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2008 protests against Kosovo declaration of independence

Widespread protests and riots in Serbia and North Kosovo followed the proclamation of independence by the Republic of Kosovo on February 17, 2008. Protests were also held by Serbs in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro.

2008 protests against Kosovo declaration of independence
Part of the 2008 Kosovo declaration of independence
A crowd rallies in front of SKC on February 21, 2008.
Date17–28 February 2008
Location
Largest protests and unrest occurred in Serbia, with several protests also having taken place in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, and elsewhere
Caused by2008 Kosovo declaration of independence
MethodsDemonstrations, occupations, rioting, civil disobedience, violence
StatusCeased
Parties
Number
6,000+ riot police deployed
Approximately 200,000 participated[1]
Over 200 arrested[2]
Casualties and losses
Over 100 injured
1 Ukrainian U.N Officer killed[3]
Over 200 injured
1 death[4]

Serbia edit

February 17–20 edit

  • On February 17, approximately 2,000 Serbs protested and stoned, then entered the Slovenian embassy in which they made major damage (Slovenia held the rotating Council presidency of the European Union at the time),[5] burnt down portions of the United States and Croatian embassy buildings in Belgrade, with some throwing stones and firecrackers at the buildings before being driven back by riot police.[6]
  • On February 18, a false bomb threat was called on a Slovenian Mercator store in Belgrade.[7] It was also announced that Beovizija 2008, originally scheduled for February 19, would be rescheduled to March 10 and 11.[8] In the multi-ethnic northern Serbian town of Subotica, approximately 300 protesting Serb youths chanted nationalist slogans directed against the country's Albanian, Hungarian and Croat communities.[9]
  • On February 19, protesters damaged several foreign businesses in Užice, including Société Générale, UniCredit and the Croatian-owned supermarket Idea.[10] The Serbian division of U.S. Steel, based in Smederevo, had a false bomb threat called in.[11] In Belgrade, stones were thrown by protesters at the Turkish embassy.[12]
  • On February 20, the Australian embassy in Belgrade was closed in anticipation of the following day's protests.[13] A protest in Niš drew several thousand people and was peaceful.[14]

Kosovo is Serbia protest edit

 
Kosovo is Serbia rally on February 21, 2008 in Belgrade

On February 21, a very large demonstration called Kosovo is Serbia (Косово је Србија, Kosovo je Srbija) was held in Belgrade in front of the Parliament organized by the Serbian government, with up to hundreds of thousands people attending it.[15] Speakers at the protest were: Prime Minister Vojislav Koštunica, opposition leader Tomislav Nikolić, Republika Srpska Prime Minister Milorad Dodik, Montenegro opposition leader Andrija Mandić, Montenegro opposition politician Predrag Popović, basketball player Dejan Bodiroga, filmmaker Emir Kusturica, tennis player Novak Djokovic (via link), actors Ivana Žigon [sr], Nenad Jezdić and Nataša Tapušković, and Yugoslav crown prince Alexander Karađorđević.

After the protest, people gathered at the Temple of Saint Sava for a religious service, where a speech was held by acting head of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Metropolitan Archbishop Amfilohije Risto Radović of Montenegro and the Littoral.

The president of Serbia and commander-in-chief of Serbian Armed Forces, Boris Tadic (Democratic Party), did not attend. The rally was not supported by the Liberal Democratic Party[16] nor by the League of Social Democrats of Vojvodina, both of which are represented in Parliament.

