International organisations to which Kosovo joined and targeted

To resume talks between Kosovo and Serbia on 27 June in the United States, the Kosovo and Serbian sides have agreed to remove barriers to dialogue. Kosovo has agreed to suspend efforts to join international organisations, while Serbia agreed to temporarily suspend the [recognition] campaign.
Kosovo has agreed to suspend efforts to join international organisations, while Serbia agreed to temporarily suspend Kosovo's independence recognised campaign.
Kosovo Prime Minister Avdullah Hoti has declared Tuesday during a debate by the Democratic Institute of Kosovo, that he agrees that by June 27th, Kosovo will stop applying for membership in international organisations, the REL reports.
Despite obstacles caused by Serbia's campaign against Kosovo citizenship, Kosovo has become a member of several international organisations, including the most important financial and sports organisations. Some of them are:
World Bank
International Monetary Fund
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
World Football Federation
European Football Federation
Olympic Committee
World Customs Organization
Central European Free Trade Agreement (CEFTA)
Kosovo is not a member of:
United Nations Organization
European Union
Council of Europe
World Trade Organization
World Health Organization
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
Serbia's campaign has prevented Kosovo from membership in:
International Criminal Police Organisation (INTERPOL)
United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Agency (UNESCO)
Reaching a comprehensive eventual agreement between Kosovo and Serbia and, subsequently, a seat in the United Nations would have to facilitate Kosovo's membership in all international organisations entirely.
Serbia's campaign to recognise Kosovo independence
Serbia has been leading the campaign to withdraw Kosovo's recognition of independence since 2017.
On behalf of Serbia, Foreign Affairs Minister Ivica Dacic has led the campaign.
Daciqi has declared that 18 states have attracted Kosovo's recognitions.
States that have attracted Kosovo recognitions, according to Serbia data: Sao Tome and Príncipe, Suriname, Guinea Bissao, Burundi, Liberia, Papua New Guinea, Lesto, Commonwealth of Dominica, Grenada, Union of the Comories, Solomon Islands, Madagascar, Palau, Togo, Central Republic of Africa, Ghana, Sierra Leone, and Nauru.
Serbia's success is highlighted that Kosovo is not membership in U NESTO and INTERPOL.
Serbia's diplomatic chief has said he has visited 108 states to talk about reconsidering their position on Kosovo.
According to data from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Serbia, Kosovo does not have the majority in the United Nations, because out of 193 member states, Kosovo's state recognises 92 of them and does not recognise 96 of them. Meanwhile, five states have <x0 concentration fluid”.
“The position fluidd”, according to Daciqi, means those states “generally recognise Kosovo, but no longer vote for it”.
Kosovo-Serbia dialogue, mediated by the European Union, started in 2011 in Brussels. He was suspended from November 2018, when Kosovo authorities imposed a 100 per cent tax on the goods of Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina.
This move was replaced with reciprocity, but Kosovo Prime Minister Avdullah Hoti's new government has removed all measures, due to what he has said, removing all obstacles to continuing dialogue with Serbia.
In October 2019, the US appointed Richard Green as their envoy for talks between Pristina and Belgrade.












