Gervailla's letter: Conjufca is trying to reason on its failure to communicate government-presidentiality, says it was due to distance.

Chief Parliamentary Glauk Konjufca has described the lack of communication between Government and Presidency in the critical days when it would be decided in Strasbourg whether Kosovo would enter the Council of Ministers' agenda to join the Council of Europe, right. Konjufca said this could have happened “for [...]
Chief Parliamentary Glauk Konjufca has described the lack of communication between Government and Presidency in the critical days when it would be decided in Strasbourg whether Kosovo would enter the Council of Ministers' agenda to join the Council of Europe, right.
Konjufca said this could have happened “due to the distance”, since President Vjosa Osmani was in the US.
I have understood this as an inability to inform the president of every detail from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. This, I assumed, could happen because of her visit to the United States. Because of the distance, certainly not every detail that changed every minute on the day of the vote we had on the part of the Council of Ministers for the Council of Europe can be divided and can be co-ordinated”, Konjufca said in a statement before reporters.
So I don't see the willpower on the part of the government and on the Foreign Affairs Ministry to do something intentional against the President, or to keep something hidden. It's just technically, I guess, a long distance that we're talking about that day, which is unlikely that every minute's changes, the proposals of every minute the Government of Kosovo has made, could create that atmosphere for Kosovo to enter the agenda, could not share it all with the presidency. And the presidency had its reaction, you've seen it. Surely as a result of what they thought would have to be set apart”, he added.
Failure to join the Council of Europe about two weeks ago involved a lack of communication between the Government and the Presidency, though the objects of these country's two central institutions are only a few steps apart.
Foreign Affairs Minister Donika Grovalla sent a letter to the president of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, Theodoros Rousopoulos (considered the wrong address) on the eve of the Committee of Ministers' meeting meeting meeting meeting, in a recent attempt to convince the ministers of the member states of this organisation to put Kosovo on the agenda.
Gervalla wrote about preparing a draft association of Serb majority municipalities that said would be handed over to the Constitutional Court for Review by the end of this month, expressing expectations that after these “concrete and tangible”, the Committee of Ministers would eventually decide on Kosovo's membership in the Council of Europe that now did not happen.
President Vjosa Osmani did not support this letter, and from the Presidency it was publicly said. Her adviser, Bekim Cupina, said the head of state had not consulted her.












