Edi Rama for UN KS meeting: It was a meaningless session.

Albania's prime minister, Edi Rama, has named it a meaningless “session”, the UN Security Council meeting for the detention of the Serbian dinar in Kosovo, saying it is not the place for anything related to Kosovo. According to Rama, solutions should be found on these issues within the facilitated dialogue [...]
According to Rama, solutions should be found on these issues under the facilitated dialogue by the European Union.
It was a meaningless session. The UN Security Council is clearly not the country for anything related to Kosovo. As two sovereign countries aiming for membership in the European Union, Kosovo and Serbia must fully focus on facilitated dialogue by the EU and focus on achieving a deal on financial circulation, postal service, double taxation and all other issues that ordinary citizens benefit from, ensuring a peaceful future for future generations”, has written Rama on the social network <2X<3>.
Rama has said that Albania will stay close to Kosovo in preventing any external threats until it has asked Kosovo to co-ordinate with the allies.
“Sustainable and consistent standing with them shows the sense of vision and state responsibility, while every case of standing alone on the road to full recognition dims the country's position in the public sphere of international relations” has written away Rama.
In the UN Security Council, Kosovo was criticised for implementing the Kosovo Central Bank regulation and for ignoring its influence on the Serb minority in Kosovo. However, it was praised for the transition period it has promised to implement this regulation.
Security Council members demanded that Kosovo and Serbia be committed to dialogue and implement agreements, as well as refrain from unilateral actions that could increase tensions. Serbia was also asked to hold responsible those involved in the armed attack on Zvecan Banjska.
At the UN meeting, called by Serbia, Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti defended the CEC's decision, which envisions only the euro being the currency for payment by preventing the use of the dinar. Meanwhile, Serbia's president, Aleksandar Vuciq, described this decision as “attack” on the Serb population in Kosovo.
Kurti said the BQC's regulation for cash operations, which went into effect on February 1st, does not prohibit the Serbian dinar, but makes the euro the only currency for payment.
He said that this decision, as well, does not prevent the Serbian government from providing financial support to Serbs in Kosovo.
“Any other suggestion is nothing but false propaganda aimed at promoting ethnic tensions”, Kurti said.












