Vesna Malisic, editor-in-chief of Radar in Serbia, said that the weekly's journalists had received information that a group of people from Kosovo had participated in the Belgrade organization in Banjska.
She said that Vuçiq is trying to create the possibility of conflict before the March 15 protests, to impose a state of emergency or to have a justification for police intervention, she told N1.
"Their very arrival and what they symbolize is ominous. They are a death squad. They are responsible for the murder of four people on the Ibar highway, the murder of Vuk Drašković, the murder of Ivan Stambolic, Prime Minister Đinđić, not to mention all the other things they did in Bosnia. And now in the park, in the part that the police guard inside the protected area around the Presidency, effectively as a human wall for the President, such a unit with such a reputation appears and it is the scandal of scandals. This is a terribly bad message sent by those who allowed these people who present themselves as descendants of the JSO to appear among these children who supposedly want to learn," said the editor-in-chief of Radar, reports KosovaPress.
Malisic explains that none of what has happened in recent days, including the appearance of the JSO, is accidental.
"Neither the date, nor those children, nor the fence around the park, nor the heirs of the JSO are accidental... It's all part of the government's plan and the message it wants to send on the eve of the anniversary of Zoran Djindjic's assassination. Well, look what happened to his legacy, everything was torn apart, even his monument, which they threw into a basement under the pretext of rebuilding a part of the city and left us forever, while they were there, without that landmark. The President of Serbia at the beginning of his mandate wanted to adorn himself with the metaphors of Zoran Djindjic and in a way present himself as his successor. Today he is actually quite the opposite. "And that fenced-off area in Pioneer Park is a symbolic sign of a break with everything that Djindjic represented and represents - a modern, democratic state with strong institutions, oriented towards Europe and with a clear vision of what the state is and what it aims for," said N1's interlocutor.