Attacks on diplomatic missions and businesses edit

 
Map of the attacked embassies after the rally
 
US embassy after Kosovo is Serbia rally on February 21, 2008 in Belgrade

The protest was peaceful until participants arrived at the US, Chinese, Croatian and Slovenian embassies, where a group of about 1000 rioters[17] separated themselves and started attacking the embassies. They burned the US embassy, entered and destroyed the interior and exterior of the Croatian and Chinese embassy[18] and caused minor damage to the Slovenian embassy.[19] The security cameras in the Slovenian embassy also filmed the action outside the embassy where Serbian police didn't try to stop the protesters from entering the embassy, instead they moved away, which caused protests in Slovenia.[20] Emergency services were able to put the fire out in embassies after protesters dissipated.[21] At around 21:00 UTC, American news service CNN reported that "charred remains" of an individual had been found inside the burnt-out offices. Flags of United States, Croatia, Slovenia and European Union were also burnt.[22][23] In response, a group of around fifty Croatian protesters burnt the Serbian flag in central Zagreb, after which the police arrested 44 of them.[24] Police guarded the U.S. Embassy in Belgrade on February 22.[25][26] Other foreign embassies damaged in the course of the protest included those of Belgium, Germany and Turkey.[27][28] In Belgrade and Novi Sad, McDonald's shops were damaged by protesters.[29] According to Serbian sources, the violent protesters were ad hoc football fans. 54 policemen and 34 citizens were injured. A Dutch journalist suffered broken ribs.[30] Serbian politicians condemned the violence.[31] The total damage from the violence was estimated at over 8 million Serbian dinars ($US 143,000).[32] The United Nations Security Council responded to these incidents by issuing a unanimous statement that, "The members of the Security Council condemn in the strongest terms the mob attacks against embassies in Belgrade, which have resulted in damage to embassy premises and have endangered diplomatic personnel," noting that the 1961 Vienna Convention requires host states to protect embassies.[33] In response to the attacks, the German embassy announced that it would temporarily stop granting visas to Serbian citizens.[28] Also on February 21, Serbian army reservists from Kuršumlija took their protest into Kosovo, during which time they attacked the Kosovo Police Service with stones.[34] An explosive was set off in the Kosovo Serb enclave of Kosovska Mitrovica near a United Nations-run courthouse.[35] During the rally there were people who carried portraits of ICTY-fugitive former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadžić and the blue-red flag of the far-right Orthodox organization Obraz.[36] In Kraljevo, Obraz was responsible for the vandalization of an Evangelical church.[32] In Valjevo, a Slovenian firm Sava Osiguranje was set on fire, most likely by protesting youths.[37] The Radio Television of Serbia took American films and sitcoms off the air, replacing them with content from Spain and Russia, who have been against Kosovo's independence.[38]

February 22 edit

The Croatian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and European Integration warned against travelling to Belgrade, resulting in the cancellation of an Adriatic League basketball match between Zagreb's KK Cibona and Belgrade's KK Partizan.[39] A concert by the Croatian band Hladno pivo scheduled for February 29 was similarly cancelled.[40] Also on February 22, the United States embassy in Serbia ordered the temporary evacuation of all non-essential personnel, after the protests and attacks on the embassy. Rian Harris, a U.S. embassy spokeswoman, explained the evacuation to AFP saying that "Dependents are being temporarily ordered to depart Belgrade. We do not have confidence that Serbian authorities can provide security for our staff members."[41] Slovenia also closed its own embassy, recommending its citizens not to travel to Serbia.[42] The European Union froze talks with Serbia on the Stabilisation and Association Agreement, the country's next step in EU-integration.[43] Meanwhile, nationalist organizations were reportedly spreading leaflets urging citizens to boycott banks and goods coming from the countries that support the independence of Kosovo.[44]

February 23 edit

The American embassy drew down staffing in Belgrade with a convoy headed to Croatia.[45] By this time, Serbian authorities reported that 200 rioters from the Belgrade protest had been arrested.[2] The Kosovo-Serbia border crossings had also been normalized.[2] The Liberal Democratic Party and the League of Social Democrats of Vojvodina again expressed criticism of Prime Minister Koštunica and his handling of the events since Kosovo's declaration.[46][better source needed]

February 26 edit

Serbia's National Security Council met to discuss how police had failed to stop the mob from attacking the embassy on the 21st.[47]

The United States raised its travel alert for Serbia to a travel warning.[48]

Zoran Vujović, the protester who died during the attack on the U.S. embassy, was buried in Novi Sad on February 26.[4] Several thousand people attended the funeral.[4]

February 27 edit

Human Rights Watch said that "Serbia's government should act quickly to reduce the dangerously hostile climate for human rights groups" since the Kosovo declaration.[49]

February 28 edit

The largest protest in Valjevo drew a crowd of several thousand people on February 28.[50]

February 29 edit

On February 29, Serbian police charged 80 people in connection with the embassy attacks.[51]

