Security powers have encircled something like 30 equipped shooters hours after a cop was shot dead in Kosovo, the nation's head of the state says.
Albin Kurti said the gathering was in a religious community in the northern town of Banjska and encouraged them to give up.
Mr Kurti has blamed Serbia for support what he called a "psychological militant assault" that likewise harmed another official.
Pressures have run intense in Kosovo, after savage conflicts followed a contested neighborhood political race in May.
EU-interceded political discussions intended to settle what is happening have slowed down.
Kosovo pronounced autonomy in 2008 yet Serbia - alongside Belgrade's key partners China and Russia - doesn't remember it.
Numerous Serbs think of it as the origination of their country. Be that as it may, of the 1.8 million individuals living in Kosovo, 92% are ethnic Albanians and just 6% are ethnic Serbs.
Sunday's shooting occurred at around 03:00 (01:00 GMT), after police said they showed up in Banjska, close to the boundary with Serbia, where a barricade had been accounted for.
Officials were gone after from a few distinct situations with "a weapons store of guns, including hand projectiles and shoulder-discharged rockets", they said in a proclamation.
For what reason is brutality erupting in Kosovo?
"We can see equipped individuals in uniforms...they are terminating on us and we are terminating back," Kosovo police official Veton Elshan told AFP news organization by telephone from Banjska.
The Serbia Conventional Church affirmed that shooters had raged a cloister in the town, situated in Leposavic, where travelers from the northern Serbian city of Novi Miserable were remaining.
The top state leader held a public interview on Sunday hours in the wake of denouncing coordinated wrongdoing with political, monetary and strategic help from Belgrade of "going after our country".
Mr Kurti added that the culprits and the people who gave their orders would be rebuffed.
Kosovo's Leader Vjosa Osmani said the occurrence, "arranged by Serbian groups of thugs", was an assault on rule of peace and law and "against the sway of the Republic of Kosovo".
She censured the "open animosity of Serbia towards Kosovo" and approached the nation's partners to help Kosovo in laying out rule of peace and law.
Ms Osmani encouraged individuals to stay joined together and communicated her trust in Kosovo's police.
Serbia has not remarked on the occurrence.
Turmoil overwhelmed northern Kosovo in May after Kosovo Albanian city hall leaders were introduced in larger part Serb regions, after Serb occupants boycotted neighborhood surveys.
Nato sent 700 extra soldiers to Kosovo to manage turmoil in the northern town Zvecan following the races.
About 30 Nato peacekeepers and in excess of 50 Serb dissidents were harmed in the following conflicts.
The most recent EU-interceded talks imploded last week, with the coalition's international strategy boss Josep Borrell faulting Mr Kurti for neglecting to set up the relationship of Serb-larger part districts which would give them more independence.
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