Protesters pelted the headquarters of the UN Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) with eggs, forcing UN Deputy Civil Administrator Larry Rossin and Raskovic-Ivic to hold a meeting in another UNMIK building outside Pristina. They discussed the situation in the UN-administered province.
The protest ended without a police intervention. Protest leader Albin Kurti, who had spent many years in Serbian prisons, said that the state represented by Raskovic-Ivic had killed nearly 12,000 unarmed people during the war in the late 1990s, that at least 120,000 houses had been burnt, thousands of women raped and that about 3,000 people were listed as missing.
Sanda Raskovic-Ivic is the daughter of the late Jovan Raskovic, one of the leaders of the Serb armed insurgence in Croatia in the early 1990s. She was recently appointed head of the Coordinating Committee for Kosovo to replace Nebojsa Covic. The Albanians are unhappy with her appointment because, according to political circles in Pristina, she is not well-acquainted with Kosovo's problems and is therefore not competent for the post.
The "Self-determination" movement is opposed to talks with the Serbian government.