KAS official in Belgrade: Serbia not to view Association as tool for blockade

Jakov Devcic, head of the “Konrad Adenauer” Foundation, has said Serbia should not see the Association of Serb majority municipalities as possible means of political blockades”. In a proposal for BILD, he has said that association must be implemented under the agreement Kosovo and Serbia have agreed on in 2013 and 2015. [...]
Jakov Devcic, head of the “Konrad Adenauer” Foundation, has said Serbia should not see the Association of Serb majority municipalities as possible means of political blockades”.
In a proposal for BILD, he has said that association must be implemented under the agreement Kosovo and Serbia have agreed on in 2013 and 2015.
But he adds that without confidence measures between the two sides, the security situation in Kosovo could change.
The government in Kosovo must agree to implement the establishment of the Serbian Communists Association agreed with Serbia in 2013. Serbs should be able to shape their policy independently at the local level, for example in the field of education, health, culture and culture, and the economy”, Jakov Devcic has said.
It is also important that Serbia does not view association as a possible tool of the political blockade and that Serb representatives return to Kosovo institutions as soon as possible. Without confidence-building measures, the security situation in Kosovo could change. The West should encourage possible approach with concrete political progress in EU integration and new investment”, he has declared.

On February 27th in Brussels, Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti and Serbian President Aleksandar Vuciq will meet.
The discussion will be the German-fraranto plan as a guide for the Kosovo-Serbia dialogue issue and resolution of problems between the two states.
In this article BILD Referring to the Franco-German plan, it says that “while Serbia does not recognise Kosovo's independence, it should at least not prevent Kosovo's membership in international organisations”.
In addition, the two countries will open representative offices in each other's capitals a scenario that is difficult to imagine in view of protesters similar to the recent crowd in Belgrade”, said the report as they report on pro-Russian groups in Belgrade using violence against any potential agreement with Kosovo.
Kosovo is recognised by more than 100 states, and Kosovo's independence does not conflict with international law, even according to the International Court of Justice.












