Belgium Explains Why Kosovo visa liberalisation Not in Order

No vote on visa liberalisation for Kosovo citizens is in order. Thus has Belgium's Foreign Affairs Minister Didier Riders said, responding to Belgian MP Gwenalle Grovonulius' interest in when visa liberalisation vote for Kosovars can occur, Koha.net broadcasts. Reggie's response has been [...]
Thus has Belgium's Foreign Affairs Minister Didier Riders said, responding to Belgian MP Gwenalle Grovonulius' interest in when visa liberalisation vote for Kosovars can occur, Koha.net broadcasts.
Reggie's response has already been that all citizens of Kosovo know but are not willing to accept some of her officials who are still dreaming that visa liberalisation will happen this year.
So Reynolds, with his answer, has cut off his dilemmas or hopes for this:
No Council-level vote is currently in order, since no qualified majority of countries has yet to fully clarify the issue. The odds of this vote happening before 2019 are very small”, he said.
Reynders has also talked about Belgium's position regarding visa liberalisation for our country's citizens.
“Belgjika has already supported visa liberalisation for Kosovo politically, since on the one hand, the word is for the last Balkan state without a right free movement, and liberalisation is an important goal for this country and its people, but not forgetting that this objective is also part of the overall framework of European politics in the Balkans. This, provided the set criteria with the” guide are met, has ended it responding to Revers, Time.net broadcasts.
In its question, MP Grovonius has commemorated that Kosovo has approved the Demarketing Agreement with Montenegro as one of the main EU conditions for visa liberalisation.












