Berlin meeting: If taxes fall, so does Ramush Haradinaj Government

Today's meeting of Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, where it is expected to discuss the fee for Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina's goods and correction of borders, has raised great attention. Haradinaj's stand at this meeting is expected to take exactly this position he never held, even [...]
Haradinaj's stand at this meeting is expected to take exactly that position he never held back, even despite international pressure to suspend the tax.
The issue differs from political analysts in Kosovo, who express their opinions about whether the prime minister should stand behind his stand for failing to verify the tax, or give up on it.
Today's meeting has received considerable attention, especially to the fact that Germany is the only state that has sided with Prime Minister Haradinaj.
Thus, political analyst Imer Mushkolaj says it is important for Kosovo to get strong guarantees from Germany that there will be no correction of borders.
He believes that in this way German state support for visa liberalisation will be reconfirmed once again.
Defending his position on the fee against Serbian goods, Mushkolaj says Haradinaj should focus on presenting the current situation in the country, so that it can become clear once and for all that Kosovo is not what it should be put on by internationals.
Unlike Mushkolaj, Rasim Alija understands the current issues in Kosovo.
He estimates that the 100 per cent tax on goods coming from Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina is one of the populist decisions.
But according to Aliaj, Prime Minister Haradinaj is forced to defend his position, as the government and the country are in danger of falling in the election.
According to him, Kosovo has had no profits from the 100 per cent tax imposed on the Serbian state, saying it has neither benefited economic benefits.
He says that even this meeting is just one of the meetings in the continuation of meetings since the arrival of the US delegation to Kosovo. As he adds that a total foreign policy imbalance is ruling in Kosovo.
For him it is disturbing how the Kosovo side, in a lack of unity, has managed to divide international friends into two barrels.
Initially Prime Minister Haradinaj was left alone in his stance on not exacting the tax, recently it is President Hashim Thaci who has changed his mind and who is publicly sided with Haradinaj, saying that “tax loss could be harmful”.











