Haradinaj said he has visas in December: EU Office chief has an answer to that

It has not been long since former Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj gave his last visa promise, which he said would be liberalised in December. However, the chief of the EU Office in Kosovo, Natalia Apostolova, is saying this is a complicated process, and that the state should make more efforts to rule [...]
It has not been long since former Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj gave his last visa promise, which he said would be liberalised in December. However, the chief of the EU Office in Kosovo, Natalia Apostolova, is saying this is a complex process, and that the state should make more efforts to rule the law, migration and security.
Visa promises gave a lot, so far, he never got shot.
Once in September, then for Christmas, these days, and finally in December, these were the promises of former Kosovo Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj, regarding visa liberalisation,
I know that in late November it's a process, but I don't want to detail these processes because that's how the nature of the work is and I know that in December we're ready for a decision on liberalisation. I expect this decision to lead Germany in December. In December, I await the formal decisions of the Council of Ministers and of the leadership countries”, he had said.
However, such a thing is not confirming even EU Office chief Nataliya Apostolova, according to her, even though Kosovo has met the criteria, this is a long and complicated process, writes Metro newspaper.
“I fully understand Kosovars' expectation of visa liberalisation. The process is long and complex, where all European institutions are involved in a certain phase”, Apostolova has said of the telegraph.
It has added that Kosovo demonstrates continued efforts for rule of law, migration and security in order to prepare a positive context for the final decision of EU member states.
We remember that Kosovo has already long met all conditions for visa liberalisation, and the country was given the green light for this by the European Parliament in April.
Until now it is expected that the European Commission in charge of Finland will turn the visa issue into an agenda, and they will be removed for Kosovo citizens.












