Special Prosecutor's Act Serbian BIA, compiled reports in O SBE With Hostile Narrative for Kosovo Security

The special prosecutor announced days ago that an indictment was filed at the Pristina Foundation Court against Jelena Djukanovic as a spy suspect. And in this regard, the news has also provided the edited indictment. According to this indictment, the defendant is said to be on February 28th until his arrest. [...]
The special prosecutor announced days ago that an indictment was filed at the Pristina Foundation Court against Jelena Djukanovic as a spy suspect.
And in this regard, the news has also provided the edited indictment.
Based on this indictment, the defendant is said to have until the moment of arrest, so on February 28, 2025, in the quality of O's local official The SEU in Kosovo, with full awareness and direct intent, has committed repeated actions that provide active assistance to the information activity of a foreign service, namely the Agency for Intelligence and Security of Serbia, known as “BIA”
This same agency is highlighted as providing data, documents and sensitive information provided during its activities on O The SBE-help that was accomplished through multiple communications with the current convict of spying criminal acts, BIA resident agent who conveyed documented information directly related to constitutional order, institutional security and internal self-activity of Kosovo institutions.
More precisely, these information is said to have been later carried to BIA's responsibility for the Novi Pazar region in Serbia.
The same through its influence and influence, during the O report meeting and compile The SEU for reflecting the political security situation in Kosovo has contributed to the creation of a hostile OSCE security, citizenship and integrity institutions and has endangered the lives and personal security of state officials, citizens and international staff.
Otherwise, Jelena Djukanovic has been arrested on February 28th 2025, while on March 2nd of this year he has been assigned a month of detention by the Constitutional Court in Pristina. It has continued the detention measure for another two months.
At 02,03,2025 that mission O The SEU in Kosovo has said suspected of spying in Mitrovica is an OSCE member. Through a response, the OSCE has said they are in contact with its legal representative and are monitoring the situation.
“We are in contact with their legal representative and are closely monitoring their well-being in line with our duty. Mission is in contact with both relevant institutions and the O Secretariat The SEU in Vienna to ensure respect for the” process, said in response.
In June of this year, the Court of Pristina has sentenced the agent of Serbia's Intelligence and Security Agency (BIA), Aleksandar Vladjic, to five years in prison for his criminal spying work. In addition to the sentence, he has been fined 1,000 euros for illegal weapons.
Vladjic was arrested in June 2024 by authorities in Kosovo, under suspicion that he was involved in BIA's service spying activities. He had collected and sent information to Serbia, violating Kosovo's constitutional order. He is the first person to be convicted of spying since declaring independence in 2008.
Over the past few years, several persons of different ethnic affiliations, including Serbs and Albanians, have been arrested in Kosovo under suspicion that they have been involved in spying activities serving Serbia's intelligence agencies.
They are suspected to have helped BIA by forward sensitive information and documents related to the Kosovo Liberation Army, the Recak massacre, the Kosovo Intelligence Agency, the Kosovo Police, along with information for witnesses involved in Kosovo's specialised Chambers processes in The Hague.
And the case of the arrest of two persons in Croatia on spying allegations for Serbia, made known in late August, continues to be full of unknowns, just as activities they are accused of carrying out in Kosovo.
A Croatian pilot, identified as J.I., who was told that he served in the peacekeeping mission of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) in Kosovo KFOR, allegedly revealed to his girlfriend, Serbian monk Anna from Northern Mitrovica, which, later, she has reportedly forwarded to the main party of Serbs in Kosovo. (Serbian List, which enjoys official Belgrade's support, has denied knowing the suspect of spying.)
Croatian media, Slobodna Dalmacija, reported that investigators, on the basis of a judicial order, have checked their mobile equipment and communications, where they have found compromising messages that have prompted them to suspect international spying.
Both have been assigned detention measures, but the entire investigation remains secret, in order that, as Croatian authorities have argued, the process will not be damaged.













