By Fatos Bytyci
Kosovo Serbs have agreed to start removing road barricades symbolic of rising tensions, following calls by the European Union to defuse tensions underlined by the West's rift with Russia.
The Serbians have been blocking roads in northern Kosovo for 19 days following a controversial arrest and violent protests, some border crossings have been closed and Serbia put its army on its highest alert on Monday.
Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic met with the Serbs from northern Kosovo said the process of removing barricades would begin on Thursday morning.
"It is a long process and it will take a while," Vucic said.
He also added that the European Union and US, which are mediating talks between Belgrade and Pristina to resolve outstanding bilateral issues, had guaranteed that none of the Serbs who set up barricades would be prosecuted.
Removal of the barricades is expected to defuse tensions between Belgrade and Pristina.
For more than 20 years, Kosovo had been a source of tension between the West (which backed its independence) and Russia, which supported Serbia in its efforts to block Kosovo's membership of global organisations, including the United Nations.
The European Union, US and NATO urged maximum restraint in the north of Kosovo, as authorities closed a third border crossing on Wednesday and tensions escalated with local Serbs over its 2008 independence.
NATO's mission in Kosovo, KFOR, said it supported dialogue between all parties to defuse tensions, including violent clashes with police and the roadblocks placed on major arteries used by trucks and other heavy-duty vehicles.
The Kremlin denied the Kosovo interior minister's claims that Russia was influencing Serbia to destabilise Kosovo, and said Serbia was defending the rights of ethnic Serbs.
A former Kosovo Serb policeman, whose arrest triggered violent protests by Kosovo's Serb minority, was released from custody and put under house arrest after a request from the prosecutors' office, a spokesperson for the Pristina Basic Court told Reuters.
On 9 December, Kosovo police said a police patrol was attacked by a group of armed people with long weapons in the area's volatile north, injuring an officer.
Dejan Pantic was arrested on 10 December for assaulting a serving police officer. Since then, Serbs in northern Kosovo had exchanged fire with police and erected more than 10 roadblocks, demanding his release.
The court decision's decision to move Pantic to house arrest angered Kosovo government officials, including Prime Minister Albin Kurti and Justice Minister Albulena Haxhiu.
"I don't know how to understand it and how it is possible that someone who is accused of such a serious crime related to terrorism goes to house arrest," Haxhiu said.
"I am very curious to see who is the prosecutor who makes this request, who is the judge of preliminary procedure that approves it," Kurti said.
Pantic was one of many Serbs who left the police and other institutions after Pristina said it would enforce a law requiring Serbs to scrap Serbian-issued car licence plates dating back to before the 1998-99 guerrilla uprising that led to Kosovo's independence.
Serbs in northern Kosovo, which they believe to be still part of Serbia, resist any moves they see as anti-Serb.
Two border crossings between Serbia and Kosovo were closed on 10 December and a third one, the biggest one for road freight, Merdare, was closed to traffic on Wednesday, disrupting journeys of Kosovars working elsewhere in Europe from returning home for the holidays.
Around 50,000 Serbs living in northern Kosovo refuse to recognise the government in Pristina or the status of Kosovo as a separate country. They have the support of many Serbs in Serbia and its government.
Albanian-majority Kosovo declared independence with the backing of the West, following a 1998-99 war in which NATO intervened to protect ethnic Albanian citizens.
-Reuters