MPB sllahut comments Vucic's request for (resulting) Serbs to Kosovo Police

The Ministry of Internal Affairs (MPB), in a response to “Radio Europe Free” on Monday, has said that “does not comment on any person's/political subject” referring to the question of red talk in Pristina about the return of Serbian policemen who have resigned in 2022 following pressure from Serbia, demanding that questions be addressed to police [...]
Members of the Serb community in the country's north have resigned from Kosovo institutions, including police, courts and prosecutors, in November 2022. However, although it forced Serbs themselves to abandon working in Kosovo institutions, Serbia's president, Aleksandar Vucic, has recently called for the resignations to return to their jobs.
Serbia's president, in addition to returning Serbs to the Kosovo Police, has also called for the return of Serbian judges and prosecutors to their posts. The Kosovo Prosecutorial Council (KPK) has announced that it will consider the demands of Serbs if there are any. The KKP has added that “has not accepted any request from Serbian prosecutors for their return to the constitutional system”.
The Kosovo Judiciary Council (KGJK), on the other hand, has stated in an answer to the REL that the issue of judges' resignations from the ranks of the Serb community “will be considered at the moment that the KDR estimates is the right time” and “under the procedure specified for such situations”.
The European Union (BE) has named <x1-positive “Serbia's president's call for reintegration of Serbs to all Kosovo institutions, from which they left late 2022. “We welcome the readiness expressed by President Vucic to continue engagement in the” dialogue.
Otherwise, despite the general situation in the troubled north inhabited by ethnic Serbs being calmer after last year's events, tension is still perceived due to the large number of unresolved issues in dialogue for normalising Kosovo-Serbia reports.