North Kosovo edit

Note on Kosovo independence

  • On February 19, Serbian protesters destroyed two UNMIK border checkpoints between Kosovo and Serbia.[52] Serbian minister for Kosovo, Slobodan Samardžić, declared that the act was legitimate and in line with the Serbian government's position.[53] A group called Mlada Bosna (Young Bosnia) also claimed responsibility for a string of hand-grenade attacks after Kosovo's declaration.[54]
  • On February 22, NATO's Kosovo Force (KFOR) began blocking entrance into Kosovo from Serbia to those who "threaten public order" after several hundred students from Belgrade, Niš, and Kragujevac attempted to cross in.[55] Despite the blockade, some of the protesters managed to make their way to Kosovska Mitrovica where they took part in clashes against UN police.[56]
  • On February 23, BBC News reported that nationalist Serbs were seeking to permanently separate North Kosovo from the Republic of Kosovo, through a strategy of confrontation, sabotage, and low-level violence directed against international institutions.[57] With continued Serb protests in northern Mitrovica, EU staff withdrew from the area.[58]
  • On February 24, with the seventh consecutive day of Serb protesting in Mitrovica, protests drew approximately 1000 people.[59] Despite some Serbian media outlets' claim to the contrary, Serbs from North Kosovo have not been leaving the Kosovo Police Service.[60] The United States' ambassador to Serbia called on the country's leaders to do more to protect foreign diplomatic missions.[61]
  • On February 25, the protest in Mitrovica drew 2,000 people, during which an EU flag was burnt.[62] On the Kosovo-Serbia border, 19 Kosovo police officers were injured by Serb protesters, before receiving additional help from NATO peacekeepers who dispersed the group.[63]
  • On February 26, protests continued in Mitrovica where students staged a mock football game in which one team represented Serbia and the other team states which have recognized Kosovo.[64]
  • Protests in Mitrovica drew thousands on March 6, as well as several hundred in Gračanica, including suspended Serb policemen of KPS.[65][66]
  • On March 14, 2008, after staging rallies for several weeks that prevented ethnic Albanian court employees from entering a UN courthouse in the northern part of Kosovska Mitrovica, hundreds of Kosovo Serbs broke into the building in the Serb-dominated part of the city, forcing UN police to retreat.[67] UN officials' negotiations with the Serbs to end the occupation were unsuccessful, and on March 17 UN police with the assistance of NATO-led KFOR forces entered the courthouse in a pre-dawn raid. When they arrived they were pelted with stones by around 100 Serbs. When they came out after arresting 53 of the protesters inside the courthouse they were attacked with gunfire, grenades and rocks by several hundred protesters who had massed outside.[68] About half of the protesters who had been arrested were freed by fellow protesters during the clashes with the rest being released by the UN after questioning.[69] The clashes lasted until around noon. One Ukrainian police officer was killed, 70 Serbs and 61 UN and NATO peacekeepers were wounded, and one UN vehicle and one NATO truck were set ablaze. Among the wounded international troops were 27 Polish and 14 Ukrainian police officers and 20 French soldiers. UN police withdrew from northern Mitrovica, leaving the area under the control of the NATO forces.[70][71]
  • Gen. John Craddock, NATO's top commander, said that after speaking with NATO commanders in Kosovo that NATO did not feel it necessary to send reinforcements to Kosovo.[69] On 19 March, UN police began to patrol parts of north Mitrovica again together with local Kosovo police, while the NATO peacekeepers still remained in overall control of security at the courthouse and generally in the north of Kosovo. A gradual transition to civilian control will happen over the next days.[72]

Bosnia and Herzegovina edit

 
Protests after Kosovo's declaration of independence in Banja Luka, Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Protests were held in Republika Srpska, the Serb-inhabited entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. On the 26th, about 10,000 protested in Banja Luka; a small group of them later approached the U.S. embassy branch office, damaging shopfronts and stoning police who blocked their path. Eventually, they were dispersed by tear gas.[73]

Montenegro edit

On October 9, 2008, Montenegro recognized Kosovo's independence. This move by the Montenegrin government, opposed by many in the country, led to a protest rally in Podgorica on October 13 attended by over 20,000 people. The rally, held in front of the Parliament of Montenegro building, was organized by the Serb List, Socialist People's Party of Montenegro, People's Party, Democratic Serb Party of Montenegro, and other opposition parties. It was backed by Movement for Changes and the Metropolitanate of Montenegro and the Littoral of the Serbian Orthodox Church, and Metropolitan Amfilohije Radović was announced as speaker.[74] Demonstrators demanded that the Montenegrin government and Prime Minister Milo Đukanović rescind their recognition of Kosovo. They waved Serbian flags, chanting "Kosovo is Serbia" and other slogans against the prime minister and his cabinet, calling them ustashas and shiptars. At the end of the rally, riots broke out and small groups attacked riot police in front of the parliament building. The rioters were eventually driven back by police, and 28 people were arrested and 34 were injured. The pro-Serbian opposition planned a second protest on 16 October, but the Montenegrin police said that no protests from the opposition would be accepted.[75][76][77]

Diaspora edit

 
 
Serbs protesting in Vienna (left) and London (right) in February, 2008.

