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Photo: Nebojsa Mandic, Starsport, ATA images
A hoop around the president of the Serbian Football Association Celebrate Kokeze It’s getting tighter and tighter, so he’s in unprecedented panic, Kurir finds out. Our sources reveal that Kokeza has been crying for days because she did not expect her customs smuggling scheme to be fully discovered.
He doesn’t know what happened to him
– Now he seems like a man who doesn’t know what happened to him. He spends literally every day locked in the house and cries all day. As he confided to his friend, he did not even assume that the investigation would reach him and his people at this speed. So distraught that he even mentioned fleeing the country. He asked how he could organize it, aware that it was a matter of time before everything came to light – says our source.
By the way, in the intense investigation into theft of epic proportions at Serbian customs, all those suspected of being part of the smuggling scheme are falling one after another. After the former director of the Customs Administration, Miloš Tomić, his partner Nemanja Manjak was brought to the hearing yesterday.
The ball is obviously unrolling and should lead to the unraveling of one of the biggest thefts, which is suspected to be a combination of corrupt officials, state officials and the Veljko Belivuk criminal clan.
Who rules?
Former Belgrade Police Chief Marko Nicovic told Kurir that Kokeza There are reasons for concern that the investigation could lead to the cocaine and heroin mafia.
– If customs are so hollow for you, the question arises as to why everyone went through it unhindered. Cigarettes and other goods are a small cat compared to what is the main business, which is drug smuggling. What we do know is that the amateurs are the army and the logistics for drug distribution, and who is in charge of the army? You’ve got the first man of the FSS and his men who are the top of that pyramid. Kokeza must also have had logistics in the police – warns Nicovic.
Let us remind you, the investigation learned that the Customs management was behind the embezzlement in relation to certain state officials and the Veljko Belivuk – Velja Nevolje clan, who was recently arrested.
“Invisible” goods entered
They made 640 million euros in cigarettes
It is suspected that Kokeza and Belivuk had a practically parallel customs through which a large quantity of goods entered Serbia, completely out of official control. These assets are supposed to be worth millions of euros. From the smuggled cigarettes alone, it is estimated that the group made a profit of around 640 million euros. With the “blessing” of the then director of the Customs Administration, Miloš Tomić, as well as the then head of the Belgrade customs office, Željko Popović, trucks and lorries of goods entered Serbia that nobody knew what it was.
Kurir.rs
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