Determined opposition prevents the realisation of exchange of territories

Adding diplomatic visits to Pristina in recent weeks have not clarified the near future of Kosovo-Serbia dialogue. But what remains clear based on numerous Western sources, the staunch opposition to exchange of territories and unable to reach such an agreement in the Brussels dialogue, writes Koha Ditore today. [...]
But what remains clear based on numerous Western sources, the staunch opposition to exchange of territories and unable to reach such an agreement in the Brussels dialogue, writes Koha Ditore today.
The German Government's unchanged position at the helm with Chancellor Angela Merkel continues to be identified as the biggest obstacle to reaching the Kosovo border change agreement.
Even the actors of negotiations have said so publicly at a conference held in Minsk, Belarus, in late October, Kosovo President Hashim Thaci, and Serbia's chief minister, Ana Brnabiq, have complained that “negative attitude” The official Berlin is obstructing the Kosovo-Serbia agreement.
Besides Berlin, several other European centres are not in favour of touching the borders, including Great Britain, which, although at a complicated moment because of the EU exit process, still cannot be ignored as one of the weightiest states in the Western world, which remains a key part of NATO, as well as a member of the UN Security Council.












