euractiv.com 
<https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/news/serbia-still-firmly-opposes-kosovo-recognition-un-accession/>
  


Serbia still firmly opposes Kosovo recognition, UN accession


Sofia Mandilara

~3 minutes

  _____  

Serbia is ready to do “certain things in our European way” but will maintain 
its red lines on Kosovo recognition and UN accession, President Aleksandar 
Vučić said on live TV a day after another round of talks on the normalisation 
of Belgrade-Pristina relations.

Vučić met with Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti and EU representatives on 
Saturday in Ohrid, North Macedonia to discuss the annexe of a plan to normalise 
relations between Serbia and Kosovo. While nothing was signed, the EU announced 
that both sides had agreed.

But similar to after a meeting in Brussels in February, Vučić backtracked in 
front of a domestic audience.

“We’ve had a round of dialogue that European and world powers have made 
extremely prominent in the media, and important. The conversation is never easy 
or simple when there are sides that are, unfortunately, still against each 
other and have opposing interests”, Vučić said.

“It will become more difficult in the next six months or year. The good thing 
is that we no longer rely only on Pristina’s goodwill, but our readiness to do 
certain things in our European way”, he said, explaining why “nothing was 
signed” in Ohrid.

“We didn’t sign the so-called Agreement, nor the Annex, first of all, because 
Serbia is a recognised state, and the so-called Republic of Kosovo, to me, is 
not. As president, I choose my words carefully because even my statements can 
be binding for the country. Our red lines are recognition and Kosovo’s 
ascension to the UN. Serbia is ready to work on the implementation up to its 
red lines.”

He added that conditions proposed by Kurti for establishing the contentious 
Association of Serb Municipalities, were not accepted. He maintained that the 
association was

“Kurti stated his three pillars, which were not accepted, for the Serbian 
Municipalities Association. And I said, not a problem, I can just leave and say 
thank you, goodbye, because that means that nothing we had worked on in 2013 
and 2015 makes any sense.”

He then told the media that he would never sign the agreement.

“I didn’t want to sign the agreement on the implementing annexe last night nor 
the EU-backed agreement [in Brussels last month], I don’t want to sign any 
international legally binding documents with Kosovo because Serbia does not 
recognise its independence,” he said.

“I have excruciating pain in my right hand, I can only sign with my right hand, 
and that pain is expected to continue for the next four years,” Serbia’s Vucic 
said on live TV.

(EURACTIV.rs | Bojana Zimonjić Jelisavac, Alice Taylor | EURACTIV.com)

 

-- 
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/01ba01d95b06%249793fd90%24c6bbf8b0%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to