According to the research, "Albanians", or better say Shiptars are the dumbest “Europeans” (82 IQ). However, the following text proves that "the dumbest in Europe" are doing again, and again the same trick they have been doing in Kosovo i Metohija for more than 50 years. This time the target is Southern Serbia. Now, the question is, who is a dumb f..k? (remark by LG)
The residents of southern Serbia are worried about history repeating itself amid reports that Kosovo Albanians* are buying up large amounts of property in towns and villages there, Sputnik Serbia reported.
The residents of southern Serbia are worried about history repeating itself amid reports that Kosovo Albanians* are buying up large amounts of property in towns and villages there, Sputnik Serbia reported.
Ethnic Albanians from Kosovo are taking advantage of the impoverishment of Serbs in the south of the country, buying swathes of agricultural land and accommodation from them in what some Serbs fear is a repeat of the "Kosovo scenario", Sputnik Serbia reported on Tuesday.
A string of towns in southern Serbia have seen an influx of Kosovan Albanians, who since 2010 have bought large amounts of land, houses and apartments in southern Serbia, close to the country's administrative border with Kosovo.
The Serbian towns most affected by the influx include Nis, Leskovac, Vranje, Kursumlija, Prokuplje and Novi Pazar. By offering inflated prices for property, Kosovo Albanians are able to increase their presence in Serbia's southern towns, some of the country's poorest.
In the town of Leskovac, a house with land can be bought for as little as 5,000 euros ($5,585). Sellers are easy to find among the local population, who are keen to migrate to areas with better job prospects.
In Kursumlija ten villages have been deserted by the local population, and many of the former locals replaced by Albanian migrants from Kosovo; in late 2014 Albanians reportedly bought about 50 properties in the area.
In Nis, Serbia's third largest city, around 1,500 Kosovo Albanians have bought apartments in the last three years. Around 11,000 Kosovo Albanians are believed to have bought property in Nis and its surrounding areas as a whole over the last five years, local sources told Sputnik Serbia.
However, the shady nature of the property deals makes official figures hard to come by since one of the most popular ways to seal the transaction is for hard-up Serbs, many of whom are refugees from Kosovo, to help the newcomers to buy property via a fake loan agreement which obscures the real owner.
In this way, Serbs buy property in their name, using money from Kosovo Albanians; the parties also sign a loan agreement in which the latter lends money, with the property as collateral. When the loan isn't paid back, the Albanians take control of the property, while the cash-strapped Serb gets a financial reward for their part in the deal.
The situation came to a head in Nis last year, when disgruntled Serbs distributed flyers calling for action to "stop the Albanization of Serbia," complained about the number of Kosovo Albanian immigrants and asked Serbs to "wake up."
The leaflet also referred to a criminal case from 2010, when four police officers from Nis were arrested for abetting Kosovo Albanians in obtaining property in the city using fake documents.
Local journalists told Sputnik Serbia that they fear a concerted attempt to spread the administrative border of Kosovo into these southern Serbian regions, amid what they term a "silent occupation" of southern Serbia.
Source (except the first photo): Sputnik International|SputnikNews| Orig. dated 26. 05. 2013.
*Sputnik International is using term "Kosovan Albanians", which is slightly corrected in the text above to "Kosovo Albanians". Actually, both terms means Shiptars from Kosovo and Metohija, rebellion national minority in Serb's territories temporary occupied by NATO forces.
Related article:
KOSOVO MIGHT BECOME FIRST 'STATE UNDER NATO CONTROL' IN HISTORY
The US has been actively lobbying the idea of Kosovo* joining NATO's Partnership for Peace program. Kosovo's president Hashim Thaci, who after a visit to the United States last year said that Washington approved the idea of establishing a Kosovo army operating under NATO, might now be happy about the new developments.
The United States apparently needed an independent Kosovo for one simple reason — to build there its "cozy military nest". This can be seen in the recent developments, in particular, the US' decision to work out conditions for Kosovo's accession to NATO's Partnership for Peace program.
Analysts believe that this move is none other than an attempt by the US to spread its political influence in countries of the Western Balkans.
A string of towns in southern Serbia have seen an influx of Kosovan Albanians, who since 2010 have bought large amounts of land, houses and apartments in southern Serbia, close to the country's administrative border with Kosovo.
The Serbian towns most affected by the influx include Nis, Leskovac, Vranje, Kursumlija, Prokuplje and Novi Pazar. By offering inflated prices for property, Kosovo Albanians are able to increase their presence in Serbia's southern towns, some of the country's poorest.
In the town of Leskovac, a house with land can be bought for as little as 5,000 euros ($5,585). Sellers are easy to find among the local population, who are keen to migrate to areas with better job prospects.
