Wrote: Etrit Rexhepi
The body of the suspect in the murder of a police officer in Serbia, Faton Hajrizi, is alleged to have been returned to Kosovo.
The claim was found on the cover of a video published (June 28) on the "Ntv.al" television page on Facebook.
Has Faton Hajrizi's body been returned?
Hibrid.info has found that this news is not confirmed either in the above video material or by official institutions in the country.
Link to the video material published on the "Ntv Televizione" Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=905363404735379

Hibrid.info has checked and found that none of the stories shown in this video material, which is more than 11 minutes long, informs about the claim that appears before clicking.
Given that lawyer Arianit Koci had received the family's authorization to retrieve the deceased's body, hibrid.info researched his Facebook account to confirm the claim.
Based on recent publications by lawyer Koci, it is understood that Faton Hajrizi's dead body is still in Serbia (see here).
There is also no official information from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Diaspora regarding the issue (see here).
Analyze:
The claim that Faton Hajrizi's dead body has been returned to Kosovo is incorrect.
Hibrid.info has found that the body of the deceased continues to remain in Serbia.
Based on its work methodology, hibrid.info assesses this content as "Disinformation" and "Clickbait".
Reasoning:
"Disinformation" is defined as information content that contains a "mix" of inaccurate sources or even half-truthful attributes, and that is created and/or distributed with the deliberate intention of causing harm. The motive behind the producers/distributors of disinformation content lies in achieving a political, financial, psychological or social goal.
“Clickbait” is considered to be informational content whose title is general and does not disclose the location of the event, context and relevance. Such texts and articles aim to attract the attention of the audience with sensational headlines with misleading consequences, which do not accurately clarify the content of the article. “Clickbait” headlines are mainly made to attract readability in the case of media publications and/or to earn from clicks in the case of commercial publications.