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Serbia accuses Kosovo of 'blackmail' after talks in Brussels | DW | 17.07.2020


Deutsche Welle (www.dw.com)

3 minutes

  _____  

The respective leaders of the Balkan neighbors have met in Brussels for 
face-to-face talks. The EU is hoping for frosty relations to thaw but 
discussions got off to an inauspicious start.

Face-to-face talks between Serbia and Kosovo got off to a bumpy start in 
Brussels on Thursday as Belgrade accused Pristina of being unrealistic in its 
demands.

More than two decades after clashing in war, the Balkan neighbors are at 
loggerheads over a number of issues, principally Kosovo's statehood, which has 
been backed by some 100 countries, including the United States and all but five 
member states of the European Union.

EU officials brokered a videoconference last Sunday between Serbian President 
Aleksandar Vucic and Kosovo's new Prime Minister Avdullah Hoti. And on Thursday 
the pair went a step further by meeting in person in Brussels in an effort to 
thaw frosty relations.

Read more: Kosovo's Hashim Thaci says talks with Hague prosecutors 'price of 
freedom' <https://www.dw.com/en/kosovo-thaci-hague-war-crimes/a-54164748> 

Too much, too soon

However, after the summit in the Belgian capital Vucic accused Hoti of coming 
not to talk, but to try to "blackmail" Serbia.

"Is it pleasant to sit on the other end from Hoti and listen to the gibberish, 
saying that they are the only victims and we are the only villains? No," Vucic 
said.

The Serbian president said he came with the intention of moving a step closer 
to solving the outstanding disagreements between Belgrade and Pristina. "But it 
is obvious that the differences are too big at the moment, concerning all 
important and strategic matters," Vucic said.

"They would like to solve (everything) overnight, with an attempt to make 
Serbia accept everything they want."

EU and Kosovo more optimistic

Hoti was more positive regarding the discussions, saying they had been able to 
make progress on economic development.

But the underlying issue is territorial. Serbia refuses to acknowledge the 
independence that its former province, home mainly to ethnic Albanians, 
proclaimed in 2008.

Nevertheless, EU foreign affairs chief Josep Borrell hailed the fact the two 
leaders were talking for the second time in a matter of days as a sign of the 
pair's commitment to healing wounds.

He urged them to adopt a "spirit of compromise and pragmatism."

Discussions will continue next week among officials and another high-level 
meeting is on the agenda for September, the EU's special representative for the 
talks, Miroslav Lajcak, said.

While Kosovo seeks complete recognition of its sovereignty, Serbia is under 
pressure to resolve the issue if it wants to make headway in its EU accession 
bid.

jsi/aw (AFP, dpa)

 

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