News

President Vucic slams arrest of Igor Popovic, assistant director of Serbia’s Office for Kosovo and Metohija, calls it ...
Serbia views Kosovo as a breakaway state and does not recognize its independence. Kosovo’s Serbs view themselves as part of Serbia, and see Belgrade as their capital, rather than Pristina.
Serbian President Vučić has long lauded tennis player Novak Djokovic and award-winning director Emir Kusturica as national heroes. Now, their support of protests in their home country is costing them ...
Serbia and Kosovo are heavily reliant upon EU financial assistance and overall trade with EU nations. The EU represents the number one trading partner and is the biggest donor to Serbia, ...
Kosovo's independence has been recognized by about 100 countries, including the United States. Russia, China and five EU countries, most of them with separatist regions of their own, have sided ...
Serbia insists on protecting its ethnic Serbs, who make up around 5 percent of Kosovo’s population of 1.8 million people and are concentrated mainly in the country’s north.
Serbia does not recognize Kosovo's declaration of independence from 2008. A former Serbian province, Kosovo broke away after a 1998-99 war which ended in a NATO intervention.
Tensions between Serbia and Kosovo flared anew over the weekend when some 30 heavily armed Serbs barricaded themselves in an Orthodox monastery in northern Kosovo, setting off a daylong gunbattle ...
Serbia has called the split-off a violation of United Nations Resolution 1244, which dates to the end of the Kosovo war. Mr. Vucic and other Serbian leaders claim Kosovo as being the “heart ...
US calls Kosovo's PM to reverse course Serbia puts army on alert Five Kosovo police, around 10 protesters injured Kosovo accuses Serbia of staging the incident ZVECAN, Kosovo, May 26 (Reuters ...
Serbia and Kosovo reached a verbal agreement on the normalization of relations during ongoing talks in the E.U. facilitated Belgrade-Pristina Dialogue. Serbian President Aleksander Vucic met with ...
Serbia and Kosovo have already OK'd air, rail and transit agreements, including one that would clear the way for the first flight between Pristina and Belgrade in 21 years.