Hasani: Vuciq targets Kosovo's further isolation and hostility with the West with its seven points

Former Constitutional Court Chairman and Law and International Relations Professor Enver Hasani has spoken about the 7 requirements Serbia President Aleksandar Vuciq made Friday in response to developments in northern Kosovo. Hasan in an interview for Euronews Albania has said Vuciq intends to achieve two goals, [...]
Hasan in an interview for Euronews Albania has said Vuciq intends to achieve two goals -- one for the interior public and another for the international public.
“Plan is designed in that way that, I would set two goals, the first goal is the interior one and done for the interior Serbian public, to calm his voters there and in Kosovo, to say that the Serbian government and state are doing something” has said Hasani.
Vuciq's next goal, according to Hasan “, is international and is most dangerous, even though it appears invisible at first glance”.
“It is more dangerous because it aims at further frustration and decay of Kosovo's international position, further isolation. Some of its provisions are pledges that Kosovo has taken to Brussels and Ohrid, and their nature is known, while others are extinguishable to catch a special social zone, the return of status quo antenna. Even though there have been scriptures here even from Albanians who on the same day have demanded the return of the status quo ante and the cancellation of other actions that have been taken in the last 2-3 years then the formation of separate trials and prosecutors, etc. These are irreplaceable and they're fuses that are made to create mist in his” opinion.
According to him, the rest “as long as they are part of the international commitments legally made by Kosovo, these are serious issues facing consensus on both sides of the Atlantic”
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The former head of the Constitutional Court, speaking of elections in the north, has said the lack of representation of Serbs goes to the expense of the Kosovo side.
There's no tax without representation in the West, no one understands you at all. We Albanians have won sympathy in the post-era Cold War, precisely because Serbs denied us the right to political representation. The representation of Serbs in the north is zero.” Has Hasani said.
For this, he has blamed Government, saying that the moment it was announced that there are “9 voters in each of the municipalities must be sought out by the mayors.
“Because the West supported us, he said it is Kosovo's legal right to the north, because it's our right, but when you see it's not legitimate you shouldn't eat that game like we did and therefore we'll never have understanding”.
Hasan says the demand for elections, association and the function of courts in the north “appear to be Vuciki's demands, but to be Sjare.
Some of them are friends. The question of elections, association and civil order in the north are of friends. You have an obligation to find political means to turn local Serbs into system” has been praised by Hasani.












