On 22 January 2001, a group of armed Albanians attacked a police station in northern Macedonia near the border with Kosovo, killing a police officer and injuring three others, thereby starting the
insurgency in the Republic of Macedonia. The insurgent
NLA was organized from former KLA fighters from Kosovo and Macedonia, UCPMB fighters, young Albanian radicals and nationalists from Macedonia, and foreign mercenaries. In February 2001, enraged Albanian mobs routed French troops and torched KFOR armoured vehicles after an Albanian child had been killed in northern Mitrovica, believing it was a provocation by the Serbs. The victim was a 15-year-old boy who was killed in a grenade attack, which amidst Serb refusal to allow the return of Albanians in North Mitrovica sparked several days of riots. On 16 February 2001 a Serb convoy escorted by KFOR was
attacked in a remote-controlled bomb explosion near
Podujevo, leaving 12 dead and 40 wounded. A bomb attack in April 2001 targeting Serbs in Pristina left one dead and four injured (KLA volunteer
Roland Bartetzko was later found guilty). On 8 April 2002, local Serbs attacked and injured 26 UNMIK police setting up a checkpoint in North Mitrovica. The UNMIK established its administration in northern Mitrovica on 25 November 2002. Although crime rates decreased in 2003, violence and crimes against minorities were concerning. On 12 April 2003 a bomb exploded on a railway bridge in Northern Kosovo, killing two, including the planter, a KPC officer; an Albanian extremist organization took responsibility. On 17 April the Special Representative defined the group as terrorist. On 19 May a Kosovo Serb politician from
Klokot was murdered and two elderly Serbs assaulted. On 4 June three Kosovo Serbs were murdered in
Obilić. In August 2003, explosive devices planted in the
Serb enclave of
Klokot destroyed five Serb houses, with several injuries, including two American KFOR soldiers. On 13 August two Serb youths were killed and four wounded
in a shooting in
Goraždevac. On 18 August a Serb male died from wounds sustained from a shooting on 11 August, and another was seriously wounded in a shooting in a returnee site near
Klina. On 31 August, four Serbs were injured and one killed in an explosion attack in Cernica near
Gnjilane. The violent incidents further heightened the feeling of insecurity in the Serb minority, while UNMIK police took security measures in minority areas. Crime against UNMIK increased, with a police officer killed in the north by sniper on 3 August, while a KPS officer was murdered near Djakovica on 6 September, and another KPS officer was shot at in Pristina on 10 September. The violence level increased steadily since late 2003. On 17 March 2004,
a violent unrest broke out in Kosovo. == References ==