Accused drug lord Mileta Ojdanic In mid-2020, he criticized associates from the clan he belongs to, due to the war that began after 200 kilograms of cocaine disappeared from an apartment in Valencia in late 2014.
This is shown by his correspondence with the once protected Sky application, most likely conducted with Miroslav Starčević called Mića.
The two, during breaks in negotiations about the smuggling of hundreds of kilograms of cocaine and the organization of this illegal business, during 2019 and a year later, also talk about transferring millions of dollars in tokens, the distribution of profits, and their roles in the international smuggling chain - from South America to the final destination...
"On this token, the next one, if possible, is a million dollars, and I'll give you more tokens, I don't have any now, this is the next one... On those first 1,815. And the one I gave you now, after these, it's worth a million," Ojdanić sent on January 12, 2020.
About ten days later, the two of them are discussing which of the drug gangs from Antwerp is better for their job, and in that context they mention "NWA or Black".
"Brother, in the case of Antwerp, who would you choose if you were in my place? In fact, everyone is available and at my disposal, I haven't entered into a conversation with anyone, only in the case of Antwerp, who would you choose," Ojdanić writes.
He agrees with Starčević that NWA is better...
"We think the same, but I like to exchange opinions with you, because when we add and subtract everything, and we know a lot about everyone, this way and that, NWA is better for me, the machine. And Bati is better at some things than Black, in my opinion," writes Ojdanić...
From the messages they exchanged over the next few months, it emerged that they had included NWA in the "deal", as they were also negotiating how much money and where their associate would give for his share of the cocaine.
Already in early March of that year, Ojdanić asked his interlocutor if NWA could hand over its share of the money to them somewhere in Europe, explaining that it would be more convenient for him to do so - to pay a certain Jovo and Ljubo Milović, whom he addressed as the Officer.
The second person mentioned, a certain Jovo, used the nickname Maradona on Sky.
At the end of May 2020, Ojdanić informed Starčević that he had "done that job" and that everything had gone as planned:
"...But I couldn't fit in the way NWA asked to pay on the water. I couldn't put it on your back and mine. Now the situation is different and it's easier to breathe, everything went as it should"...
Among the thousands of messages they exchanged with several Sky accounts are those from June 22, 2020, when they discussed, among other things, the problems caused by the closure of borders due to the coronavirus pandemic, as well as the war, which was then already in its sixth year...
"I forgot that day, did you see the NWA digli... They think they are protected in Dubai. Fools, my brother, there is no mafia and no racketeering. It's not enough for them to do this, they want to do more mafia. Oh my God, it can't be done, it won't work. As an old friend of mine, a smart man, says, I paid three times 190 pieces so I wouldn't go to war," Ojdanić writes.
He then replies to Starčević that many among them are mistaken, but that the end is known.
"People can't see beyond their noses. It's like we won't live next year and it's like we won't be good enough and need peace and some sustenance and security," he sends to Starčević.
"Vijesti" does not have information about the associate of Ojdanić and Starčević, whom they call NWA, but publicly available data shows that Nordin El Hajioui, a drug lord from Belgium, was arrested in Dubai four days before their correspondence.
Serbian police have identified Starčević as the leader of “the largest criminal drug trafficking organization in the Balkans,” which was uncovered with the help of Europol.
Radio Free Europe previously reported that Europol was linking Starčević to the cocaine seized in Aruba. Starčević was arrested in May 2023 along with 12 other people.
They are charged in Serbia with international drug trafficking.
Serbian police believe that the cartel, led by Starčević, is "behind multi-ton shipments of cocaine that arrived in Europe from Colombia, Brazil, Ecuador, but also via West Africa."
Starčević's group is linked to the Kavač criminal clan in reports by the Global Initiative to Combat Transnational Crime.
One of the cells of the Kavača organized crime group is the police drug cartel, headed by Ojdanić.
The war entered its second decade.
The once-unified Kotor criminal clan split into two cells - Kavačka and Škaljara - at the end of 2014. That's when a bloody conflict began between former friends, multiple godfathers, relatives, closest associates... in which more than 70 people have lost their lives to date, including several innocent victims.
According to one version, the cause of the conflict was the disappearance of 200 kilograms of cocaine from an apartment in Valencia. Allegedly, the cocaine, for which the clan already had a sale, disappeared from the apartment of the now deceased Goran Radoman from Cetinje.
The previously unified organized crime group split into those who remained with Radoman, and the team gathered around Radoje Zvicer, who blamed the Cetinje resident for the disappearance of valuable cargo from the warehouse.
The first conflict took place in Valencia, and early the following year Radoman was killed in Belgrade.
From that moment on, the first victims of the cocaine war, the Kavčani under the leadership of Zvicer, Milan Vujotić and Slobodan Kašćelan and the Skaljarci led by Igor Dedović and the brothers Jovan and Igor Vukotić, began to hunt each other across Europe, but also South America...
The Škaljari clan was beheaded with the liquidations of Dedović, Jovan Vukotić and their closest associate Alan Kožar...
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