Miroslav Ivanović, the brother of the murdered leader of the Civic Initiative "Freedom, Democracy, Justice", said that the Srpska lista party was behind the television spot against his brother, which was broadcast in the days before the assassination.
Miroslav Ivanovic added that behind the negative video that was broadcast, among other things, on TV Pink, before the elections in Kosovo and Metohija in 2017, "it's not about the name and surname, but about the interest group".
"I would like someone to come out publicly and announce who made that video. I know, but I want them to tell me"... Srpska lista. They did it. I can't, I won't be so categorical, but I will tell you one thing detail, so let them correct me if I'm wrong," Ivanovic said.
He stated that in the first days after the appearance of that video, "Srpska lista was written in the right corner, in white letters, at an angle of 45 degrees".
"It later disappeared on social networks, for understandable reasons," Ivanovic said, adding that "it was clear to him that it was drawing a target for Oliver."
Much more energy should have been invested
Ivanovic said that the professional services and authorities in charge of investigating that assassination should have invested "much more strength and energy" in gathering evidence, as well as that they were "under the influence of the power centers that manage their work."
He said that every prosecutor would request the collection of the necessary evidence as early as tomorrow, and that this may be the reason why the name of the prosecutor dealing with the case is marked with the level of secrecy.
"(Prosecutor's Office) due to the fact that the public is interested in the case had to order the collection of evidence, which (at the beginning of the investigation) was easy to collect... People who should be professionals had to do it, and it was obvious doesn't happen," said Miroslav Ivanovic.
He added that in northern Kosovska Mitrovica there are cameras that record pedestrians, that the murder happened in the center of two streets, there were many witnesses and many cameras in the area, and that it is still unknown who the perpetrators are.
"You have waves when you have some information (about the murder), and there are periods when literally nothing is mentioned. Time works in favor of those who committed (the murder)," Miroslav Ivanović concluded.
Radonjić: The investigation was not conducted properly from the first moment
Journalist Milan Radonjić assessed that the investigation into the murder of Oliver Ivanovic "was not conducted properly from the first moment", and that the usual measures prescribed in such situations, such as closing the entrances and exits to the city or searching cars, were absent.
"Months passed before the indictment was filed. I would leave the question of why the autopsy report cannot be seen, what are the basic parameters of the investigation, that is a scandal in itself," said Radonjić.
Radonjić recalled that he interviewed Oliver Ivanović two months before the murder, that he stated in the conversation that "his opponent is not the Government of Serbia, but the criminal structure", and that he asked him not to quote the sentence in which he mentioned the name of a businessman from the north Kosova by Milan Radoičić.
Radoičić came into the public spotlight later, when the Pristina authorities issued a warrant for him because of, as Kosovo Prime Minister Ramuš Haradinaj said at the time, "connection with the Ivanovic case."
"We live in a society where there are people whose names are forbidden to say, and we are going back to the time when it was also forbidden to say the name of Željko Ražnatović (Arkan). Now we have the same situation, that a person who has no political pedigree enters that field and leads a party." , Radonjic said.
He also stated that the newsroom where he worked at the time may have made a mistake by not investigating "who that man is" more deeply.
Crime and Corruption Investigation Network (KRIK) journalist Bojana Pavlović said that the Ivanović case is still in the pre-investigation phase, as well as a large number of other processes, and that this phase of the investigation has no legal limit.
"The only official information we have from the investigation is that Milan Radojičić was questioned in Serbia regarding that case," said Pavlović, and added that this information was presented by the President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vučić, who then stated that he "certainly did not participate in the liquidation Oliver Ivanovic".
Pavlović also states that KRIK journalists obtained the documentation of the Security and Information Agency, in which it is stated that in 2011 Radoičić was linked to criminal acts such as drug trafficking, and that in the meantime these accusations "disappeared from the case ".
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