KP: Government recognises documents where Kosovo is treated as part of Serbia

The agreement on IDs between Kosovo and Serbia has led the Kosovo government to recognise documents issued by Serb parallel structures, in which the state of Kosovo is treated as part of Serbia. Kosova Preris has secured Serbia's identification of a Mitrovicas from the north, in which except personal notes in [...]
Kosova Preris has secured Serbia's identification of a Mitrovicas from the north, in which in addition to personal notes in the Cyrillic alphabet, writes Mitrovica municipality for the Police Directorate in Kosovo Mitrovica, and released by the Republic of Serbia.
This citizen, who wanted to remain anonymous, says he travels smoothly with this document to Serbia and vice versa through the Jarinje border.
Citizens, but also connoisseurs and political circumstances in Mitrovica, consider the agreement on IDs has called into question Kosovo's sovereignty and territorial integrity, but has also legalised parallel Serb structures.

Nazmi Feyza, citizen of Mitrovica, has made known to Kosova Preris that illegal documents in question have given Prime Minister Albin Kurti himself with the latest agreement.
According to him, the other major problem with these IDs lies at over 6 thousand Serb incomes in the north, from different parts of Croatia and Bosnia, which can already live freely in Kosovo and move without a problem.
Until the day Albin Kurti as prime minister admitted that these documents across the border were illegal, while Albin has given him legality with the oral agreement he made with Vucinqi. The second, the biggest problem about these IDs lies with over 6 thousand futures living in northern municipalities, who do not have Kosovo documentation, but Serbia's. And if the previous situation had continued, these citizens would have crossed the border once for their needs in Serbia, but after coming they would have been forced to leave Kosovo within three months. With this agreement these free citizens will live in Kosovo and move without a problem”, Fyza has said.
Politologist Musa Preteni warned that there is another detail about the ID agreement, which was never released but directly questions the country's sovereignty and territorial integrity.
The “appears to be in practice another detail of the agreement, which has in fact never been introduced to us and directly questions Kosovo's sovereignty and territorial integrity. If Kosovo Serb citizens, born in Kosovo, have specific documentation in which the Republic of Serbia writes, and through this documentation manages to cross the border... then I think that this puts Kosovo's integrity and sovereignty in question and in some form can be interpreted as recognition of a new reality, presenting in this case a certain municipality whether Mitrovica or another municipality of Kosovo, as part of Serbia<1>, Preten stressed.
Even Emir Azemi, the connoisseur of political circumstances, says the IDs Serbia issues to the citizens and the territory of Kosovo with the Republic of Serbia inscription are legal violations.
While politically speaking, he added that this is a temporary agreement that has ended a crisis that had emerged in recent months.
The fact that in the IDs that the Republic of Serbia issues to Kosovo citizens Mitrovica or another municipality remains with the Republic of Serbia inscription, in a legal sense of course that it constitutes legal violations on Kosovo territory... I think this is a temporary agreement that has given a solution to a crisis that had emerged in the past months, but this problem must be solved in a comprehensive agreement where the parties will end a century-old conflict... this is a compromise, compromises in politics are painful”, Azemi said.
Police spokesman for the northern region, Branislav Radovovic, has confirmed Kosovo priss, crossing the Kosovo-Serbia border, and vice versa on the part of northern citizens with Serbia's IDs.
“Yes, citizens are crossing the border with Serbia's ID and so far there is no obstacle”, Lieutenant Radovic has said February.
On the other hand, Kosova Press has been asking the Government questions via electronic addresses to get an explanation about this issue, but throughout the week they have not returned.












