The process of missing gets stuck in Kosovo dialogue Serbia

Kosovo has become a member of the International Commission for Missing Persons for what, according to leaders of the missing in Kosovo, this is a very important step. But this process, which Kosovo and Serbia had pledged in the Ohrid Agreement, is looking non-progressive, after Wednesday in Brussels [...]
It has long not been reported on Kosovo's membership in international organisations.
However, during Wednesday, the deputy minister of Jashmte affairs, Kreshnik Ahmeti, has announced that Kosovo already has full rights is a member of the International Commission for Missing Persons.
And the benefits from this membership have shown Dukagini to Andy Hoti, who holds the position of chairman of the government commission for the disappearances.
“We have requested a donation of considerable value to be provided a database for registering missing persons in Kosovo”, he said.
Hoti, has said that in Brussels at the latest meeting of chief negotiators in Brussels, in the absence of the Serbian side's will, there has failed to reach the reference of the joint commission between Kosovo and Serbia to the disappearances.
“We expect after harmonisation that yesterday we have failed to agree with Serbia on this, and that this must be achieved very quickly....”, he has declared further.
In the meantime, family members of the missing expect this process to take on epilogue as soon as possible, with what confidence do they have in Prime Minister Albin Kurti in the matter?
“After being prime minister Albin Kurti, I hope this process will end. With Albin we've done some activities before, and he knows this topic”, Nesrete Kumnova of the Mothers “Association's “calls to”.
In March of this year, Kosovo and Serbia in Ohrid had pledged a joint declaration to the missing, under which a commission will then be formed, which will be headed by the European Union aimed at dealing with the missing during the war.












