O'Brien in Skopje: A person who stumbles will have consequences

US Assistant Secretary of State James O'Brien, during his speech at the Western Balkan Summit, and EU and US representatives in Skopje, said countries should work and co-operate to create better opportunities for their citizens, among other things, he indicated that no one [...]
Among other things, he said that no one should be an obstacle to developing a state, despite bilateral problems they may have, while stressing that if something like that happens, there will be consequences.
No one has the right to prevent the other from advancing, which has unresolved bilateral issues, who does it, will have consequences. If anyone does, then the citizens of this country will decide whether he is the right leader. We hope to achieve changes, to offer more citizens in the region”He said it.
Also O'Brien underlined that US support in all countries of the region will not be lacking.
O'Brien: The EU has ongoing innovations. Every country has to do the practical work and the citizens have some innovation. The U.S. supports the idea, we have spent about $200m in assistance to this region and we will remain committed, but we are focused on the market. Initially, we will identify initiatives for businesses and citizens in the region. This means that each individual saves more when he transfers money both inside and outside the region. Green tar is second.
Studies have shown that citizens have expected about 80% of the time in the Western Balkans, this is a long time. Every state will work to improve, costs will drop about two times, EU companies will make outscores out of it. As is the production of electricity, we'll continue negotiations, we'll talk to economic options. We need to see real improvement and advancement.
No one has the right to prevent the other from advancing, which has unresolved bilateral issues, who does it will have consequences. If anyone does, then the citizens of this country will decide whether he is the right leader. We hope to achieve changes and offer more citizens in the region.












