Religion

 


Kosovo: Bosnian Muslim leader's visit sparks protests


 

Belgrade, 5 August (AKI) – Bosnian Muslims' spiritual leader Reiss-ul-Ulema
Mustafa Ceric, on Wednesday began a three-day visit to Kosovo, angering
local Serb leaders who described his visit as a “provocation”. It is Ceric's
first visit to Kosovo since it declared independence last year - a move
backed by most Bosnian Muslims.

Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik said Ceric’s visit to Kosovo was
“inappropriate”, because Bosnia has not officially recognised Kosovo.

Dodik accused Ceric of being “an important ideologue of Islamic policy, who
interferes not only in internal matters of Bosnia-Herzegovina, but the
entire region”.

Ceric’s visit was officially billed as a visit to the “Islamic community of
the Republic of Kosovo”. 

Belgrade doesn’t recognise Kosovo independence and has not given up its
diplomatic battle to retain Kosovo within Serbia's borders.

Kosovo ethnic Albanians are overwhelmingly Muslim. Besides a tiny Serb
minority, there is also a small Muslim community of Slavic origin who call
themselves Bosniacs.

Ceric drew sharp criticism during his recent visit to the southwestern
Serbian region of Sandzak, where Muslims form the largest group. 

“Nothing could separate Muslims in Serbia from those in Bosnia," he said.

Ceric was scheduled to meet Kosovo Muslim religious leaders, president
Fatmir Sejdiu and other officials during his visit. 

He will also visit a memorial to Adem Jasari, a leader of the Kosovo
Albanian rebellion against Serbian rule, whose entire family was killed by
Serbian forces in 1998. 

 

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registration number 156. Director: Giuseppe Marra

 

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