From Reuters:
“Kosovo and Serbia agree to
resume flights after two-decade gap”
Kosovo and Serbia agreed on
Monday to launch direct commercial flights after a two-decade interval in a
deal mediated by the United States in an attempt to push the two former foes
closer to normalising relations. Direct flights were halted in 1998 when war
broke out in Kosovo between Albanian insurgents and Serbian security forces.
Serbia lost control of Kosovo after NATO bombing in 1999 to drive out Serb
forces, ending a counter-insurgency in which more than 13,000 people, mainly
local Albanians, were killed. Monday's deal was signed at the U.S. embassy in
Berlin. "This event marks another step in our efforts to normalise
relations between Kosovo and Serbia," Kosovo President Hashim Thaci said
in a statement. Thaci said the deal was reached with the
"contribution" of the U.S. President Donald Trump's national security
adviser, Robert O'Brien, and U.S. ambassador to Berlin, Richard Grenell. Grenell
was appointed by Trump in October last year as special envoy for talks between
Belgrade and Pristina. "President Donald Trump once again led us to an
historic victory," Grenell wrote on his twitter account. There were no
details on when the flights would start but officials in Kosovo said that
Eurowings, a low-cost company owned by Lufthansa, would be involved. The road
distance from Pristina to Belgrade is 350 km (218 miles), around four hours by
car. NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg welcomed the deal. NATO has some
4,000 peacekeepers in Kosovo and is responsible for the control of Kosovo's
airspace. "This is an important step which will make the circulation of
people and goods easier and faster within the Western Balkans region,"
Stoltenberg said in a statement. Kosovo has now been recognized by more than
110 countries including the United States, but not by Serbia, Russia or China. The
United States and the EU have encouraged Serbia and Kosovo to normalize
relations. If they do, Kosovo would be able to apply for membership of the
United Nations, a move that Serbia’s old ally Russia is currently blocking. Talks
between Kosovo and Serbia to normalise relations came to a halt in November
2018 when Kosovo introduced a 100 percent tax on goods produced in Serbia. Belgrade,
which still considers Kosovo as part of its territory, said it will not return
in the negotiating table until the tariffs are lifted.
^ Serbia and Kosovo are two
independent countries that have a shared history and hopefully now a shared
future. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/kosovo-serbia-agree-resume-flights-164637546.html?guccounter=1
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