One year after Kosovo Police sergeant Afrim Bunjaku was killed when Serb gunmen led by Kosovo Serb kingpin Milan Radoicic attacked police in the village of Banjska, the authorities renamed a road leading to the village after him.
Prime Minister Albin Kurti, members of the cabinet, parliament speaker Glauk Konjufca and police director Gazmed Hoxha visited the site where Bunjaku was killed and unveiled the new road sign commemorating the slain policeman.
Kurti said the September 24, 2023 attack in Banjska âwas a plan to attack Kosovo, it was an aggression against state sovereignty, territorial integrity, peace, security, constitutionality and legalityâ, which he said could be proved by the arsenal of weapons seized by police after the attack.
âPrecisely for this reason, since we never forget this, today in this place we unveiled the sign which marks the new name of this road, ie. âAfrim Bunjakuâ,â he added.
On September 11, Kosovoâs Special Prosecution charged Radoicic and 42 other individuals with terrorism and endangering the constitutional order of the country. Radoicic, together with his business partner, Radule Stevic, and his company, RAD D.O.O., are also charged with money-laundering.
According to the indictment, which has been see by BIRN, Radoicic had been financing the criminal activities of a âstructured terrorist groupâ since 2017.
This included the purchase of heavy weapons and military uniforms, all with the aim of âseparatingâ Kosovoâs four northern Serb-majority municipalities from the rest of the country âto join them with the Republic of Serbiaâ.
The indictment claims that Radoicic rallied local Serbs against any step taken by Kosovoâs authorities and deemed undesirable by Belgrade, mounting roadblocks and barricades.
Kurti said on Tuesday that Kosovo is seeking help from the US and EU to secure his arrest âbecause Milan Radoicic and other criminals must be handed over to the Kosovo Police, the Kosovo authorities, and face justiceâ.
Radoicic, who is now in Serbia, has made no public comment about the indictment so far. He is also being investigated by Belgrade prosecutors for organising an armed group, the unauthorised amassing of a large cache of weapons, which he transported to Kosovo, and âserious crimes against general securityâ.
In October last year, a Belgrade court refused to detain Radoicic but ordered him not to leave the country and confiscated his passport.
Kurti insisted that âSerbia is responsibleâ for the Banjska attack. Radoicic, who is now in Serbia, has admitted leading the assault but has insisted he did so without informing authorities in Belgrade.
Kosovoâs prosecution alleges that initial preparations for the Banjska attack began in October 2021, at a meeting between Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic and Kosovo Serb representatives. Vucic has said the Serbian state had nothing to do with Radoicicâs actions.
After the commemorations of Bunjakuâs death, the US ambassador to Kosovo, Jeff Hovenier, wrote on X that âthe United States reiterates its call, and it is our expectation, that the perpetrators and all those who were involved in that horrific crime are held fully accountableâ.
EU spokesperson Peter Stano wrote on X that the EU âreiterates the call for swift prosecution of those responsibleâ.
Stano said the attack was a âreminder of the need for continued efforts to maintain securityâ and to progress with the normalisation of relations between Ksoovo and Serbiaâ.
EU High Representative Josep Borrell retweeted his statement from last year in which he condemned âthe hideous attack by an armed gang against Kosovo Police officers in Banjska/BanjskĂ« in the north of Kosovo, which left one police officer dead and two injuredâ, adding that âthe responsible perpetrators must face justiceâ.