What does it say on Serbia's sticky tickets to Kosovo cars? yesterday's Faithful Bislim Agreement for the North

The crisis in northern Kosovo has entered on its eleven [11] day, with members of our Special Unit on two roads leading to border points that continue to be blocked by Serb protesters. And while special police and Serb special protesters continue to remain in [...]
Last night about 6 pm, Besnik Bislimi rushed to warn the people that a principle agreement had been reached between the plates.
Many media reported that the deal had been reached and that the situation would be stressed. Later, the EU side and Serbia's side announced that, in fact, negotiations would continue and that agreement had not been reached.
Let's hope Kosovo's deputy prime minister is more focused during today.
The draft agreement in question came from Monday to begin placing sticky [statics] tickets instead of temporary license plates. You heard that: sticky tickets. In July, the Kurti Government almost set up Kosovo's citizens with sticky tickets that would sell 5 euros and cost less than a cent. Fortunately, he was retreating.
There is no known what will be written on the sticky tickets that will be given to citizens from Serbia to settle in the front of the cars. And it is not known what will be written on the sticky tickets that will be given to citizens from Kosovo. Nothing good is expected to come from what it will write in Serbia's sticky tickets, that is known. Right at this point is the essence of Kosovo's sovereignty problem, although Bislim gave absolutely no information.
But the sticky tickets would be temporary. What would be permanent would remain NEGOCIETY. The agreement was to establish a working group that was due to begin on October 21st and that would try to find a permanent solution to the license plates in a six-month term.
Also, Kosovo police were expected to hand over control of the border checkpoints in Jarinje and Brnjak to KFOR, which constitutes a step back in our country's efforts to extend sovereignty across the country's entire territory, Periscope follows.
On Saturday, next morning, Special Unit officers in Jarinje and Brnjak had eight hours to get away from these points, and the same deadline was for Serb protesters.
What we learned from these negotiations and these agreements is that our professional Special Unit officers were equated with the vulgar protesters of Serbia. Kosovo Special Unit = vulgar Serb protesters”. We also learned that Kurti Government has a strange obsession with sticky tickets.
Let's hope today's negotiations by the party official with the “banner No Negociata” be more productive!










