Zoran Djindjic urged NATO that Serb forces return to Kosovo - Kurti Government today named him a road to the north

Today, Vetevendosje's party has placed a street sign in northern Mitrovica named after former Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic. Local media in the north have reported that Victory Pacolli, the acting minister of the environment, was present during the deployment of the signs.
But how Djindjic had asked, NATO restores Serbian seals to Kosovo?
Four years after NATO had removed Serb forces from Kosovo, Serbia had asked NATO Permission to Return Its Military Forces to Kosovo, Porporoton BBCPerscope broadcast.
At the time, Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic had called for the return of the Serbian Army to Kosovo in a letter to NATO Commander for Southeast Europe Admiral Gregory Johnson.
In the letter, then Prime Minister Djindjic had expressed “concern about the possibility of UNMIK entrusting some security duties to local Kosovo Albanian authorities”.
He said such a move would affect the decision on Kosovo's final status.

Djindjic had declared that the arrival of about a thousand soldiers from Belgrade to Kosovo"would fill the security vacuum that could arise if NATO draws part of its units in case of military action in Iraq".
The representative of international forces in Kosovo said there is no need for any army to operate in Kosovo except members of the NATO-led KFOR mission. / P ECISCOPIA