In Kursumlija ten villages have been deserted by the local population, and many of the former locals replaced by Albanian migrants from Kosovo; in late 2014 Albanians reportedly bought about 50 properties in the area.
In Nis, Serbia's third largest city, around 1,500 Kosovo Albanians have bought apartments in the last three years. Around 11,000 Kosovo Albanians are believed to have bought property in Nis and its surrounding areas as a whole over the last five years, local sources told Sputnik Serbia.
However, the shady nature of the property deals makes official figures hard to come by since one of the most popular ways to seal the transaction is for hard-up Serbs, many of whom are refugees from Kosovo, to help the newcomers to buy property via a fake loan agreement which obscures the real owner.
In this way, Serbs buy property in their name, using money from Kosovo Albanians; the parties also sign a loan agreement in which the latter lends money, with the property as collateral. When the loan isn't paid back, the Albanians take control of the property, while the cash-strapped Serb gets a financial reward for their part in the deal.
The situation came to a head in Nis last year, when disgruntled Serbs distributed flyers calling for action to "stop the Albanization of Serbia," complained about the number of Kosovo Albanian immigrants and asked Serbs to "wake up."
The leaflet also referred to a criminal case from 2010, when four police officers from Nis were arrested for abetting Kosovo Albanians in obtaining property in the city using fake documents.
Local journalists told Sputnik Serbia that they fear a concerted attempt to spread the administrative border of Kosovo into these southern Serbian regions, amid what they term a "silent occupation" of southern Serbia.
Source (except the first photo): Sputnik International|SputnikNews| Orig. dated 26. 05. 2013.
*Sputnik International is using term "Kosovan Albanians", which is slightly corrected in the text above to "Kosovo Albanians". Actually, both terms means Shiptars from Kosovo and Metohija, rebellion national minority in Serb's territories temporary occupied by NATO forces.
Related article:
KOSOVO MIGHT BECOME FIRST 'STATE UNDER NATO CONTROL' IN HISTORY
The US has been actively lobbying the idea of Kosovo* joining NATO's Partnership for Peace program. Kosovo's president Hashim Thaci, who after a visit to the United States last year said that Washington approved the idea of establishing a Kosovo army operating under NATO, might now be happy about the new developments.
The United States apparently needed an independent Kosovo for one simple reason — to build there its "cozy military nest". This can be seen in the recent developments, in particular, the US' decision to work out conditions for Kosovo's accession to NATO's Partnership for Peace program.
Analysts believe that this move is none other than an attempt by the US to spread its political influence in countries of the Western Balkans.
Washington "is readying a plan for Kosovo's NATO membership" and "the self-proclaimed state of Kosovo intends to, in the coming period, launch the process of joining NATO," the website b92.net wrote.
Can Kosovo become a NATO member at all? Theoretically it can, if Kosovo is able to bypass the UN Security Council Resolution 1244 which defines it as a part of Serbia, as well as if the Serbs in the Kosovo Parliament vote in favor of the creation of an army in Kosovo.
According to UN Security Council resolution 1244, only NATO military forces, namely KFOR mission, can be deployed in the territory of Kosovo. The resolution is unlikely to be canceled as Moscow and Beijing will veto such a decision in the UN Security Council. So how could Kosovo bypass the resolution and create its own army despite mandatory UN regulations?
For this case, Washington and Pristina seem to have a plan "B". They can just "rename" the security forces acting in Kosovo within the KFOR into the Kosovo Armed Forces.
In the same way, the "rebranding" helped to transform the Kosovo Protection Corps into the Kosovo Security Force (KSF), the local response force developed in line with NATO standards and set to be deployed during crisis response operations.
Although the KSF has not received permission to use heavy weapons, it can still participate in international peacekeeping operations.
Some experts argue that in a similar way the US might help Kosovo create its own army which would operate under NATO supervision. If this happens, Kosovo might become another precedent, namely the world's first "state under NATO control".
Source: Sputnik International|SputnikNews| Orig. dated 23. 05. 2016.
*"Kosovo" in this text is an euphemism for NATO occupied Serb's territories Kosovo and Metohija. On these territories the occupier has formed a puppet state bringing to power armed national Shiptar minority rebels.
Some experts argue that in a similar way the US might help Kosovo create its own army which would operate under NATO supervision. If this happens, Kosovo might become another precedent, namely the world's first "state under NATO control".
Source: Sputnik International|SputnikNews| Orig. dated 23. 05. 2016.
*"Kosovo" in this text is an euphemism for NATO occupied Serb's territories Kosovo and Metohija. On these territories the occupier has formed a puppet state bringing to power armed national Shiptar minority rebels.
No comments:
Post a Comment