Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Saturday, May 9, 2015

Macedonia police fight an 'armed terrorist group'

by Natalie de Vallieres and Biodun Iginla, Reuters contributors and BBC News, Skopje

1 hour ago


Police in Macedonia have been fighting an armed group from an unidentified neighbouring state, say officials.
Some 20 officers have reportedly been injured in clashes in the northern town of Kumanovo, close to the borders with Kosovo and Serbia.
Interior ministry spokesman Ivo Kotevski said that the "terrorist group" were armed with bombs and automatic rifles.
He added that they had been planning attacks on state institutions.
Mr Kotevski said that the "well-trained" group were putting up a violent resistance and that the operation against them was ongoing.
"This is a risky operation because it is an area with narrow streets and police need to perform house-to-house searches very carefully," he told AFP news agency.

Police armoured vehicles have reportedly helped seal off a suburb of the town which lies some 40km (25 miles) north of the capital, Skopje.
Witnesses have reported hearing intense shooting there since early on Saturday.
Helicopters are reported to be still circling the town and smoke can be seen rising from several houses.
Several police officers have been taken to hospital with serious injuries, according to MIA news agency.
Mr Kotevski said that some residents of the Diva Naselba neighbourhood had been sheltering the armed group which had entered the country illegally.
The mayor of the town, Zoran Damjanovski, has urged local people to remain calm.

Local media say that the area of Kumanovo at the centre of the fighting mainly inhabited by ethnic Albanians.
In 2001, rebels demanding greater rights for the ethnic Albanian minority launched an uprising against the government.
Further conflict was averted by a peace agreement, which guaranteed ethnic Albanians greater recognition, but tensions have continued to simmer.
Macedonia's President Gjorge Ivanov has cut short a visit to Moscow and is returning to Macedonia to deal with the incident.
The government is already under pressure over claims of illegal wire-tapping and the alleged cover-up of the death of a man in 2011.
Thousands of protesters clashed with riot police in the capital on Wednesday.
Macedonia's political crisis dates back to last year's elections, when an opposition party made allegations of electoral fraud, denounced the government as a dictatorship, and boycotted parliament.

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