EU to become guarantor of Kosovo agreements Serbia

It has been two years since Kosovo and Serbia have signed four agreements. According to jetai Krasniqi from KDI, although there is agreement on the Association of Serb majority municipalities, the telephonic code, energy and the Peace Park has no application. She has said it would be best for the European Union to [...]
According to jetai Krasniqi from KDI, although there is agreement on the Association of Serb majority municipalities, the telephonic code, energy and the Peace Park has no application.
She has said it would be best for the European Union to be guarantor of the agreements that would be reached by representatives of Kosovo and Serbia in Brussels.
“So if it were better for all”, Krasniqi said.
“In such a scenario, a constructive ambition and dual truths would have to be avoided, as parties have been taught to hear continually from Brussels meetings. Moreover, it would have to be thought clearly of how to achieve implementation, identifying the impasses of the agreements, why not identify the punitive measures for them as violators of the normal spirit of normalisation”, it wrote on Facebook.
This is her full post:
The “U has been two years since Kosovo and Serbia reached four agreements, which were signed by the highest state leaders on both sides.
The Association of Serb-majority municipalities, the Agreement on Texting and Energy Code, “the Peace Park” in Mitrovica ) are the agreements reached between prime ministers Isa Mustafa and Aleksandar Vucic.
Two years after the deal package in principle, there is no materialisation or implementation of deals, in whole or in part.
The principles of Association have been rejected by the Constitutional Court, Telekom and Energy have remained unfinished in practice, as Ibër's main bridge saga continues further despite promises and pledges of local or central acts.
Two years later we clearly see that the problem is not only implementation but a lack of the fundamental will to move further towards normalising relations between the two states.
So this lack of political will in the rude form translates into failing to comply with the number of agreement reached in Brussels.
These dialogue circumstances necessarily require a <x0 sub-rabbiter”, which the European Union has not done so far.
Seeing this not very short period of dialogue, it is difficult to expect a radical change until the EU becomes guarantor of agreements that would reach representatives of the parties in Brussels.












