
Kosovo authorities have stopped a truck with Serbian dinars at the border. The news was announced by the Deputy Prime Minister of Kosovo, Besnik Bislimi. Through an article, he said that the CBK regulation correctly predicts who can send money to Kosovo, as he accused Serbia of inciting tensions.
Bislimi, through a post on Facebook, said that the persons transporting Serbian dinars were presented with the credentials of a non-existent company and that they were sending them "to an also non-existent entity in Kosovo".
" In response to this, today the equivalent Bank of Serbia (one day before the convened meeting of the Security Council), has sent a truckload of money (full of 117,000,000 dinars) to the border, escorting individuals who present themselves with credentials of a non-existent company, with the claim that they want to send the money to an also non-existent entity in Kosovo and for the benefit of the beneficiaries, whose names they neither know nor have. Imagine a parallel where in front of the customs inspector, a truckload of consumer goods appears, by individuals who present themselves in the name of non-existent companies, and claim that they are sending the goods to a company, which also does not appear anywhere in the official records of the state ", Bislimi wrote.
Since February 1, a regulation of the Central Bank of Kosovo has entered into force in Kosovo, which stipulates that the euro will be the only currency for payments in Kosovo, prohibiting the use of the Serbian dinar.
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