Threatening letter sent to Vučić: "We have three billion bullets for you Chetniks"

A photo of Adolf Hitler, Ante Pavelić and Herman Göring arrived with the letter, Večernje novosti reported
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Aleksandar Vučić, Photo: Beta-AP
Aleksandar Vučić, Photo: Beta-AP
Disclaimer: The translations are mostly done through AI translator and might not be 100% accurate.
Ažurirano: 16.12.2017. 09:27h

Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić received a threatening letter sent from Hanover, Germany, today's Belgrade press reported. As the general secretariat of the president told Blic, the letter addressed to Vučić arrived yesterday, and the signature reads "Pavelić's booksellers, Ustaše guerrillas." According to the paper, the letter is written in poor Croatian language, has no diacritical marks (ticks) and is full of letter and spelling mistakes, and it is estimated that it was printed on a printer. "To Aleksandr Vučić, the Ustasha organizations of the diaspora say: Ready for home. A new Storm and Flash is being prepared. Our Ustasha chief and leader was and remains Ante, and you know his last name Pavelić Ante. A fighter for Catholicism against Orthodoxy. Pavelić's crusaders, Ustasha guerillas to all they say to the Chetniks: we have three billion bullets for you Chetniks," the letter stated. A photo of Adolf Hitler, Ante Pavelić and Herman Göring arrived with the letter, Večernje novosti reported. The author of the letter said that he would kill a third of all Serbs, a third would be deported to camps, and the last third would be "forced" to convert to Catholicism.

Vulin: Such threats are registered every day

Defense Minister Aleksandar Vulin said today that the security services register threats against Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić every day. "Every day our security services register such threats to the president. It is no longer hidden. You have leaders of political life in Serbia who consider it completely normal," Vulin told TV Pink regarding the threatening letter sent to the president of Serbia yesterday. Vulin said that it was interesting that Vučić was out of the country when the threatening letter was sent to him. "Every time he is out of the country, when he goes somewhere, it happens that some tourists miss the May 25 Museum and come to the stadium. These things are rarely accidental," said Vulin. He added that threats to Vučić are daily and that a culture of hatred has been established in Serbia, which is "allowed when you hate Vučić, his family and people who are close to him", but that citizens can be calm. "We will protect our way of life, the constitutional order and the safety of every citizen," said Vulin.

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