Family members of the dead: We're still in the mist

Familys of missing persons in Kosovo say uninformed about the declaration agreed between Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti and Serbian President Aleksandar Vuciq on 2 May in Brussels, RTKlive reports. They say the issue of forcibly missing persons in the country's latest war should not be [...]
They say the issue of people forcibly missing in the country's recent war should no longer be part of political discussions.
Co-ordinator of the Buritmore Centre for Missing Persons in Pristina, Bajram Qerkina, has said they have had other expectations for this meeting.
For us households, it's not yet concrete, we're still in the mist, it's not what we've been waiting for in Ohrid and Brussels. We're interested in what's happening at these high-level meetings. I'm in this process from the start. We made a strategy that was five years old. All these points that politicians now mention were in the 2010” strategy, Qerkina stressed.
Even Jasmina Zivkoviq, chairman of the Association of Apostles in Shtrpce, said there has been no innovation from the recent meeting in Brussels.
I'm going to try to be objective and believe what's agreed on on May 2nd, though there's no innovation. Waiting is very difficult and difficult. No meeting has been held in the last two years, and no excavations have been made. Hope is what keeps us all family and the hope that this process should not be stopped and lost the humane line”, she has been posting.
While Milica Radovanovic, a researcher from “The New Social Initiative”, said there has been no seriousness in dealing with the issue of forcibly missing persons.
Because this issue has come up to discuss at the political level, this for us is very inconsistent. It's not the first time we've discussed this subject and some important conclusions are approved and then the agreement doesn't apply. No one has been interested so far and no one has questioned the perpetrators so there has been no results of”, she stressed.












