Lajcak sends letter to Thaci for dialogue, makes no mention of recognition from Serbia (Document)

The European Union's Special Envoy for Kosovo-Serbia Dialogue, Slovak Miroslav Lajcak, has sent a letter to Kosovo President Hashim Thaci to seek co-operation in the dialogue. Lajcak, for whom President Thaci and chief diplomat Konjufca had remarks as a mediator of dialogue because of Kosovo's approach to independence and citizenship, in the letter [...]
Lajcak, of whom President Thaci and chief diplomat Konjufca had remarks as a mediator of dialogue because of Kosovo's approach to independence and citizenship, in the letter sent to Thaci says nothing about the goals of dialogue and nowhere does he mention recognition by Serbia and UN membership.
“I am convinced that with the political will of both sides we can achieve goals in the” dialogue, Lajcak writes in his letter.
Not to mention the concrete and specific results for dialogue on this letter also signals a long dialogue process with slow and non significant results, as had happened during the process in Moghrin's time. However, Lajcak says his deployment to this role is the signal of EU re-integration in dialogue.
On the other hand, Lajcak in this letter also speaks of the public health crisis due to the David-19, citing the EU's 5m-euro assistance to Kosovo.
EU envoy for Kosovo-Serbia dialogue Miroslav Lajcak, even when official duty asked him to be neutral with Kosovo's status, he earlier turned out openly against Kosovo independence. Last year, as Slovakia's representative, Lajcak had led the OSCE chairmanship and exceeded his role, coming out against Kosovo openly.
With U.S. initiative, states that have O leadership The SEU had established a practice through which they invited representatives from Kosovo to an informal meeting. Until Germany, Austria and Italy had continued this tradition, Lajcak had unilaterally refused to invite Kosovo to such a meeting. For the move, Lajcak was also criticised by the US.
Also, at the same capacity, Miroslav Lajcak had come to Kosovo last year. But he had insisted that meetings with Kosovo state representatives be held through OSCE hotels or offices, refusing to be held at the offices of Kosovo's independent state institutions. Thus, Lajcak had again broken the practice of all foreign ministers leading the OSCE, who had met with state representatives in Kosovo institutions, such as Kurz, Steinmeier and others.
In the same role, Lajcak had held a meeting with Serbia's President Aleksandar Vuciq last year. But despite being the leader of the OSCE, Miroslav Lajcak had misused his meeting and role, promising Vuciqi that Slovakia would not recognise Kosovo's independence.
Miroslav Lajcak had also opposed Albania's incumbent Foreign Minister, Gent Cakain, to represent Albania's chairmanship in O The SEU, since it is from Kosovo. Lajcak had lobbied on member states to oppose Cakaj's name, and then Albania was represented by Prime Minister Edi Rama.













