After the indictment for the attack in Ibër Lepenc, Fetoshi: The EU must urgently review its approach towards Serbia, hold it accountable

The director of the "Octopus" institute, Arben Fetoshi, has called on the European Union to urgently rethink its approach towards Kosovo and Serbia, especially after the publication of the indictment by the Special Prosecution Office regarding the terrorist attack on the "Ibër Lepenc" channel.
In a statement to Telegrafi, Fetoshi emphasized that the FBI's involvement in the investigation process has eliminated any doubt about the authorship of the attack and its connection to Serbian security structures.

"First, the FBI's involvement in the investigation eliminates any room for doubt regarding the results and the indictment, thus shutting Serbia's mouth and removing dilemmas from international institutions regarding their authorship and connection with Serbian security structures. Second, the results of the FBI's expertise confirm not only the organized terrorist attack on critical infrastructure, but also Serbia's direct responsibility for the VBA spy, Colonel Jovan Vicentijevic, and the arsenal of weapons, ammunition, and Serbian and Russian uniforms seized during their raid," Fetoshi said.
Fetoshi said that international factors should not remain silent, because as he said, "such a thing would give space to Serbia's deceptive tendencies as it tried to do in this case, and would be read as encouragement for such attacks in the future."
The director of the Octopus Institute emphasized that the European Union must urgently review its mistaken approach towards Kosovo and Serbia, holding Serbia accountable for such attacks that undermine regional security and stability.
"One thing is certain: maintaining punitive measures against Kosovo is a reward for the hybrid tactics of Belgrade and Moscow," Fetoshi said.
Otherwise, security analyst Avni Islami, in a statement for Telegrafi, described the case of the Ibër Lepenci channel as one of the most serious events after the Banjska aggression.

"It's been a year and a few days since the indictment was finally filed against the three suspects in the terrorist case where the Ibër-Lepenc canal was hit. This act is considered the most serious after Banjska. At the time of the investigation, the FBI's involvement was also warned by the American Embassy."
Islami emphasizes that the indictment shows the direct involvement of one of the defendants, who appears as a member of the Serbian military intelligence service. /Telegraph/




















































