Vuciq: All Serbs know Kosovo lost

Many things are happening in Kosovo today -- things that remind me of what happened in the late 1980s -- no matter how many conditions and circumstances are now -- and almost beyond compare. I'm starting from my meeting and talking with Serbia's president, Alexander Vuciq, early February of this year. [...]
I'm starting from my meeting and talking with Serbia's president, Alexander Vuciq, early February of this year. After publishing the interview with him for “Globusin“, I had the so-called business lunch at the “Bokelika” villa in Dedinje. At one point, I asked Vucinqi how she thought she could solve Kosovo's problem. It was thought a little bit of a few seconds passed in significant silence and then said it would not give up, or think about giving up Kosovo's north. I couldn't literally remember what she told me.
The defence of northern Kosovo was, in some way, the backbone of its Kosovo policy. In his troubled and marathon talks with political representatives of Albanians in Kosovo (but also with Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama, who also included him in the talks), and, of course, with senior EU representatives, with the Italian European Commissioner for Foreign Affairs and Security, Federica Moghrini, at the helm.











