Andjelkovic: Kurti's policy is "no Serbs, no problems"
Former President of the Executive Council of Kosovo and Metohija, Zoran Andjelkovic, emphasized that the intention of Kosovo's Prime Minister Albin Kurti to form the Community of Serb Municipalities based on the "Croatian model" actually represented the policy of "no Serbs, no problems," Kurir reports.
"There is no progress when it comes to the CSM. They have been talking for a long time about creating the CSM based on the Croatian model, which means that there will be no Serbs involved because what kind of Serbian community exists in Croatia and in their politics? And if there are no Serbs, there are no problems. Over the past 30 years, especially since Kurti took charge of the Pristina institutions, they have been determined to expel Serbs at all costs," Andjelkovic said.
He stated that Pristina devises various actions and provocations to accelerate this "process."
"Let's remember the dozens of break-ins into church buildings, the shooting of Serbian boys on Christmas Eve, the harassment with license plates, the confiscation of land, and the shooting of Jovanovic near Zubin Potok. These are all actions designed to provoke Serbs into conflict so that they can be expelled or forced to leave on their own. There are two channels. One is what Kurti is doing, and the other is what Germany has been doing for a long time in the former Yugoslavia, including what they are doing today. Kurti won't do anything, and they reward him by initiating the procedure for admission to the Council of Europe," Andjelkovic explained.
He also points out the declaration prepared for the Council of Europe Summit in Reykjavik regarding the territorial integrity of Georgia, Ukraine, and Moldova, which does not mention the territorial integrity of other member states of that organization, and that Serbia's amendment was not accepted.
"Both Serbia and Azerbaijan are members, and so is Cyprus, to name a few. It is clear that Germany is helping Kurti carry out these actions. And he continues his activities without any hindrance, which is the expulsion of Serbs from Kosovo and Metohija," Andjelkovic emphasized.
He raises the question of whether France and other major powers will react.
"The proposal for resolving the Kosovo and Metohija issue is Franco-German. Historically, we are closer to France, but it is clear that the proposal is German. The fact that Albin Kurti is doing all this without any reaction from the EU indicates, at the very least, that he has support for extremist-terrorist actions. This is when major powers decide that something is 'white,' even though it is 'gray,' and anyone who says it's 'gray' is an opponent of democracy and the EU. I got used to that back in the 1990s when they claimed they had the right to kill because they were fighting for freedom," Andjelkovic said.
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