Lajcak is completing his mandate as an emissary of dialogue: Here's what happened for about a year.

More than eight months have passed since former Slovakia Foreign Affairs Minister Miroslav Lajcak was appointed by the European Union as a special minister for Kosovo-Serbia dialogue. Lajcak was given this trustary task by the EU with a one-year mandate to provide a permanent solution to dialogue, writes Periscopi. Great support was given [...]
Lajcak was given this trustary task by the EU with a one-year mandate to provide a permanent solution to dialogue, writes Periscopi.
Great support was also given from Germany and France, two major states in the European Union.
He came with powerful statements that the bilateral dialogue resumed after two years of deadlock, since 2018. He even came to Kosovo and went to Serbia, where he issued the sensational declaration that the Constitution of Kosovo could be changed and that it was not a sacred book.
So far, Kosovo and Serbia have, to some extent, managed to deal with the issue of the unknown. But, Kosovo Prime Minister Avdullah Hoti, has initially stressed that Kosovo has entered into dialogue on only one condition, with Serbia at the end to accept and recognise Kosovo. Meanwhile, Serbia's president, Aleksandar Vucic, many times, without hesitation at all, has said that this cannot be accepted by the Serbian side, and that recognition is neither the subject of discussions in the dialogue.
Lajcak, at the last meeting, the seventh in a row held in Brussels on December 10th, attended by national co-ordinator Skender Hyseni, said the dialogue would continue next year.
But Lajcak seems to have faced difficulties and realized that. He changed the record before the opinion. It no longer says that the dialogue will be completed, as expressed at the beginning of his task.
“There will be no artificial”, The long way with many obstacles” is considered to be the dialogue for the special immigrant from Slovakia.
“Dialogue is on a good track, but it's not on a fast highway. More than that is a long shift and wind road””, Lajcak said in the recent debate, organised by the Commission for Foreign Policy, in the European Parliament.
Thus, the long-awaited “ “ “ “restore” could not be completed. Lajcak will soon complete his one-year term as emissary, and the result is a bit too “anything”, even after nearly nine months “work”. /Periscope.











