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Serbian police arrested person suspected of threatening N1 reporter Zana Cimili (TV N1)

As N1 unofficially learned the Serbian police on the order of prosecutor have arrested on Saturday night a person who threatened Zana Cimili, TV N1 Kosovo correspondent.

The person was apprehended under suspicion of committing a crime defined as 'spreading of religious and national hatred and endangering the safety.'

Serbian PM Brnabic: ''Haradinaj told me that the Pristina's ban on Serbia’s official is fake news'' (Beta, N1)

Serbian prime Minister Ana Brnabic said in Poznań on Friday that her Kosovo counterpart Ramush Haradinaj told her the news on Pristina’s ban on Belgrade's officials’ visits to Kosovo was fake news, the Beta news agency reported.

Brnabic, who attends the Western Balkans Summit in Poland, as a part of the Berlin Process, said she was surprised that the advisors to “the so-called Foreign Minister spread fake news,” adding “she was glad (the news was fake since that reduces tensions in the region).”

Serbian PM Ana Brnabic condemns threats against journalist Zana Cimili (TV N1, BETA)

Serbian Prime Minister Ana Brnabic condemned the threats TV N1 Kosovo correspondent Zana Cimili received on social networks in Serbian, saying they were heinous and impermissible, TV N1 reported.

Cimili received severe menace on social networks against her and her family’s physical integrity, BETA news agency reported late on Thursday.

Media: The man mentioned by Vucic trained in the CIA headquarters (Vecernje Novosti, Tanjug, B92)

"I cannot speculate whether Florim Ejupi was involved in Oliver Ivanovic's murder, but I can say that he was selected and trained in some of CIA headquarters," Novosti daily said it got this information from a Swedish judge Christer Karphammar, who was in charge of the investigation on the bomb attack on the Nis Express bus near Podujevo, back in 2001. He added that this was known at times when Ejupi was arrested in 2001.

Serbian Government members react to Pristina’s entry ban (RTS, Tanjug)

Serbian Deputy Prime Minister Zorana Mihajlovic, Defence Minister Aleksandar Vulin and European Integration Minister Jadranka Joksimovic said Pristina’s decision to ban entry in Kosovo to all Serbian officials represents anti-European stance and shows unreadiness of Pristina for the dialogue, RTS reports.

Belgrade will react to Pristina’s travel ban, PM Brnabic says (RTS, N1)

Official Belgrade will react to Pristina’s travel ban on Serbian officials, Prime Minister Ana Brnabic said on Thursday.

Pristina’s behaviour affects regional cooperation, security and ties, she said and added that the Kosovo authorities have stepped up what she said are provocations including the ban on all Serbian officials traveling to Kosovo.

“That is something that we will react to,” Brnabic said.

Drecun: Pristina did not opt for peaceful resolution of problems (RTS)

Ban on Serbian officials to enter Kosovo is yet another in a series of unilateral acts by which Pristina wishes to escalate the crisis created by imposing 100 percent tariffs on Serbian goods, Chairman of the Serbian Assembly Committee for Kosovo and Metohija Milovan Drecun told RTS. He added such acts would unfortunately continue.

Kocijancic: Agreement on official visits must be respected (Vecernje Novosti)

On the occasion of the new Pristina ban to Serbia's officials to enter Kosovo, thus violating the agreements reached so far, Brussels responded to the Belgrade based daily Vecernje Novosti.

- We expect all agreements reached within the framework of the EU-mediated dialogue to be respected and implemented, including an agreement on official visits - spokesman for the High Representative Mogherini, Maja Kocijancic responded to the Vecernje Novosti question to comment on the latest prohibition of the Pristina authorities.

Pristina's decision is a terrible slap to the international community, says the Office for KiM Director (RTS)

Serbian state broadcaster RTS reports that Director of the Office for Kosovo and Metohija Marko Djuric told reporters during a visit to the Belgrade City Museum that Pristina's decision is the last wedge in the coffin of the idea of dialogue, a terrible slap to the international community, a blow to the foundation of freedom of movement and all European principles.

Unprecedented move of Pristina and a slap to the EU, says Serbian FM Dacic (Serbian media)

Pristina's decision to ban entry to Serbian officials to Kosovo is unprecedented, said Serbian Deputy Prime Minister and Serbian Foreign Minister Ivica Dacic.

He told Belgrade based daily Vecernje Novosti that the decision is another slap, not to Belgrade, but above all the European Union and the international community, which shamelessly is silent to the violation of all civilization norms that have been practiced for years by Ramush Haradinaj and Hashim Thaci.