Petar Miletic resigns from Kurt's position of adviser: With this letter, explain the reasons

Petar Miletic, has resigned from the position of adviser to Prime Minister Albin Kurti. Through a letter, he has explained the reason and Periscope brings from the letter from the N1. Besides this letter, I inform you that from today I am not officially the foreign political adviser to the prime minister of Kosovo. From the start of this [...]
Petar Miletic, has resigned from the position of adviser to Prime Minister Albin Kurti. Through a letter, he has explained the reason and Periscope brings from the letter from the N1.
Besides this letter, I inform you that from today I am not officially the foreign political adviser to the prime minister of Kosovo. By the beginning of this year, I have seen that my position as an adviser is not important, and later, not even in a position of aid to Serbs in Kosovo, is written, among other things, in the reason for Mr. Miletiq's resignation, which records N1, Periscopi translates.
“I have not been asked or consulted on any decision by Prime Minister or Government”, Miletic says.
The “was clear to me that I would not be consulted on important issues in the first months of work. Events and topics were happening before my eyes, yet the most important evidence that this government does not want any contact with Serbs was the refusal of the director of the office for communities under the Office of the Prime Minister of Kosovo, despite the international actors' insistence on this and also the reduction of this office's budget from over one million euros to 500 thousand euros”, he says.
Miletic also says that since he saw no role in the dialogue between Pristina and Belgrade, as well as the implementation of the Ohrid Agreement, the crisis in northern Kosovo, during the summer, along with his colleague Elizabeth Gowing and a group of Serbian civil society, they have identified about 15 day-long problems that could easily be resolved.
If there were a government alert, Miletic says <x0 most of the problems could be solved in a few days.
“In my view, 90 percent of these problems could be solved within a few days if there were readiness from the Kosovo government”, he says.
Miletic also says, that the majority of funds from the Prime Minister's Office for Communities have gone to Albanian NGOs. /Periscopi












