Serbian parties in Kosovo report incidents, claiming there are “political attacks”

The Serb list, the largest party of Serbs in Kosovo supported by Belgrade, reported that strangers on January 25th threw a Molotov cocktail in front of her activist's family house, Aleksandra Popovic, in Ranilug, a majority Serb municipality in southeast Kosovo. This explosive device, according to the Serbian List, hit the car [...]
This explosive tool, according to the Serbian List, hit the Popovich family car, fully superseding “”.
Earlier, the Serbian People's Movement announced that unknown persons on 24 January tried to burn a bill of it in Moguille, near Klokot, also a majority Serb municipality in the Gjilan region.
This billboard was facing the family home of Divna Andrews, an MP candidate in the Kosovo Assembly by the Serbian People's Movement.
Kosovo police in the Gjilan region have confirmed that both incidents have been reported and that cases are being investigated.
The Serbian List and the Serbian People's Movement claim these incidents are “politically motivated attacks”.
The “is no doubt about a politically motivated attack and efforts to intimidate members of Serbian List election councils, in order to prevent them from following and controlling the elections, in order to favour several other favourite parties from Pristina”, the Serbian List statement said.
Meanwhile, Milija Bisevac from the Serbian People's Movement has called for the international community to react in terms of trying to burn their bill, claiming that democratic elections cannot be held under these conditions.
You didn't scare us”, they said from this party.
Parliamentary elections in Kosovo will be held on February 9th, and besides the Serbian List, five political subjects representing the Serb community will also participate: The Serbian People's Movement, For Freedom, Justice and Survival, the Party of Kosovo Serbs, Serbian Democracy and the Civic Initiative of People's Justice.
However, for participation in the upcoming elections in Kosovo, Belgrade's support is exclusively with the Serbian List, which boycotts Kosovo institutions for more than two years in line with the decision to abandon institutions in the north due to Prime Minister Albin Kurti's government's insistence on banning Serbian plates.
The Serbian List has won over 90 per cent of the vote in all elections in which it has participated since its formation in 2013, but the European Union's observer mission has written in its reports in 2021 on “monopol and intimidation” by the candidates and activists of the party. /Radio Europe Free












