Initiative deputy warning: We had government that didn't do their homework, but it fell down.

On February 6th, Montenegrin Prime Minister Dusan Markovic will visit Kosovo to discuss one of the main topics now in three years, the one in the demarcation. Today it was reported that Haradinaj is preparing a plan to present his counterpart from Montenegro in order to unblock the liberalisation process [...]
Today it was reported that Haradinaj is preparing a plan to submit his counterpart from Montenegro in order to unblock the visa liberalisation process for Kosovo.
This plan envisions the possibility of renegotiating the agreement between Kosovo and Montenegro.
But MPs from the ruling parties are awaiting actions by the government to resolve this issue, which is keeping Kosovars isolated now and for so long.
Rasim Selmanaj, deputy of the Alliance for the Future of Kosovo, says about the news that he does not vote any agreement without convinced that Kosovo does not lose territory.
He points out that he will wait until opportunities to improve mistakes are created. “First without seeing that plan, I can't comment on any comment, but what I can say is that for not knowing that Kosovo doesn't lose territory I don't vote”, says AAK MP“when real opportunities are created to correct mistakes that have occurred at the demarcation of the border line is another matter”, Selmanaj said.
He has once again charged Murat Meha's commission with, according to him, mistakes issued during the signification of the border with Montenegro, reaffirming the position that if such a version goes to the site, he will not vote.
The softest in his position on demarcation is seen as Social Democrat Initiative deputy Rexhep Hoti.
He says they are waiting for the government to act on its duties and responsibilities.
We encourage the government and are carefully following the government's actions and commitments. We think there's space and it has to work hard on the task and responsibilities it has, to get out of this” situation, the Initiative deputy said.
According to Hoti, the Haradinaj government must take concrete action for an acceptable solution.
But he claims that an eventual demarcation agreement should not affect the country's territory.
“We now think that the government should take concrete actions which would be in the function of an acceptable solution, which does not violate the country's territory and find co-operation with Montenegro's government. There's room for examination, but those projects still haven't come to the Assembly and we haven't seen”, Hoti says.
The Parliament's MP also mentions the past government, which, according to him, did not act but collapsed.
This government should play its role. We had governments that didn't do their homework, and we saw how it ended”, and Rexhep Hoti stressed.
Otherwise, the country's prime minister, Ramush Haradinaj, has declared that with Markovik's visit, there may be clarification of the situation for demarcation. Except for the past weeks in Montenegro, two Kosovo deputy prime ministers, Enver Hoxhaj and Fatmir Limaj have stayed behind.












