Trajkovic: Vuciq wants to return control over Kosovo Serbs in old ways

Rada Trajkovic, Kosovo Serb politician, has commented on recent developments about Serbia's referendum and the refusal of Kosovo institutions to hold on its territory as well. The former Kosovo Parliament delegation has given an interview for southpress, Danas quoted, where she has declared the refusal will serve mostly the Serbian president, [...]
The former Kosovo Parliament delegation has given an interview for southpress, Danas quoted Danas as declaring the refusal would serve mostly Serbian President Aleksandar Vuciq.
It appears that the continued violation of the Brussels agreement by Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti has inspired the Serbian president to start thinking of violating the agreements reached in Brussels for normalising relations between the two countries, she claims.
My “impression is that Vuciki's next move could be to remove Serbs from Kosovo institutions and boycott the upcoming elections in Kosovo. This threat to the destabilisation of Kosovo is becoming more concrete, especially because of Vuciki's fear that some other Serbs not the Serbian List can take reserved positions for Serbs within the Kosovo system”, she said.
Trajkovic further claimed that “do not forget that until recently Serbs in Kosovo's system were controlled by “the informal “Vuciq's Kosovo sub-checker, Milan Radojic. But after the decision on American sanctions against him, this power centre lost its credibility. Now it seems that Vuciq wants to turn control over Kosovo Serbs into the old ways inside Serbia's institutions in Kosovo”.
Asked how she perceives and comments on the fact that in Kosovo no referendum will be organised, she said that Kurti's refusal to organise referendum on Kosovo's territory is simply denial of reality”.
The fact is that Kosovo does not have full international sovereignty, as is the fact that Belgrade has no functional control over Kosovo's territory, and resolving this complex relationship is the subject and the purpose of negotiations between Belgrade and Pristina, Trajkovic considers.
Otherwise, the QUINT states have asked Kosovo institutions to allow elections to be organised on Kosovo's territory as in the past, but that our country's officials have said Kosovo Serbs who also have Serbian citizenship can vote by mail or at the Belgrade Liaison Office in Pristina.










