Behgjet Pacolli's secret agreement with Serbian List

The demarcation in the Assembly, with the Serbian List votes, will be voted in next week. KTV finds that the request from Belgrade has been for the vote to take place following Belgrade's mayoral elections. Deputy Prime Minister Behgjet Pacolli has taken care of this agreement. Sunday's elections in Belgrade have postponed the launch for several days [...]
KTV finds that the request from Belgrade has been for the vote to take place following Belgrade's mayoral elections. Deputy Prime Minister Behgjet Pacolli has taken care of this agreement.
Sunday's elections in Belgrade have postponed the demarcation vote in Pristina for several days.
Since the weekend, Foreign Minister Behgjet Pacolli has voiced conviction that Wednesday there will be no vote, as it did.
KTV reports Pacolli himself has spoken with cabinet officials of Serbia's president, Aleksandar Vuciq, to secure the Serbian List votes.
But the condition from Serbia has been to expect the outcome of Belgrade's mayoral elections, held this Sunday.
Vuciqi's Progressive Party of Serbia is expected to win the elections, but it will not be easy at all because of the opposition union over a candidate.
For that very reason, Vuciq has not wanted to create an image in Serbia that his Serbian List is helping Albanians overcome the last obstacle to liberalisation.
This is confirmed even with the rigging of the opposition tone in Belgrade against President Vuciq's party.
People's Party Chairman Vuk Jeremic has said Vuciqi has sworn his promise that he will allow Kosovo's membership in the UN at the Berlin meeting with Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Therefore, the promise is that the Serbian List will vote on demarcation in the first case to come to the Assembly, during next week, and after the election ends in Belgrade.
It is unclear whether the Serbian List has received guarantees from the Albanian side for the rapid creation of the Serbian Communists Association, which is its main requirement.
Serbian, led by Goran Rakic, has said the demarcation is nowhere on their list of priorities.












