Vuciq: I have the support of Serbs from Kosovo for a compromise solution

Serbia's President Aleksandar Vuciq said that at the 21 August meeting in Belgrade with representatives of Serbs from Kosovo, he received their support to work to find a compromise solution. Asked what such a solution would be, he said that “does not know”. “Once I understand it, you will be [...]
Asked what such a solution would be, he said that “does not know”.
“Once I understand, I'll let you know. We'll try, we'll do our best. If we can, we can, we can't, we can't-
Vuciq said Serbia wants to preserve peace and added that “will find more compromise proposals”.
According to him, what representatives of Serbs from Kosovo asked for, during Sunday's meeting, was not to face persecution, and Vucic said he has assured them he will not allow that.
“won't allow Pegromin and expulsion”, Vuciq said.
Serbian president said Serbia is in a very difficult situation and that “will desperately seek a compromise for the next 10 days. I hope we're going to be able to get to”.
He referred to September 1st, when Kosovo has said it will resume implementing two decisions for Serbian license plates and documents, which raised tensions in northern Kosovo in late July and early August.
“A we believe in this, I'm afraid that even if it's going to be successful, there's the next curve, very soon, and then the next one, and I'm afraid that the rubik has long been passed”, Vuciq added.
During the address to the nation on 21 August in Belgrade, Vuciq said he was informed that if no solution is reached, Serbs would leave the institutions and that there would be “conduct of the Brussels rule agreed on by deal”.
Vuciq has also stated that there is information that prior to the escalation of tensions between Serbia and Kosovo on July 31st, a group of Chechens and Cherszes, who are opponents of Chechen leader Ramzan Cadyrov's regime, have stayed in Kosovo.
He said their task was to observe the situation in northern Kosovo and recruit potential soldiers to fight in Ukraine.
Kosovo wants “Agreement with six points”
Vuciq said Kosovo in the last round of dialogue in Brussels on 18 August, which ended without any agreement, had gone to discuss a general agreement on normalising six-point reports.
According to him, these points are: General principles of bilateral relations: mutual recognition and membership in all international organisations; Solving problems from the past: resolving the problem of the undiscovered, conspiring and resolving the problem of raped persons, resolving the issue of displaced people, destroying private and public property, and returning objects, and that war damages Serbia must pay all. Then co-operation in the future; A mutual respect for the rights of Serbs in Kosovo and Albanians in the Presevo Valley; Reviewing previously agreed agreements and resolving disputes and final provisions.
After meetings in Brussels, the Government of Kosovo had indicated that it had discussed two issues, the overall framework of the final agreement, and the Serbian license plates and documents.
“Prime Minister Kurti stressed that this agreement should be legally binding for the full normalisation of relations with mutual recognition at the centre. He introduced several chapters with relevant elements that should contain this”, the government's statement issued on the evening of August 18th said.
In Belgrade, Vuciq said that in recent days among the Serb population in Kosovo, fear has reigned and said they “are based on the wall”. He said that in the latest round of dialogue in Brussels, Pristina has rejected any proposal for Serbian license plates and documents.
Kosovo “wants to expel Serbs”
But according to the Serbian president, Serbia's message to the Serb population in Kosovo is that “regardless of what the situation is, there will be no refugee columns because we will save our people from persecution”.
Vuciq and Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti met in Brussels on 18 August under the dialogue mediated by the European Union. Meetings in Brussels ended without agreement over recent tensions dealing with the Kosovo Government's two decisions on Serbian license plates and documents.
Serbian president reiterated that Kosovo's KS license plates are required to return to Brussels to replace those Serbia leaves for Kosovo ( KM, UR, PR and similar), but this proposal has been rejected.
The KS plates have neutral status regarding Kosovo's citizenship.
“They are not interested in implementing it, only in how the lives of Serbs from Kosovo and Metohia were destroyed. They refused everything. And KS plates, and everything. Because the only purpose of torturing our people in Kosovo is their final expulsion”.
“The goal is to abolish everything related to the Serbian state and to become the persecution of Serbs from Kosovo”, Vuciq added.
In the Brussels dialogue, Vucic said all Serbia's proposals were to find a compromise, but they were not accepted by Kosovo.
He also spoke of Kosovo's decision to go in and out, at 90 days' worth. According to him, issuing these documents from Kosovo is a “crazy.
“Serbs must get a visa back to live in his house. QUINT agrees, at least those in Pristina. Those in Brussels were more correct”, Vuciq said.
On July 31st and August 1st, local Serbs blocked roads in northern Kosovo to counter the government's two decisions in Kurti, for Serbian plates and documents.
But after the barricades were removed on the afternoon of August 1st, the Kosovo government announced that it delayed implementing decisions for a month.
The first decision concerns reregistering cars that have license plates issued by Serbia, at those RKS (New Kosovo Republic). Kosovo city acronym plates like KM, PZ and similar that are issued by Serbia are considered illegal by official Pristina.
Meanwhile, the second decision has to do with issuing a document for entry and exits for all citizens of Serbia entering Kosovo. This document, Serbia releases it to Kosovo citizens for 11 years and ends from the agreement on freedom of movement the parties have reached in Brussels in 2011.












