Serwer after meeting with Valley leaders: Belgrade offers reserved seats in parliament for Albanians

“professor John Hopkins University” and political connoisseur in the Western Balkans Daniel Serer wrote after the meeting he had last week with representatives of the Presevo Valley. Serwer has spoken to representatives of the Valley has made him think again about dialogue between Kosovo and Serbia. He [...]
Serwer has spoken to representatives of the Valley has made him think again about dialogue between Kosovo and Serbia.
He wrote that reciprocity should be the rule on which action is taken in terms of dialogue. When he said that, Serwer has cited the fact that there are seats reserved for Serbs in the Kosovo Assembly.
According to the American analyst, based on this fact, Serbia must be prepared to offer proportional numbers of seats reserved for Albanians in Serbia's parliament.
“Reciprocity is a fundamental diplomatic principle. My visitors told me that people in the State Department prefer the term “imeter”. I admit I don't understand the difference. The question is that whatever you ask of someone else, you should be willing to give something equal in return if there is an equivalent. So if there are ten reserved seats for Serbs in the Kosovo Parliament (ka), Belgrade should be prepared to offer a proportional number of seats reserved for Albanians in the Serbian Parliament (where today there is no”, Serwer wrote.
He has said reciprocity should be implemented even when it comes to the Association of Serb-run municipalities. Cerwer has said the association seems to have more executive authority than an association of Albanian communities in Serbia.
This principle should also apply to the Association of Serb-run municipalities, which Belgrade wants to form within Kosovo. It should not have more executive authority than a comparable association of Albanian communities within Serbia”, Serwer has added.
Professor Serwer has also said reciprocity should be implemented in terms of military forces on the border between Kosovo and Serbia.
He has recalled the fact that internationals have limited Kosovo in terms of deploying the military to the northern part. Serwer proposes that Serbia should also be limited by the military's defeat by majority Albanian municipalities.
Until he has presented two maps by which he argues that the “situation That's not the case today”












