Hamiti: Kurt's patriotic noise, which sounds like music in the ears of his supporters, does not move our country forward

University professor and member of the LDK's Headship Muhamet Hamiti has commented yesterday's meeting between Prime Minister Albin Kurti and Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, saying the talks of the two leaders were patriotic and for internal consumption in the two countries of Hamiti, through a Facebook text said that despite great commitment [...]
Hamiti, through a Facebook text, said that despite the EU and the US's great commitment to the urgent need for dialogue to be concluded by agreement, Serbia indicated it is not interested in the resulting dialogue, leading to recognition of Kosovo.
While Kurt's speech was sounded as patriotic noise that sounds music in the ears of his supporters, Muhammad did not move the country forward.
Kurt's patriotic noise, which sounds music in the ears of his supporters, does not move our country forward. He is no longer opposition, but Kosovo's prime minister. He must do what he can to end the status quo in our country's reports with Serbia. With nothing to cover Serbia's strategy to stall this process, to buy time, with the aim of Vuciqi and his regime, in the meantime to gain space for diabolic bodies that would defunct the independent and sovereign state of Kosovo, Hamiti wrote.
He said Prime Minister Kurti should leave the opposition rhetoric, and do the prime minister's work in the country's domestic and foreign relations.
This is a full post:
Brussels Summit Echo: Very patriotic noise
After the Kosovo prime minister's yesterday meeting with the president of Serbia in Brussels, which, as Kosovo-Serbia dialogue facilitators say, is a continuation of dialogue, we heard the media presentations of Kurti and Vuciqi, which were popular speeches, with patriotic rhetoric, of internal consumption in both countries. The meeting did not mark the realities of the dialogue, nor was its continuation corrected. No step forward took place yesterday.
Despite a greater commitment -- at least declarative -- to the EU and the US -- for the urgent need for dialogue to be concluded by agreement, Serbia is still not interested in the resulting dialogue, which, in effect, should ultimately lead to recognition of the reality of independent Kosovo, in mutual recognition at current borders, without violating Kosovo's current constitutional regulation.
Vuciki's Serbia is interested in continuing the status quo, for stalling and not for progress. Such a situation is not in Kosovo's interest that, after recognition by Serbia and by the five EU nations that have not yet recognised us, must start the path of Euro-Atlantic integration.
Kurt's patriotic noise, which sounds like music in the ears of his supporters, does not move our country forward. He is no longer opposition, but Kosovo's prime minister. He must do what he can to end the status quo in our country's reports with Serbia. With nothing to become a cover for Serbia's strategy to drag this process back, to buy time, with the aim of Vuciqi and his regime in the meantime to gain space for Kosovo's independent and sovereign state. Kosovo cannot prove guilty because of our prime minister's lack of courage and knowledge when Serbia wants the suspension of dialogue. In this trap of Vucinqi, the Kosovo government falls.
Therefore, Prime Minister Kurti must leave the opposition rhetoric and do the work of the head government of our Republic, both in internal affairs and in the relations of the Republic of Kosovo with other countries.












