Vucic and Poroshenko about Serbia's sovereignty in Kosovo (RTS)
Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic arrived in Eskişehir (Turkey) where he met with President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko immediately after his arrival with whom he discussed bilateral relations and economic cooperation, reports radio Television of Serbia (RTS).
Vucic and Poroshenko discussed bilateral relations and economic cooperation, and the Ukrainian president said that his country respects the territorial integrity of Serbia and has asked Vucic to appeal politicians in Serbia not to conduct an anti-Ukrainian campaign.
"Crimea is Russia; Kosovo is Serbia" - Russian ambassador (B92, Politika, Blic)
Russian Ambassador Aleksandr Chepurin has announced the possibility of his country getting "even more deeply involved" in resolving the Kosovo problem, Serbian media quoted Belgrade based daily Politika.
Vulin: "You'll have no army - now go back to fighting old ladies" (B92, Tanjug, RTS, TV Pink)
Serbs in Kosovo do not support the formation of an army in Kosovo, and it will not be formed, Serbian Defense Minister Aleksandar Vulin has said.
Drecun: Without progress in dialogue what's the point?
Milovan Drecun, Chairman of the Committee for Kosovo of the Assembly of Serbia, told regional broadcaster N1 that it was uncertain whether dialogue in Brussels would continue by the end of this month, but that the more important question is what will be discussed and whether a move will be made.
President comments possible international conference (Tanjug, B92)
Serbian president planning to hide behind referendum (N1, Danas)
The Serbian President is planning to hide behind the will of the people expressed at a referendum on Kosovo after years of taking decisions on his own, leading opposition politician Sanda Raskovic Ivic told Belgrade daily Danas.
"My singing has helped," Dacic tells his critics (Kurir, Tanjug, B92)
Survey: 63 percent of Serbs support frozen conflict in Kosovo, 9 percent for agreement at any cost (Tanjug, RTV)
Significantly more than half of Serbian citizens, 63 percent precisely, think that the frozen conflict in Kosovo is the best solution at the moment. Every second citizen believes the Kosovo status would not be resolved in the next 5 to 10 years.