The indictment of the Prosecutor’s Office for Organised Crime (TOK) against the Montenegrin policeman Ljubo Milović, Daniel Jovanović, who worked in the Criminal Police Administration, his wife Dusica Jovanović, who worked in the Security and Information Agency (BIA), as well as the other defendants, could shed a whole new light on the murder of the leader of the Serbs from the north of Kosovo, Oliver Ivanovic, and shed a definitive light on the immediate perpetrator of the liquidation. His name is mentioned in the intercepted conversations of the Sky app.
The Serbian Prosecutor’s Office for Organised Crime had earlier filed an indictment against Milović, spouses Jovanović and other defendants on suspicion of being part of a criminal organisation that smuggled cocaine from Ecuador to Europe.
The organizer of the criminal group was Milović, and the indictment describes in detail how drugs were transported to European cities via trans-oceanic ships.
The accused spouses from the BIA and the MUP were close to Milović, and their role was a kind of logistical support, but also custody of the drug smuggling money. The couple were in charge of the safekeeping of Milović’s money, which they packed in vacuum bags and then transported to Montenegro.
However, perhaps the most important thing they did was to release information from the BIA’s confidential databases.
“Jovanović had been collecting highly confidential information on investigations and available operational knowledge on the members of this organised criminal group and the activities of other criminal groups in the BIA databases. She then passed this information on to her husband, Daniel Jovanović, and he to Ljubo Milović. “The fact that the defendant Dušica Jovanović carried out the aforementioned tasks is evident from the evidence gathered and from the content of the communications that her husband had with Milović via the Sky phone,” Nova.rs learns.
According to Nova.rs, key evidence against the organised crime group was obtained through the Sky app, where the first defendant Milović was listed as “Officer”.
In the case files against this group, it is particularly significant that they mention a communication related to the murder of the political leader of the Serbs from the north of Kosovo, Oliver Ivanovic, on 16 January 2018. This is particularly significant given that to date it has not been established who the principals and direct executors of the liquidation are.
The messages, the content of which was seen by Nova.rs and date back to 2020, mention the murder of Ivanović. Thus, on 23 January 2020, the accused police officer Jovanović sent Milović information provided by his wife.
“Brother, the BIA has seriously started to work Skaljars. They have become a priority. Some Matkovic brothers from Novi Sad, supplied with goods by certain Jaka Zaletel from Slovenia. Almost all the Skaljars fled to Slovenia,” Jovanović wrote to Milović.
He then added: “The only information that has come to the Kavac clan is that one of the clan members was involved in the murder of Oliver Ivanovic.” And the story goes that Dedovic (the murdered skaljar Igor Dedovic) wanted to take over the leadership of the clan himself and built a team around him within the clan.”
“This is what the BIA currently has at its disposal,” it is stated in the messages.
The intercepted Sky messages make it clear that the BIA has certain information about Ivanovic’s murder in January 2018, and this is not the first time the Security Information Agency has been mentioned in the context of a politician’s assassination.
Interestingly, prior to the murder, Ivanović himself had reported to the BIA about who was threatening him, but the crime was not prevented, nor was an escort reportedly assigned to him.
Although the proceedings for the murder of Oliver Ivanović are still pending before the Pristina court, there is still little information about the crime itself and the perpetrators.
Ivanovic was killed by six shots in the back, outside his party’s offices in North Mitrovica. Marko Rošić, Nedeljko Spasojević, Silvana Arsović and Rade Basara are accused of participation in an organised crime group, while Dragiša Marković and Žarko Jovanović are accused of abuse of official position.
On the other side, controversial Kosovo businessmen Zvonko Veselinovic and Milan Radojicic were indicted as leaders of the criminal group responsible for the murder of Ivanovic. However, no charges have been brought against them because they are unavailable to law enforcement authorities or have never been questioned.
Call for lynching
Just a few months before Oliver Ivanović was murdered in 2018, first on TV Most and then on Pink, a paid propaganda video was broadcast describing Ivanović as “a man who cries not for the murdered people, but for his car”. “.
The video was the culmination of a media lynch mob that was released because Ivanovic had decided to run for mayor of Mitrovica, and this video was labelled as drawing a target on Ivanovic’s forehead.
The information is being examined
As Insajder wrote a few days ago, the Prosecutor’s Office for Organised Crime is examining information related to the murder of Oliver Ivanović and the link to the Kavac clan. It is not yet known how far it has gone, nor whether anyone has been questioned in the meantime./Nova S/