euractiv.com 
<https://www.euractiv.com/section/enlargement-neighbourhood/news/kosovo-serbia-leaders-meet-to-discuss-implementation-of-eu-peace-plan/>
  


Kosovo, Serbia leaders meet to discuss implementation of EU peace plan


Alexandra Brzozowski

5–6 minutes

  _____  

Leaders of Kosovo and Serbia meet under EU mediation in Ohrid, North Macedonia, 
on Saturday (18 March) to discuss the implementation of a deal on normalising 
ties agreed in principle last month, essential for their hopes of joining the 
EU.

Serbia’s President Aleksandar Vučić and Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti will 
sit down for talks chaired by the EU’s chief diplomat Josep Borrell, who 
oversaw their previous face-to-face meeting in Brussels last month where 
initial progress was made.

“An agreement is good, an implementation path is better – and this meeting that 
we agreed, which is going to take place tomorrow in Ohrid, in order to define 
the practical steps that have to be followed – in concrete timelines, what 
needs to be done, [by] when and how,” Borrell told reporters in Skopje on 
Friday.

The meeting will focus on how to fulfil an 11-point agreement the EU has put on 
the table designed to help draw a line under decades of enmity.

These latest talks follow months of shuttle diplomacy to push the EU plan that 
has been backed by the United States and all 27 EU member states.

Tensions between Serbia and its former province, whose 1.8 million people are 
mostly ethnic Albanian, are still high nearly 25 years after a war between 
ethnic Albanian insurgents and Serb government forces.

Kosovo declared independence in 2008 with US and EU backing, but Serbia refuses 
to recognise it and the Serbian constitution considers Kosovo an integral part 
of its territory.

Bilateral ties need to be mended for Serbia and Kosovo to achieve their 
strategic goal of joining the EU. In recent years, clashes flared up between 
local authorities and Kosovo’s Serb minority.

Saturday’s meeting follows talks in Brussels last month where the two sides 
moved closer to a deal by giving their tacit approval 
<https://www.euractiv.com/section/enlargement-neighbourhood/news/serbia-kosovo-move-closer-to-eu-brokered-deal-on-normalising-ties/>
  to the EU-brokered peace plan but fell short of deciding on an annexe, which 
is meant to spell out steps to implement the final deal.



Senior EU diplomats described the February meeting as the first time the 
dialogue moved away from mere crisis management to actual discussions about 
normalisation.

Details of the arrangement, and other contentious issues, are expected to be 
part of that annexe on implementing the deal as well as previous commitments.

The EU’s Special Representative Miroslav Lajčák travelled to Kosovo and Serbia 
before the Ohrid talks, and both sides have provided comments on the 
implementation annexe.

“We will discuss (…), and we will produce a consolidated version of the Annex 
based on their feedback. And then, I hope, Kosovo and Serbia will be able to 
agree on the final result of these discussions,” Borrell said.

According to the 11-point text, neither side will resort to violence to resolve 
a dispute or seek to prevent the other from joining international bodies – a 
key demand from Kosovo.

Belgrade is not required to formally recognise Kosovo as an independent state 
but agrees to recognise official documents such as passports, diplomas and 
licence plates and not to block Kosovo’s membership in any international 
organisation, including the EU.

The plan, however, also calls on both parties “to ensure an appropriate level 
of self-management for the Serbian community in Kosovo and the ability for 
service provision in specific areas, including the possibility for financial 
support by Serbia”

Serbia has insisted that Kosovo establish an association of Serb-majority 
municipalities, but Pristina has been reluctant to allow a Belgrade-backed Serb 
Association of municipalities, fearing this could lead to a breakaway enclave 
that would undermine its sovereignty and violate its constitution.

Borrell is expected to brief the EU’s foreign minister on the progress of the 
talks during their regular meeting in Brussels on Monday and EU leaders during 
their regular March summit later next week.

An agreement between Serbia and Kosovo is expected to bolster economic 
opportunities and EU integration not only for the two countries but also for 
the rest of the Western Balkans, comprising Montenegro, North Macedonia, 
Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Albania.

Bilateral ties need to be mended for Serbia and Kosovo to achieve their 
strategic goal of joining the EU.

Nevertheless, Kurti and Vučić have over the past three weeks traded barbs, 
insisting that many issues remained unresolved that would prevent an agreement.

On the eve of the talks, several thousand people gathered in Belgrade to 
protest against the Western-backed deal to normalise ties with Kosovo, which 
they view as a recognition of Kosovo’s independence.

Protesters held Serbian flags and banners reading “Kosovo is not for sale,” 
“Serbia, not European Union,” and “No to capitulation.”

Serbia has so far relied on its traditional ally Russia, a veto-wielding member 
of the UN Security Council, and other countries that do not recognise Kosovo, 
including five EU members, to prevent it from joining the United Nations.

Washington, meanwhile, believes an agreement over the normalisation of ties 
between Serbia and Kosovo this year is “entirely” possible, Gabriel Escobar, 
the senior US diplomat for the Western Balkans, said earlier this week.

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic]

 

-- 
http:www.antic.org
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/000201d9597f%242de1ed40%2489a5c7c0%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to