The Government Office for Kosovo announced that the Kosovo police at the administrative crossing of Jarinje today stopped a shipment of dinars from central Serbia, intended for the payment of salaries, pensions and social benefits from the Serbian budget.
The Director of the Office, Petar Petković, said that “on the order of Aljbin Kurti”, the police at the administrative crossing demonstrated “insolence and rudeness” towards the representatives of the National Bank of Serbia and the “Henderson” company, and that they were then “driven away with the threat of arrest”.
“The money was sent according to all established decades-long procedures, which stipulate that the shipment of dinars to Jarinje with all the certificates is taken over by the British company ‘Henderson’ and transported to the vault in Leposavic, but the entry of dinars is prohibited,” said Petković.
He assessed that the messages of the Prime Minister of Kosovo that the dinar is not banned in Kosovo are “a lie and shameless propaganda, and that his plan of ethnic cleansing of the Serbian people from the province is being implemented without any hesitation.”
“We appeal again to the international community to further increase the pressure on Pristina to permanently abandon the unilateral decision to ban the dinar, because obviously the explicit verbal messages of disapproval that Kurti has been receiving in recent days are not effective. We call on the Serbian people in Kosovo to be patient and restrained, because Belgrade will will undoubtedly find a way to prevent Kurti’s plans and to ensure the survival of the Serbian and other non-Albanian population in our southern province,” added Petković.