Protests were also held in diaspora communities, such as in London (23 February), Vienna (24 February), and by Serbian students in Brussels on 28 February.[78]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • , TIME.com, February 21, 2008
  • In pictures: Belgrade rally, BBC News, February 21, 2008

2008, protests, against, kosovo, declaration, independence, this, article, needs, updated, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, information, november, 2010, widespread, protests, riots, serbia, north, kosovo, followed. This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information November 2010 Widespread protests and riots in Serbia and North Kosovo followed the proclamation of independence by the Republic of Kosovo on February 17 2008 Protests were also held by Serbs in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro 2008 protests against Kosovo declaration of independencePart of the 2008 Kosovo declaration of independenceA crowd rallies in front of SKC on February 21 2008 Date17 28 February 2008LocationLargest protests and unrest occurred in Serbia with several protests also having taken place in Bosnia and Herzegovina Montenegro and elsewhereCaused by2008 Kosovo declaration of independenceMethodsDemonstrations occupations rioting civil disobedience violenceStatusCeasedPartiesLaw enforcement Serb civiliansNumber6 000 riot police deployed Approximately 200 000 participated 1 Over 200 arrested 2 Casualties and lossesOver 100 injured 1 Ukrainian U N Officer killed 3 Over 200 injured 1 death 4 Contents 1 Serbia 1 1 February 17 20 1 2 Kosovo is Serbia protest 1 2 1 Attacks on diplomatic missions and businesses 1 3 February 22 1 4 February 23 1 5 February 26 1 6 February 27 1 7 February 28 1 8 February 29 2 North Kosovo 3 Bosnia and Herzegovina 4 Montenegro 5 Diaspora 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksSerbia editFebruary 17 20 edit On February 17 approximately 2 000 Serbs protested and stoned then entered the Slovenian embassy in which they made major damage Slovenia held the rotating Council presidency of the European Union at the time 5 burnt down portions of the United States and Croatian embassy buildings in Belgrade with some throwing stones and firecrackers at the buildings before being driven back by riot police 6 On February 18 a false bomb threat was called on a Slovenian Mercator store in Belgrade 7 It was also announced that Beovizija 2008 originally scheduled for February 19 would be rescheduled to March 10 and 11 8 In the multi ethnic northern Serbian town of Subotica approximately 300 protesting Serb youths chanted nationalist slogans directed against the country s Albanian Hungarian and Croat communities 9 On February 19 protesters damaged several foreign businesses in Uzice including Societe Generale UniCredit and the Croatian owned supermarket Idea 10 The Serbian division of U S Steel based in Smederevo had a false bomb threat called in 11 In Belgrade stones were thrown by protesters at the Turkish embassy 12 On February 20 the Australian embassy in Belgrade was closed in anticipation of the following day s protests 13 A protest in Nis drew several thousand people and was peaceful 14 Kosovo is Serbia protest edit Main article Kosovo is Serbia nbsp Kosovo is Serbia rally on February 21 2008 in BelgradeOn February 21 a very large demonstration called Kosovo is Serbia Kosovo јe Srbiјa Kosovo je Srbija was held in Belgrade in front of the Parliament organized by the Serbian government with up to hundreds of thousands people attending it 15 Speakers at the protest were Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica opposition leader Tomislav Nikolic Republika Srpska Prime Minister Milorad Dodik Montenegro opposition leader Andrija Mandic Montenegro opposition politician Predrag Popovic basketball player Dejan Bodiroga filmmaker Emir Kusturica tennis player Novak Djokovic via link actors Ivana Zigon sr Nenad Jezdic and Natasa Tapuskovic and Yugoslav crown prince Alexander Karađorđevic After the protest people gathered at the Temple of Saint Sava for a religious service where a speech was held by acting head of the Serbian Orthodox Church Metropolitan Archbishop Amfilohije Risto Radovic of Montenegro and the Littoral The president of Serbia and commander in chief of Serbian Armed Forces Boris Tadic Democratic Party did not attend The rally was not supported by the Liberal Democratic Party 16 nor by the League of Social Democrats of Vojvodina both of which are represented in Parliament Attacks on diplomatic missions and businesses edit nbsp Map of the attacked embassies after the rally nbsp US embassy after Kosovo is Serbia rally on February 21 2008 in BelgradeThe protest was peaceful until participants arrived at the US Chinese Croatian and Slovenian embassies where a group of about 1000 rioters 17 separated themselves and started attacking the embassies They burned the US embassy entered and destroyed the interior and exterior of the Croatian and Chinese embassy 18 and caused minor damage to the Slovenian embassy 19 