The Basic Court in Prishtina has officially revoked the one-month pre-trial detention orders for seven prominent directors of Serbian-run educational and healthcare institutions operating inside Kosovo.
The directors, who are accused by the Special Prosecution of illegally influencing the free will of voters leading up to Kosovo’s early parliamentary elections held on June 7, 2026, will now be allowed to defend themselves at liberty. The structural shift in judicial custody was confirmed to Radio Free Europe (RFE/REL) by defense attorney Jovana Filipović.
1. The Judicial U-Turn and the Election Context
The defendants were originally placed into rigorous pre-trial detention on May 21, after prosecutors successfully argued that letting them remain free posed a genuine flight risk and an immediate danger to the integrity of the democratic electoral process.
The Election Interference Allegation Cycle
[ Serb List Party (Belgrade Backed) ] ──► Systemic structural coercion via parallel networks
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[ Target Vulnerability Zone ] ──► Local Serbs supporting Nenad Rashiq's GI SPO (SL Rivals)
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[ Leverage Weaponized ] ──► Mass firings from healthcare & educational jobs
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[ Judicial Counter-Strike ] ──► Prosecution raids and immediate arrests of directors
The political escalation exploded into a criminal investigation following formal complaints filed by Nenad Rashiq, leader of the rival anti-recherche Gis (Freedom, Justice, and Survival – GI SPO) party. Rashiq accused Srpska Lista (Serb List)—the dominant, Belgrade-backed political entity—of leveraging their absolute control over parallel Serbian state jobs to systematically blackmail and fire voters who planned to support non-regime candidates.
2. Roster of the Released Parallel Directors
The investigation spans a wide-reaching institutional blackmail apparatus embedded primarily within the Gračanica and Lipjan municipal perimeters:
| Defendant Name | Parallel Institutional Title / Role | Specific Geographic/Operational Hub |
| Ljubiša Karadžić | Director, “Miladin Mitić” Primary School | Llapna Sella (Laplje Selo) |
| Boban Petrović | Director, High School of Electrical Engineering | Sušica |
| Milica Dimić | Director, “Braća Aksić” Primary School | Lipjan |
| Nebojša Rashiq | Director, High School of Mechanical Engineering | Preoc |
| Bratislav Lazić | Director, Clinical-Hospital Center (KBC) | Gračanica |
| Mirjana Dimitrijević | Director, Primary Health Care Center (Dom Zdravlja) | Gračanica |
| Saša Mladenović | Director, Primary Health Care Center (Dom Zdravlja) | Lower Gušterica |
Radio Free Europe corroborated Rashiq’s allegations by publishing testimonies from multiple local Serbs who had been abruptly terminated after decades of service. The victims confirmed they were fired solely because they refused to campaign for Serb List, choosing to support Rashiq’s alternative political platform instead.
3. Geopolitical Backlash and International Monitoring
The mass arrests have triggered sharp, polarized responses across the region’s political spectrum:
Bilateral and International Geopolitical Stances
[ Kosovo State Authorities ] ──► Commended the prosecution for protecting democratic voter integrity.
[ Serbian State Officials ] ──► Condemned the sweeps as "purely politically motivated persecution."
[ Srpska Lista Leadership ] ──► Rejected all charges, classifying the case as tactical intimidation.
[ European Union (EULEX) ] ──► Actively monitoring the ground; demanding strict compliance with international fair trial laws.
The European Union has formally stepped in via its Rule of Law Mission (EULEX). In an official brief to media channels, Brussels confirmed that EULEX tracking teams are monitoring the active court files on the ground to guarantee a transparent, uncompromised, and fair judicial sequence that complies fully with both Kosovo statutory law and international human rights standards.
