MPJ rejects Vuciki's request for a visit to Kosovo: It's an insult more than provocation!

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has announced that they have received a request from Serbia's president, Aleksandar Vuciq, and several other Serbian officials to visit Kosovo. Except for their aversion. MPJ has said its demand is more insulting than provocation at a time when Kosovo is facing [...]
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has announced that they have received a request from Serbia's president, Aleksandar Vuciq, and several other Serbian officials to visit Kosovo.
Except for their aversion. MPJ has said its demand is more insulting than provocation at a time when Kosovo is facing the pain of unscathed persons.
Likewise, Minister Melza Haradinaj-Subla has announced that she has postponed her visit to Kizevac, Serbia, where a mass cemetery with Albanian troops killed in the war was found.
Full statement:
Vuciq's request, Voulin, Petkovovic's Djuric to visit Kosovo, at a time when Kosovo faces reopening the great plague and pain of the undiscovered persons, and the discovery of mass cemetery of Albanian people killed and massacred in the war, 21 years later, is an insult more than provocation!
Each request of Serbia under these circumstances will always have the same answer!
Since Kosovo institutions committed to dawning the fate of undiscovered persons have already accepted the invitation for participation in the continuation of excavations at the mass cemetery in Kizevac, Serbia, and will be there during the next week, even the warned visit of Foreign Affairs Minister and Diaspore Mrs. Melise Haradinaj- Stublla is postponed for another time.
Citizens of Kosovo, families of the missing, killed and massacred by Serbian police, military and paramilitary forces rightly question what will happen after the discovery of mass cemetery and re-dependence? How long will international justice allow the very ones who committed crimes to conduct investigations and judgments?
Serbia is unable to address its criminal past, so international intervention in these circumstances is required so that the missing justice for victims of the Serbian genocide in Kosovo can be put in place.











