the Kosovo Central Bank announced it has completed the transit deadline for its regulation, which prohibits the use of the Serbian dinar for handling payments.












