The issue of demarcation can bring the country back to the elections

Monday, January 15th, will bring back to the Parliament discussions the most controversial issue in the past three years -- the one for demarcation with Montenegro. The Commission for Foreign Affairs at the first meeting for the new session will decide to proceed with the agreement in Headship and if it will [...]
The Foreign Affairs Commission at the first meeting for the new session will decide on the prosecution of the agreement in Headship and whether it will do so with or without recommendation from the commission, KTV reports.
But, despite that, the party's positions have not changed.
Prime Minister's Party Aims to Break That Agreement in the Assembly, Until The PDK intends to pass it.
The last to have made that call is Minister for Entrance Hoxha, who has called on MPs to vote on the agreement and not keep Kosovars isolated.
The same call was made by analyst Artan Murati. He has called on MPs to give the epilogue to the issue.
While Valmir Ismaili of Democracy Plus envisions several scenarios for Monday's gathering.
Ismaili says the very issue of demarcation could undermine the ruling coalition and the country go to the polls.
It was the demarcation that had ruined the PDK-LDK coalition.
The LDK had failed to secure even the votes of its deputies at the time.
And one of the deputies strongly opposed in the past mandate of this version of the agreement -- Speed Bulqi -- currently heads the state commission for demarcation and accuses the former Mesha commission of counterfeiting maps.









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