The security cameras in the Slovenian embassy also filmed the action outside the embassy where Serbian police didn t try to stop the protesters from entering the embassy instead they moved away which caused protests in Slovenia 20 Emergency services were able to put the fire out in embassies after protesters dissipated 21 At around 21 00 UTC American news service CNN reported that charred remains of an individual had been found inside the burnt out offices Flags of United States Croatia Slovenia and European Union were also burnt 22 23 In response a group of around fifty Croatian protesters burnt the Serbian flag in central Zagreb after which the police arrested 44 of them 24 Police guarded the U S Embassy in Belgrade on February 22 25 26 Other foreign embassies damaged in the course of the protest included those of Belgium Germany and Turkey 27 28 In Belgrade and Novi Sad McDonald s shops were damaged by protesters 29 According to Serbian sources the violent protesters were ad hoc football fans 54 policemen and 34 citizens were injured A Dutch journalist suffered broken ribs 30 Serbian politicians condemned the violence 31 The total damage from the violence was estimated at over 8 million Serbian dinars US 143 000 32 The United Nations Security Council responded to these incidents by issuing a unanimous statement that The members of the Security Council condemn in the strongest terms the mob attacks against embassies in Belgrade which have resulted in damage to embassy premises and have endangered diplomatic personnel noting that the 1961 Vienna Convention requires host states to protect embassies 33 In response to the attacks the German embassy announced that it would temporarily stop granting visas to Serbian citizens 28 Also on February 21 Serbian army reservists from Kursumlija took their protest into Kosovo during which time they attacked the Kosovo Police Service with stones 34 An explosive was set off in the Kosovo Serb enclave of Kosovska Mitrovica near a United Nations run courthouse 35 During the rally there were people who carried portraits of ICTY fugitive former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic and the blue red flag of the far right Orthodox organization Obraz 36 In Kraljevo Obraz was responsible for the vandalization of an Evangelical church 32 In Valjevo a Slovenian firm Sava Osiguranje was set on fire most likely by protesting youths 37 The Radio Television of Serbia took American films and sitcoms off the air replacing them with content from Spain and Russia who have been against Kosovo s independence 38 February 22 edit The Croatian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and European Integration warned against travelling to Belgrade resulting in the cancellation of an Adriatic League basketball match between Zagreb s KK Cibona and Belgrade s KK Partizan 39 A concert by the Croatian band Hladno pivo scheduled for February 29 was similarly cancelled 40 Also on February 22 the United States embassy in Serbia ordered the temporary evacuation of all non essential personnel after the protests and attacks on the embassy Rian Harris a U S embassy spokeswoman explained the evacuation to AFP saying that Dependents are being temporarily ordered to depart Belgrade We do not have confidence that Serbian authorities can provide security for our staff members 41 Slovenia also closed its own embassy recommending its citizens not to travel to Serbia 42 The European Union froze talks with Serbia on the Stabilisation and Association Agreement the country s next step in EU integration 43 Meanwhile nationalist organizations were reportedly spreading leaflets urging citizens to boycott banks and goods coming from the countries that support the independence of Kosovo 44 February 23 edit The American embassy drew down staffing in Belgrade with a convoy headed to Croatia 45 By this time Serbian authorities reported that 200 rioters from the Belgrade protest had been arrested 2 The Kosovo Serbia border crossings had also been normalized 2 The Liberal Democratic Party and the League of Social Democrats of Vojvodina again expressed criticism of Prime Minister Kostunica and his handling of the events since Kosovo s declaration 46 better source needed February 26 edit Serbia s National Security Council met to discuss how police had failed to stop the mob from attacking the embassy on the 21st 47 The United States raised its travel alert for Serbia to a travel warning 48 Zoran Vujovic the protester who died during the attack on the U S embassy was buried in Novi Sad on February 26 4 Several thousand people attended the funeral 4 February 27 edit Human Rights Watch said that Serbia s government should act quickly to reduce the dangerously hostile climate for human rights groups since the Kosovo declaration 49 February 28 edit The largest protest in Valjevo drew a crowd of several thousand people on February 28 50 February 29 edit On February 29 Serbian police charged 80 people in connection with the embassy attacks 51 North Kosovo editSee also 2008 unrest in