Kosovo blames Belgrade for canal explosion
The “terrorist attack” was carried out by “gangs directed by Serbia,” the breakaway region’s prime minister has claimed
Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti has accused the Serbian authorities of being behind a blast on a canal that provides water to the breakaway region’s two main coal-fired power plants.
Kurti spoke about the attack on the Ibar-Lepenac waterway near the town of Zubin Potok during a televised address on Friday evening. Parts of the region could be left without power if the damage caused by the explosion is not fixed soon, he warned.
"This is a criminal and terrorist attack aimed at damaging our critical infrastructure,” the prime minister said.
The bombing “was carried out by professionals. We believe it comes from gangs directed by Serbia,” he claimed without providing any evidence.
In a post on X, Kurti promised that the authorities in Pristina “will hold those responsible accountable.”
There were no reports of fatalities or injuries as a result of the blast, which also affected water supplies in the breakaway region.
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The government in Belgrade has not yet commented on the incident.
The Serb List, a party representing the interests of the Serb minority in the mainly Albanian-populated Kosovo, told the media that the attack on the canal was “absolutely against the interests of the Serbian people.”
The party demanded an “urgent investigation” into the blast by the NATO-led international peacekeeping force (KFOR) and the EU’s civilian mission to the breakaway region (EULEX).
US ambassador to Kosovo Jeff Hovenier wrote on X that Washington has offered “full support to the government of Kosovo to ensure that those responsible for this criminal attack are identified and held accountable.”
The EU’s envoy to the region, Aivo Orav, also condemned the attack and called for the incident to be investigated.
The explosion on the Ibar-Lepenac Canal is the third attack in Kosovo this week. On Tuesday, unidentified perpetrators threw two grenades into the courtyard of a police station in the town of Zvecan in the north of the region. There was material damage, but no injuries as a result of the incident.
The next day, a municipality building in Zvecan was also targeted with a grenade. The building and four cars parked outside suffered minor damage in the attack, the police said.
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The US and many of its allies recognized Kosovo as a sovereign state in 2008 after the province declared independence. Belgrade still considers the region part of Serbia, as do Russia and China, among other countries.