Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Sunday, January 15, 2017

Serbia-Kosovo train row escalates to military threat


  • Jan 15, 2017  19H:55  GMT/UTC/ZULU TIME
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  • From the sectionEurope
A man passes a train decorated with the Serbian flag and the words "Kosovo is Serbia" in Belgrade.Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES

by Elodie Bagnol and Biodun Iginla, BBC News, Pristina, Kosovo
Serbia has warned it will defend "every inch" of what it claims as its territory in neighbouring Kosovo.
President Tomislav Nikolic accused Kosovo of seeking a war, after a train painted in Serbian colours and the words "Kosovo is Serbia" was prevented from crossing the Kosovan border.
Kosovo saw the train as a deliberate provocation.
As tensions grew, Mr Nikolic said that he would be willing to send the army to defend Serbs in Kosovo, if necessary.
Kosovo, historically a province of Serbia, declared independence in 2008. It is recognised by the US and most EU countries but not by Serbia or its ally Russia.
The train - heralded as an important transport link by Serbia - was the first direct link between the Serbian capital, Belgrade, and Mitrovica, in northern Kosovo, since 2008.
Many of the remaining Serbs in Kosovo live around Mitrovica.
Serbia said the slogan "Kosovo is Serbian" in many languages was a celebration of its cultural heritage, as were the Serbian Orthodox religious symbols adorning the inside, and the liberal use of the Serbian national colours.
Map showing Serbia and Kosovo
But Kosovo's Prime Minister Isa Mustafa told reporters that the train had been stopped "to protect the country's sovereignty" and that Kosovo would not allow "machines that will provoke with a message of occupation."
Kosovo had deployed police forces along the border to prevent the train crossing over - which forced President Nikolic to order a halt to the service.
Serbian Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic alleged that Kosovan forces were planning to blow up the tracks, and accused them of playing "war games".
Ethnic Serbs protested in northern Kosovo, waving Serbian flagsImage copyrightEPA
Image captionEthnic Serbs in Mitrovica took to the streets, protesting the interruption of the service
The incident has heightened tensions, causing protests by ethnic Serbs in Kosovo, and prompting Mr Nikolic to comment that the two nations had briefly been "on the brink of conflict".

Kosovo and Serbia - key recent dates

1991 - Start of the violent break-up of Yugoslavia
1996 - Rebel Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) steps up attacks on Serbian authorities in Kosovo - met with a Serbian crackdown
1999 - Nato bombs Serbian targets - Yugoslav and Serbian forces respond with ethnic cleansing against Kosovo Albanians but withdraw from Kosovo after a peace agreement
2008 - Kosovo unilaterally declares independence.

Kosovo has had a constant Nato peacekeeping force since 1999.
Tensions with Serbia were already running high, after former Kosovan prime minister Ramush Haradinaj was arrested in France on 5 January. He was detained on a Serbian warrant accusing him of war crimes.
Mr Haradinaj has twice been cleared of such charges at the United Nations, but Serbia insists he should be extradited. He remains in France pending a court decision.

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