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Belgrade – The European Union’s special envoy for dialogue, Miroslav Lajak, after a two-day visit to Pristina, arrives in Belgrade.
Source: Tanjug
EPA / KOCA SULEJMANOVIC
According to announcements from Brussels, Lajak was supposed to convince officials there to bring the issue of the Serbian municipal community back to the negotiating table and thus allow the dialogue to continue, arriving in Belgrade this afternoon, where he will meet with the highest representatives of the authorities.
The results of Lajak’s dinner with Serbian President Aleksandar Vujic are known to be somewhat more concrete after the press conference he announced for today before leaving for Belgrade, but, judging from the course of the talks so far, the Lajak’s thought in Pristina failed.
Even before the plane Lajak landed in Pristina, the EU special envoy received a message from the Kosovo government that there had been nothing since the formation of the Serbian community of municipalities, and then HaimTai and Avdulah Hoti told him that the Only topic of dialogue was mutual recognition and that nothing will be applied before.
Representatives of the political parties with whom Lajak met, as well as the civil sector, judging by information from social networks and the media, emphasized dialogue as a process that goes without saying, but whose objective is exclusively a final agreement between Belgrade and Pristina, that is, mutual recognition.
“We are discussing a final agreement on mutual recognition. Nothing will be applied until the final agreement on mutual recognition is concluded and ratified in the Assembly. Then the implementation will begin,” Hoti clarified, and Lajak did not notice anything else from the others interlocutors. shades.
In such a situation, Lajak, in addition to, as he has said, hopes that Pristina’s proposal to continue the implementation of the Brussels agreement, can Belgrade ask and offer, so that the dialogue can continue?
“A far-reaching decision”, as Brussels’s expectations of Alexander Vui defined, is certainly not possible.
Regardless of the conviction of the EU Special Envoy that it is time to end the dialogue process and reach a comprehensive agreement, the final solution will not be without compromises and the position of Serbia and its President has not changed.
Probably aware of this, the mediator in the EU dialogue, in an interview with Cord, emphasized that the EU will provide as much time as necessary to reach an agreement without much acceleration.
“Experience has taught me that it is never good to set such deadlines and I have not set any deadlines,” Lajak said.
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