It is not at all easy to create the impression that you are Kosovo's greatest hero while slowly letting Kosovo and Metohija down the drain. This time, the 72 hours that he gave himself were not enough for Aleksandar Vučić to turn from thunderous silence about the abolition of the remaining institutions of the Serbian state in Kosovo and Metohija to address the people about Kurti's latest terrorizing of Serbian life, as the official vocabulary reads.
He sounded far less combative and convincing than before on similar occasions, even by the standards of his fans, as if some red lines had been drawn by CIA chief William Burns when he was recently in Belgrade.
It was disclosed by the President of Serbia a series of measures which his Government will undertake on this occasion, where it is necessary to separate some kind of special court panel and prosecutor's office that will persecute all those who persecute and harass the Serbs living in Kosovo, and whose subject of special interest, apparently, will be the so-called Serbs loyal to Kurti, that is, those who oppose the Serbian list, i.e. to him.
It is also worth pointing out some social protection measures, such as, for example, that over 5000 Serbs employed in the newly abolished Serbian state administration in the North will continue to receive salaries, which, admittedly, they will have to collect in some kind of "offices" that will be formed outside the borders of Kosovo. and Metohija.
Vučić also said that by the end of November he will meet with sixty presidents of states and governments to complain to them about all the injustice in Kosovo and the suffering of the Serbs who were left at the mercy of Kurti by the hypocritical and lying West.
But the essence is the following: since Pristina Prime Minister Aljbin Kurti abolished the Serbian dinar in Kosovo, for Serbs residing in Kosovo Serbian license plates, Serbian driver's licenses, Serbian ID cards, all Serbian institutions except, for now, education and health, the President of Serbia Aleksandar Vučić defiantly told him that he could only dream about independence.
Before that, according to his directive, Serbian police officers left the Kosovo police, Serbian judges left the Kosovo judicial system, Serbian mayors resigned in four municipalities with a Serbian majority in the North, so there was no one to oppose in any way the measures taken by Kurti. with the goal of rounding off the independence of Kosovo, but it all came down to rather quiet protests by representatives of the authorities in Belgrade.
The Serbian president's "demand" sounds almost cynical now that Serbian police officers return to the Kosovo police, and Serbian judges to their jobs, and that local elections be held so that Serbian mayors can once again sit in the municipal buildings where the symbols are now of Serbian statehood decorated with the Kosovo flag.
Vučić announced that he would "demand" that Kurti withdraw his unilateral moves, that the Union of Serbian Municipalities be formed and that all points of the famous Brussels Agreement be fulfilled, but he did not say what the executive power in Belgrade would do if he did not do so.
And then he moved on to the long waiting lists in hospitals in Serbia without Kosovo, which he, of course, will abolish, presumably following the example of Dr. Dragan Milić from Nis, although he did not say so, the cardiac surgeon whose electoral victory in the local elections on June 2 in Niš, the Serbian Progressive Party stole.