Albanian Post: Three-point international proposal for exits from current situation in the north

Since the Kosovo government and the Serbian List, directed by official Belgrade, have no answer to the current situation, when Kosovo Serbs have emerged from institutions, from all levels, and Kosovo has remained without four mayors, close to 600 policemen, without judges in the northern part, and with vacuum in some other sectors [...]
Albanian Post has seen the proposal with its points and goals.
The first point of the international proposal to exit the current crisis is that the “both sides must confirm their commitment to the Franco-German plan and both sides return to negotiations”.
At point two makes an explosive request for Serbia's government.
Serbia agrees that the demand for the Association of Serb Majora municipalities should be discussed only within the total of the Franco-German plan, hence, as part of the overall structure of the plan”, the international proposal in which the AP has been access to, says.
The third point is another requirement, but for Kosovo.
“Kosovo agrees to ease the measures in relation to the issue of license plates”, the proposal states.
Aiming at these three points in the form of international requirements is calming the situation on the ground, restoring normality and creating the ongoing possibility of dialogue in Brussels.
“This should form the basis for restoring to dialogue and gradual return of Serbs to 48x1> institutions, the proposal is confirmed.
How did it get to the proposal?
Paradoxically, but the Government of Kosovo wants the Association of Serb Majorities within the General Agreement, which within the district is now known as the Base Agreement, while Serbia does not want association within the agreement.
But, Serbia makes this rejection precisely because it wants to implement association outside the agreement, and only then discuss the proposal, demanding another concession.
Kosovo has accepted the Association, but within the agreement, in order to imply as the release Kosovo is making in the Franco-German proposal.
This duality has also led to the blocking of the situation in the north, where Kurt decided to sequence the decision for license plates, fines, props.
Serbia used this decision as the trigger to block the talks, guiding the Serbian List to launch Kosovo institutions, what it means to bring down the entire dialogue process in Brussels and virtually undo all agreements reached to this stage.
Fear of this movement, envisioned by Serbia, had forced the international community to demand from Kurti to postpone the decision, although they would publicly acknowledge that Kosovo has a right to implement.
The AP also understands that Kurti had accepted the postponement following several-time international demands, especially Americans.
He had even agreed that the push would be made in the form of verbal reproof by the Kosovo Police for illegal car users.
Everything seemed fine until the day Kurt announced the decision to postpone implementation through sequence.
The internationals were surprised by the Kosovo prime minister's statement, because the postponement was happening, but not as the preliminary agreement was.
Within the scaling decision there was a point that internationals were unaware of.
Albanian Post understands that the fine sequence was conceived, proposed and eventually made part of the decision, by Kosovo Deputy Prime Minister Besnik Bislim.
His subordinate's proposal had accepted Kurti, with the idea that this would better be argued in public that the government is not giving up on law enforcement, only to classify the decision in three different phases.
Unregulated was the deadline too. Until 10 months were required, the postponement until April 21st was something more than six months.
International surprise with the Kosovo Government's decision and failure to announce the changes also led to the American State Department's harsh reactions through a media communique, which said that “The US is concerned and worried about the Kosovo government's decision”.
Communication conveyed by Antony Blinken, American Secretary of State and was later reconfirmed by White House spokesman Edward “Ned” Price.
/Albanianpost. com