KosovoNote on Kosovo independenceOn February 19 Serbian protesters destroyed two UNMIK border checkpoints between Kosovo and Serbia 52 Serbian minister for Kosovo Slobodan Samardzic declared that the act was legitimate and in line with the Serbian government s position 53 A group called Mlada Bosna Young Bosnia also claimed responsibility for a string of hand grenade attacks after Kosovo s declaration 54 On February 22 NATO s Kosovo Force KFOR began blocking entrance into Kosovo from Serbia to those who threaten public order after several hundred students from Belgrade Nis and Kragujevac attempted to cross in 55 Despite the blockade some of the protesters managed to make their way to Kosovska Mitrovica where they took part in clashes against UN police 56 On February 23 BBC News reported that nationalist Serbs were seeking to permanently separate North Kosovo from the Republic of Kosovo through a strategy of confrontation sabotage and low level violence directed against international institutions 57 With continued Serb protests in northern Mitrovica EU staff withdrew from the area 58 On February 24 with the seventh consecutive day of Serb protesting in Mitrovica protests drew approximately 1000 people 59 Despite some Serbian media outlets claim to the contrary Serbs from North Kosovo have not been leaving the Kosovo Police Service 60 The United States ambassador to Serbia called on the country s leaders to do more to protect foreign diplomatic missions 61 On February 25 the protest in Mitrovica drew 2 000 people during which an EU flag was burnt 62 On the Kosovo Serbia border 19 Kosovo police officers were injured by Serb protesters before receiving additional help from NATO peacekeepers who dispersed the group 63 On February 26 protests continued in Mitrovica where students staged a mock football game in which one team represented Serbia and the other team states which have recognized Kosovo 64 Protests in Mitrovica drew thousands on March 6 as well as several hundred in Gracanica including suspended Serb policemen of KPS 65 66 On March 14 2008 after staging rallies for several weeks that prevented ethnic Albanian court employees from entering a UN courthouse in the northern part of Kosovska Mitrovica hundreds of Kosovo Serbs broke into the building in the Serb dominated part of the city forcing UN police to retreat 67 UN officials negotiations with the Serbs to end the occupation were unsuccessful and on March 17 UN police with the assistance of NATO led KFOR forces entered the courthouse in a pre dawn raid When they arrived they were pelted with stones by around 100 Serbs When they came out after arresting 53 of the protesters inside the courthouse they were attacked with gunfire grenades and rocks by several hundred protesters who had massed outside 68 About half of the protesters who had been arrested were freed by fellow protesters during the clashes with the rest being released by the UN after questioning 69 The clashes lasted until around noon One Ukrainian police officer was killed 70 Serbs and 61 UN and NATO peacekeepers were wounded and one UN vehicle and one NATO truck were set ablaze Among the wounded international troops were 27 Polish and 14 Ukrainian police officers and 20 French soldiers UN police withdrew from northern Mitrovica leaving the area under the control of the NATO forces 70 71 Gen John Craddock NATO s top commander said that after speaking with NATO commanders in Kosovo that NATO did not feel it necessary to send reinforcements to Kosovo 69 On 19 March UN police began to patrol parts of north Mitrovica again together with local Kosovo police while the NATO peacekeepers still remained in overall control of security at the courthouse and generally in the north of Kosovo A gradual transition to civilian control will happen over the next days 72 Bosnia and Herzegovina edit nbsp Protests after Kosovo s declaration of independence in Banja Luka Republika Srpska Bosnia and Herzegovina Protests were held in Republika Srpska the Serb inhabited entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina On the 26th about 10 000 protested in Banja Luka a small group of them later approached the U S embassy branch office damaging shopfronts and stoning police who blocked their path Eventually they were dispersed by tear gas 73 Montenegro editOn October 9 2008 Montenegro recognized Kosovo s independence This move by the Montenegrin government opposed by many in the country led to a protest rally in Podgorica on October 13 attended by over 20 000 people The rally held in front of the Parliament of Montenegro building was organized by the Serb List Socialist People s Party of Montenegro People s Party Democratic Serb Party of Montenegro and other opposition parties It was backed by Movement for Changes and the Metropolitanate of Montenegro and the Littoral of the Serbian Orthodox Church and Metropolitan Amfilohije Radovic was announced as speaker 74 Demonstrators demanded that the Montenegrin government and Prime Minister Milo Đukanovic rescind their recognition of Kosovo They