Kosovo agreement ) Serbia could abolish Resolution 12 44

Reaching an eventual agreement between Kosovo and Serbia, which would resolve the conflict between the two countries, will also require formalisation, and this formalisation should be made through approval of the UN organisation's Security Council, assessing the connoisseurs of legal issues. Arsim Bajrami, professor of Constitutional Law. [...]
Arsim Bajrami, professor of Constitutional Law at the University of Pristina, tells Radio Free Europe that an eventual agreement between Kosovo and Serbia would be sponsored by the European Union, which is facilitating dialogue for normalising relations between the two countries.
But, according to him, it is considered that the UN is involved in the Kosovo issue, through Resolution 12 44, with which it has mandated international administration, for Kosovo, as it says, would be of interest that the eventual agreement with Serbia is accepted by the Security Council.
This agreement should also formally abolish Resolution 12 44 completely and be replaced by another resolution, which will pave the way for membership within the UN. In a way, this resolution would end international administration, which is defined with Resolution 12 44 and would become a kind of recognition of Kosovo's independence on the part of Security Council member states. This opens the way for through a new resolution the path to full membership of Kosovo within the United Nations Organisation”, Bajrami says.
Approximate thoughts include Africa Hoti, professor of International Law at Pristina University. Speaking to Radio Free Europe, he expresses the opinion that however the content of the eventual agreement between Kosovo and Serbia, there is no need to be discussed at the UN Security Council.












