Police in Kosovo surround 30 gunmen in monastery after officer killed

Prime minister lays blame for violence on ‘professional’ fighters from neighbouring Serbia

A Kosovo police officer guards the road near the village of Banjska. Photograph: Dejan Simicevic/AP
A Kosovo police officer guards the road near the village of Banjska. Photograph: Dejan Simicevic/AP

Kosovo’s prime minister has said a police officer was killed and another was wounded in an attack he blamed on support from neighbouring Serbia.

Albin Kurti said “masked professionals armed with heavy weapons” opened fire at 3am on a police patrol in the village of Banjska, Leposavic, some 50km north of the capital Pristina, killing one officer. Another officer was injured but his condition is not life-threatening.

Security forces surrounded at least 30 armed gunmen in a monastery in Banjska on Sunday. Mr Kurti urged those inside to surrender.

Kosovo police said two lorries with no licence plates had blocked a bridge at the entrance to the village. Three police units were sent to unblock it but came under fire from different positions with different weapons, hand grenades and bombs.

READ MORE
The incident happened in the village of Banjska, Leposavic, some 50km north of the capital Pristina. Photograph: Bojan Slavkovic/AP
The incident happened in the village of Banjska, Leposavic, some 50km north of the capital Pristina. Photograph: Bojan Slavkovic/AP

Police managed to push back the attack and take two injured police officers to the hospital in southern Mitrovica. However, one of them was dead on arrival.

‘Sad day’

Speaking on Sunday after a meeting of the country’s security council, Mr Kurti said it was a “sad day” for Kosovo. He named the dead police officer as Afrim Bunjaku.

The prime minister displayed a set of photos which showed a number of vehicles without licence plates and an armoured personnel carrier “which does not belong to the Kosovo police”, near the Orthodox monastery in Banjska.

There was ongoing gunfire from what he described as a group of at least 30 military professionals, masked and heavily armed.

“It is clear that these uniformed persons, at least 30, are an organised professional unit who have come to fight in Kosovo,” he said, calling on them to hand themselves over to authorities.

The area around Mitrovica, in northern Kosovo, is where most of the country’s ethnic Serb minority lives, in four municipalities.

‘A real little war’

Reports in the media in Serb-dominated northern Kosovo said residents of the village of Banjska were woken up by shootings and detonations in the middle of the night until dawn.

“It was a real little war: first some gunfire, then silence, shootings, detonations,” Serbian Kossev news agency quoted an unidentified resident as saying.

Serbian media said both local roads and crossings with Serbia were blocked.

“Organised crime, which is politically, financially and logistically supported from Belgrade, is attacking our state,” Mr Kurti wrote on his Facebook page. He said gunfire against police with different weapons was ongoing.

Serbian media said both local roads and crossings with Serbia were blocked. Photograph: Bojan Slavkovic/AP
Serbian media said both local roads and crossings with Serbia were blocked. Photograph: Bojan Slavkovic/AP

“The government of the Republic of Kosovo and its state institutions are ready and co-ordinated to respond to crime and criminals, terror and terrorists,” he said.

Kosovo’s president Vjosa Osmani, who is in New York at the United Nations General Assembly, denounced the killing and the “attacks against the Republic of Kosovo’s sovereignty”.

“Such attacks testify once again the destabilising power of the criminal bands organised from Serbia which for a long time .. are destabilising Kosovo and the region,” she said.

‘Quick to blame’

Serbia’s parliamentary speaker Vladimir Orlic said Mr Kurti “was quick to blame the Serbs,” adding that Mr Kurti was the one who wanted an “escalation”.

“He said it was some kind of organised action by professionals,” Mr Orlic told the Prva television station. “They must have been identified and he knows who they are and what they are, and everything is clear.”

Earlier this month, an EU-facilitated dialogue meeting in Brussels between Mr Kurti and Serbian president Aleksandar Vucic ended in acrimony. Washington has fully supported the negotiations and the stance of the EU.

In February, the EU put forward a 10-point plan to end months of political crises. Mr Kurti and Mr Vucic gave their approval at the time, but with some reservations that have still not been resolved.

The EU warned both countries that the commitments that Serbia and Kosovo made in February “are binding on them and play a role in the European path of the parties,” which refers to their chances of joining the 27-nation bloc.

In May, tensions in northern Kosovo left 93 peacekeepers hurt in riots.

Serbia and its former province, Kosovo, have been at odds for decades. Their 1998-99 war left more than 10,000 people dead, mostly Kosovo Albanians. Kosovo unilaterally declared independence in 2008 but Belgrade has refused to recognise the move. - AP