Belgrade cannot give seat to Kosovo in UN (Danas)
Programme adopted by the Alliance for Serbia at the recent gathering on the Zlatibor Mountain contains 30 topics and Danas daily reported it had an insight into one of the working versions of this paper.
Dragan Djilas, former Belgrade mayor, Vuk Jeremic leader of Peoples’ Party, Zoran Lutovac leader of the Democratic Party (DS), Borko Stefanovic, a former Belgrade chief negotiator in Brussels talks and leader of Leftist Serbia (LS), Milan Stamatovic from Prosperous Serbia (ZS), Milos Jovanovic leader of the Democratic Party of Serbia (DSS), Bosko Obradovic leader of Dveri Movement and Slavisa Ristic from Fatherland Movement participated in the gathering.
Although “Zlatibor Charter” does not specifically refer to Serbia’s EU path, Danas source close to the Alliance explains, there were talks on that topic as well, and participants agreed “Serbia should wait with its accession to the EU, in order to see how the EU would organize itself in the future and what the fate of NATO Alliance would be, whether it would dissolve or remain.”
One of the main aims of this programme is to “create conditions for a fair and democratic elections in Serbia, without pressure on voters, buying votes and using state resources for political parties’ interests.”
When it comes to Kosovo and Metohija issue, the document said the Alliance for Serbia “would pledge for reaching a just and sustainable solution through dialogue with Kosovo Albanians, in full accordance with the Constitution of the Republic of Serbia, UN SC Resolution 1244 and international law,” and they would object to “any act that could have as a consequence affirmation of the international status of Kosovo, including the membership of the ”so-called Kosovo state” to the UN.”
Danas also reported, the document object to “conducting any referendum, including the one on Kosovo, under existing undemocratic conditions.”
It also included strong actions against crime and corruption, reaching full media freedom, improving the status of vulnerable groups, including the war veterans and workers affected by privatization processes, passing the law on verifying origin of properties applying to all public officials from 1999 onwards, Danas daily added.