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Many stations have also interviewed ordinary Serbs who fled Kosovo, vowing to return.
Serbian politicians and ministers are to lead a mass return to Kosovo, some reports said.
The head of the Serbian Civil Defence Headquarters, Deputy Premier Milovan Bojic, said in a national broadcast Saturday: "The Serbian government and Civil Defence Headquarters have the great responsibility to remain with their people and they are today returning to Kosovo-Metohija together with their people."
"We are going back because the UN forces have promised and guaranteed security to us, not just a formal but a real one. Kosovo-Metohija is ours and will stay ours only if we return.
"Our institutions are working in Kosovo-Metohija and cooperation has been established with K-For troops and the UN civil structure."
"We will be with you now, possibly the hardest hour, and in the future too, because we have succeeded, through a great engagement of all of us, to secure conditions for your safe return and a secure life in Kosovo-Metohija," Bojic said.
Praise for K-For
Belgrade Radio interviewed Zoran Vujovic, a senior member of the ruling Socialist Party of Serbia, currently visiting Kosovo.
He urged Kosovo Serbs to stay put in the province and to co-operate with K-For troops "because they are here to guarantee the personal safety of citizens and their property. They are already doing it."
"Yesterday, they started to disarm on a major scale the so-called terrorist Kosovo Liberation Army, that is, the terrorists. This is being done in many places. Life is normal.
"The Serbian government is doing everything to ensure that public services, companies and institutions work normally, that is our priority task at the moment," he said.
Tanjug agency on Saturday applauded British K-for troops for disarming members of the KLA inside Pristina:
"Today, members of the British contingent of the UN peace forces, K-For, in Pristina continued disarming the terrorists. Unlike yesterday, when weapons were confiscated from the members of the so-called OVK [KLA] who were carrying arms around the streets of the suburban districts, today, the British troops entered buildings and apartments in which they had seen armed terrorists.
"The operation will be continued tomorrow and in the following days. K-For confiscated close to 200 weapons in Pristina alone," Tanjug said.
Reports of 'ethnic cleansing'
Bosnian Serb TV from Pale however accused the Kosovo Albanians of conducting ethnic cleansing in parts of the province. It also reported the attempts by Serbian Orthodox clergymen in Pec, Gnjilane and Gracanica to support beleaguered Serbs trying to hang on in their areas.
"In spite of daily appeals and efforts by the clergy of the Serbian Orthodox Church to convince the Serbs to stay in Kosovo and Metohija, parts of the province have been ethnically cleansed," the TV said.
"The situation is the most dramatic in Metohija, where almost all Serbs have fled in the face of assaults by the terrorist, so-called Kosovo Liberation Army and unruly masses of Siptar [Albanian] refugees."
"His Holiness Serbian Patriarch Pavle is sharing the fate of the remaining Serbs in Kosmet. He is staying in the Pec Patriarchate. Patriarch Pavle on several occasions called on the Serbs not to leave their ancestral homes. Today, Prizren-Raska Bishop Artemija today appealed to the Serbs in Gnjilane to stay. The situation in the town continues to be tense as Siptar hordes are moving around the town, shouting militant and nationalist slogans," Pale TV said.
Reservists protest
Several hundred Yugoslav Army reservists returning from Kosovo blocked the Kragujevac-Belgrade road in Serbia on Saturday to protest at unpaid daily allowances, the Serbian news agency Beta reported on Saturday.
The troops lifted their roadblock, at the village of Petrovac, only after an agreement was reached with Kragujevac Corps officers that the allowances would be paid out by next Friday.
BBC Monitoring (http://www.monitor.bbc.co.uk), based in Caversham in southern England, selects and translates information from radio, television, press, news agencies and the Internet from 150 countries in more than 70 languages.
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