waved Serbian flags chanting Kosovo is Serbia and other slogans against the prime minister and his cabinet calling them ustashas and shiptars At the end of the rally riots broke out and small groups attacked riot police in front of the parliament building The rioters were eventually driven back by police and 28 people were arrested and 34 were injured The pro Serbian opposition planned a second protest on 16 October but the Montenegrin police said that no protests from the opposition would be accepted 75 76 77 Diaspora edit nbsp nbsp Serbs protesting in Vienna left and London right in February 2008 Protests were also held in diaspora communities such as in London 23 February Vienna 24 February and by Serbian students in Brussels on 28 February 78 See also edit2008 unrest in Kosovo following the declarationReferences edit CNN report on February 21 protest in Serbia claims more than 2 000 000 people attending a b c Serbia Police and Authorities Allowed Attacks Archived February 28 2008 at the Wayback Machine Vecernji list February 23 2008 UN officer dies after Kosovo riot bbc co uk 2008 03 18 Retrieved 2020 11 18 a b c Serbs mourn youth who died in riots targeting US embassy International Herald Tribune February 27 2008 Turk zahteva opravicilo in odskodnino Kosovo declares independence International Herald Tribune Europe 2008 02 17 Retrieved 2008 02 17 Serbia calls for calm protests cuts diplomatic ties Roundup Europe 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 02 26 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Zbog stanja na Kosovu do daljnjeg otkazana Beovizija 2008 Archived from the original on February 22 2008 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Last night in Subotica a protest was held due in response to the declaration of independence by Kosovo Archived February 28 2008 at the Wayback Machine SEEbiz eu Retailing Todoric s Idea attacked in Uzice 2008 Retrieved 2008 02 22 B92 Vesti Neredi u gradovima Srbije Internet Radio i TV stanica najnovije vesti iz Srbije 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 02 26 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Serbia tries to claw back Kosovo SBS World News Australia 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 02 26 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Tullberg Julie 2008 02 22 Protesters want Kosovo decision reversed Breaking News National Breaking News The Age Melbourne Archived from the original on 2012 12 31 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Nis Several thousand students protest Archived February 26 2008 at the Wayback Machine B92 February 20 2008 Cetiri godine od proglasenja nezavisnosti Kosova Liberalno demokratska partija 2008 Archived from the original on 2013 04 16 Retrieved 2008 02 22 US starts evacuation from Serbia BBC 2008 02 23 Retrieved 2008 02 23 Demonstracije v Beogradu Protestniki vdrli v slovensko veleposlanistvo SiOL net Archived from the original on 2010 03 24 Retrieved 2010 11 19 Belgrade s US Embassy set on fire Associated Press 2008 02 21 Archived from the original on 2008 02 26 Serbs breaks into Slovenian embassy www youtube com Archived from the original on 2021 12 21 Furious U S warns Serbs over Belgrade embassy attack Star Tribune 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 02 28 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Vdrli v slovensko ambasado v Beogradu spopadi pred Mercatorjem ranjenih 50 ljudi U Beogradu napadnute hrvatska i americka ambasada Jutarnji hr 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 04 30 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Gnjevni Boysi zapalili srpsku zastavu Jutarnji hr 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 05 01 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Fresh violence in Kosovo Serb protests CNN com 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 02 25 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Kosovo declares independence from Serbia Russia protests warning it will stir conflict Charleston Daily Mail 2008 02 17 Archived from the original on 2008 02 26 Retrieved 2008 02 17 DNEVNIAVAZ BA Multimedija Huligani pale i ruse sve pred sobom 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 02 25 Retrieved 2008 02 22 a b German embassy stopped giving visas to Serbian citizens Archived February 27 2008 at the Wayback Machine Vecernji list Lekic Slobodan 2008 02 17 Serbian president rejects Kosovo independence declaration Adelaide Now Retrieved 2008 02 17 Ongoing violence threatens relations with Serbia EU News news 2008 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Predsednik Tadic nece govoriti na mitingu Blic Online 2008 Archived from the original on 2013 04 16 Retrieved 2008 02 22 a b Account of yesterday s chaos B92 February 22 2008 Worsnip Patrick 2008 02 21 U N council condemns Belgrade embassy attacks Reuters Retrieved 2008 02 21 Srbijanski rezervisti kamenjem gađali kosovsku policiju na prijelazu Merdare 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 02 28 