A powerful explosion damaged a water canal and temporarily cut water and power supply to Kosovo’s cities, the prime minister said on November 30, Report informs via Euronews.
Prime Minister Albin Kurti said the explosion on November 29 in Vrage, 60 kilometers north of the capital Pristina, disrupted water supply to some cities and main power plants. It followed two other explosions in previous days on police station buildings and local authorities in the same area in the north of the country, mostly populated by the ethnic Serb minority.
Kurti blamed “official Belgrade and its criminal structures led by Milan Radoicic, supported by Serb institutions and Serbia’s President Aleksandar Vucic.”
Radoicic, a politician and wealthy businessman with ties to Serbia’s ruling populist party and Vucic, was among 45 people charged in Kosovo in connection with a gunfight last year in which a Kosovar police officer was killed following an incursion by heavily armed Serb gunmen.
Only three Serbs have been arrested and the others are at large, including Radoicic, who Pristina says is protected by Belgrade.
Serbia's Foreign Minister Marko Djuric condemned Friday's explosion but also criticized Kurti’s “ethnonationalist regime” rushing “to point fingers at Belgrade without evidence.”
“We believe that such premature accusations are a deliberate diversion,” said Djuric. “These baseless allegations undermine efforts for constructive dialogue and serve only to escalate tensions in an already delicate situation.”
The European Union and the United States strongly denounced the explosion and demanded that the perpetrators are brought to justice.
“These violent actions have no place in a democratic society, and those responsible for these criminal attacks against the legitimate authorities of the Republic of Kosovo should be held accountable,” the US Embassy in Pristina said.