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Interior Minister Aleksandar Vulin declared today that the President of Serbia was heard and that the services are working on the investigation of that case.
“Vučić did not say that because of political marketing, but because it is true. The president told the truth, and it is up to us to confirm that truth,” Vulin told TV Prva, adding that the relevant services informed the president about it.
The minister says he cannot speak about the details of the investigation, but that “the president was certainly not listened to with good intentions.”
Vulin affirmed that the definition of the mafia implies that “an organized criminal group is always in connection with someone from the circles of power, with someone who makes decisions, who can arrest or release him” and “that it is simply like that”, they are one of The priorities.
“President Vučić announced the fight against the mafia and it is being fought,” said Vulin.
He evaluated that “the police are efficient but that does not mean anything” because we are a “statistically safe country, but the citizens feel insecure.”
That, he says, will change by shedding light on crime.
He says there were five mob murders last year and all have been solved.
He stated that a fight is being waged against the Kavački and Škaljarski clans and that there are several more murders from the previous period that need to be clarified.
Speaking about Bakir Izetbegović’s remarks that Serbia owes Bosnia and Herzegovina, Vulin said they should first say “who tried to kill Vučić in Srebrenica” and “where the host disappeared at that time”.
Vulin advocated for the preservation of the Dayton Agreement.
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