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Javno World 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 02 26 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Belgrade Riots Photo Essays TIME Time 2008 02 21 Archived from the original on February 25 2008 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Office of Slovenian firm Sava Osiguranje set on fire Archived 2008 02 25 at the Wayback Machine February 22 2008 Purvis Andrew 2008 02 22 US Serb Tension Mounts Over Kosovo TIME Time Archived from the original on February 25 2008 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Sportal hr Cibona vracena iz Beograda Partizan garantira sigurnost 2008 Retrieved 2008 02 22 permanent dead link Otkazan koncert Hladnog piva u Beogradu Jutarnji hr 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 04 20 Retrieved 2008 02 22 US to evacuate staff from Serbia BBC News 2008 02 22 Retrieved 2008 02 22 B92 Vesti Ambasada Slovenije zatvorena Internet Radio i TV stanica najnovije vesti iz Srbije 2008 Retrieved 2008 02 23 TODAY S ZAMAN 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 02 26 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Serbia gives reminder of defiance under Milosevic Europe News Independent co uk The Independent London 2008 02 23 Archived from the original on 2022 05 01 Retrieved 2008 02 22 US starts evacuation from Serbia www bbc co uk BBC 2008 02 23 Retrieved 2008 02 24 Serbia on verge of isolation after riots Archived from the original on 2018 11 18 Retrieved 2008 02 23 Serbia probes police inaction during embassy attacks AFP Google 2008 02 26 Archived from the original on 2008 03 03 Retrieved 2008 02 27 Hamm Catharine M February 26 2008 U S heightens travel warning in Serbia Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2008 02 27 Serbia Protect civil society and minorities Government should unequivocally condemn and quell violence Srednjoskolci u protestu zbog Kosova Press Beta 2008 02 28 Archived from the original on 2012 03 15 Retrieved 2010 11 30 Serbia Charges 80 People Over Riots dead link Srpski prosvjednici unistili dvije kontrolne tocke UNMIK a na Kosovu 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 04 02 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Samardzic Demoliranje kontrolnih tocaka UNMIK a je legitimno i u skladu s politikom srbijanske vlade 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 03 17 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Wilkinson Tracy 2008 02 20 Sign Up Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 2008 10 13 Retrieved 2008 02 22 B92 News Politics North Kosovo UNMIK students in new disturbance 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 02 25 Retrieved 2008 02 22 The Associated Press Kosovo Serb Protesters Attack UN Police 2008 Archived from the original on February 25 2008 Retrieved 2008 02 22 Thorpe Nick 2008 02 23 Serbs enact plan to sabotage Kosovo BBC News Retrieved 2008 02 23 EU staff flee from Kosovo s split city Kosovo marks its first full week of independence better source needed Archived February 27 2008 at the Wayback Machine Serbs not leaving the KPS B92 February 24 2008 U S ambassador angered by Serb violence Protesters in North Kosovo Burn EU Flag Associated Press February 25 2008 Archived March 3 2008 at the Wayback Machine Protest at Kosovo border post injures 19 police officers Kosovo Serbs protest independence declaration with mock soccer game Xinhua 2008 02 27 Archived from the original on April 3 2008 Retrieved 2008 02 27 Protesti Srba u Gracanici Press 2008 03 05 Archived from the original on 2012 03 15 Retrieved 2010 10 30 Protesti na Kosovu i danas RADIO TELEVIZIJA VOJVODINE Kosovo Serbs seize UN courthouse BBC News 2008 03 14 Retrieved 2008 03 14 UN police forced out of Kosovo town after clashes Agence France Presse 2008 03 17 Archived from the original on 2008 03 22 Retrieved 2008 03 17 a b Radovanovic Radul 2008 03 17 Peacekeepers battle Serbs in Kosovo Yahoo News Associated Press Archived from the original on 2008 03 22 Retrieved 2008 03 18 Kosovo clashes force UN pullout BBC News 2008 03 17 Retrieved 2008 03 17 UN officer dies after Kosovo riot BBC News 2008 03 18 Retrieved 2008 03 18 UN police back in north Mitrovica BBC News 2008 03 19 Retrieved 2008 03 19 Bosnian Serbs Try to Storm US Consulate AP Google 2008 02 26 Retrieved 2008 02 27 dead link Incidenti na protestu u Podgorici VIDEO Mondo Archived from the original on 2008 10 16 Retrieved 2008 10 19 RTS Neredi u Podgorici MTS mondo Crna Gora Policija zabranjuje nove skupove MTS mondo Incidenti na protestu u Podgorici Serbs protest in Brussels External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kosovo is Serbia rally nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Kosovo is Serbia Kostunica s speech at the rally Belgrade Riots Photo Essays TIME com February 21 2008 In pictures Belgrade rally BBC News February 21 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2008 protests against Kosovo declaration of independence amp oldid 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