Nutrellary: Kurti had to bring Kosovo back 9 years later, to understand the importance of dialogue

Democratic Party of Kosovo chief member (PDK), Adri Nurellar, has said that Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti had to return Kosovo 9 years later to understand the importance of dialogue with Serbia. According to Nurlar, the dialogue was neither a priority nor a priority, and then it became more important by looking for it [...]
According to Nurlar, the dialogue was neither a priority nor a priority, and then it became more important by asking for it in some statements made several days ago.
The statement was essentially that dialogue was no priority and we could even do without it because Kosovo is still okay without dialogue with Serbia. It now turns out that dialogue is the only way to solve problems with Serbia”, it has written, the Periscope broadcast.
His complete scripture:
Initially the statement was that dialogue was no priority and we could even do without it because Kosovo is okay without dialogue with Serbia. It now turns out that dialogue is the only way to solve problems with Serbia. It evidently took his adventure and the cold shower coming from the State Department and international partners to get a lecture and understand the need for dialogue. The very process he's been taunting and instrumentalizing in order to get votes.
The prime minister has decided to learn only by suffering after he's wrong. But these policy lectures are costing Kosovo a lot because they are seriously damaging the trust report with our allies. On the other hand, they have made internationally acceptable and justifiable the return of Serbian tanks and planes to the Kosovo border, in violation of the security buffer zone envisioned by the Kumanovo Agreement.
Also, this bitter “selection” has caused the regrition not only at the level of foreign policy but also within internal policy because for the first time in 9 years KFOR's return to Kosovo border crossings has become necessary. Kosovo police have been able to manage Kosovo's crossing points without KFOR presence after KFOR troops in June 2011 unblocked roads in the north from barricades imposed a year earlier. KFOR's return to control border points returns the bitter taste of the era of Resolution 1244 before declaring independence.











