Kosovo says deal on Serbia ties possible

Kosovo's president is optimistic about normalising relations this year with Serbia, but that country's president is not so sure about it.

Kosovo President Hashim Thaci

Kosovo President Hashim Thaci is optimistic about normalising relations with Serbia this year. (AAP)

Kosovo's president is hopeful about reaching a deal with Serbia this year on normalising ties despite a recent increase in tensions and said a planned meeting on July 1 in Paris could prove a turning point.

Serbia's President Aleksandar Vucic, speaking at the same event in Slovakia on Friday, said he was more pessimistic but that both sides must keep seeking a compromise.

Majority-Albanian Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008, almost a decade after NATO air strikes ended Belgrade's control of the territory following a brutal counter-insurgency there by Serbian security forces.

But Serbia, whose constitution still sees Kosovo as Serb territory, has been blocking Kosovo from joining international institutions such as Interpol and UNESCO. It also still provides financial aid to ethnic Serbs in Kosovo.

"This process (of trying to normalise ties) is now in crisis, which brings opportunity for final agreement," Kosovo's President Hashim Thaci told the Globsec conference in the Slovak capital Bratislava.

"I believe this agreement can be reached this year."

Last month tensions in the region spiked following Kosovan police operations in a region of the small landlocked country that is mainly populated by Serbs and still pledges allegiance to Belgrade.

Serbia put its troops on full alert but Vucic also told the parliament in Belgrade on May 27 that the country had to accept it had lost control of Kosovo. Serbia must either normalise relations with Kosovo through agreement or maintain "a frozen conflict", he said.

On Friday Vucic told the Bratislava conference he aimed to maintain peace in the region.

"I'm very much pessimistic (about a deal)," he said.

"We need to find a solution. If the political situation today is that bad it means other people will have to do it in the future. We need to find a solution, it has to be a solution in which both sides make concessions."

Vucic is attempting a balancing act by maintaining both Serbia's European Union aspirations and close ties with Russia and China. Kosovo's independence is not recognised by five EU member states, by Russia or China.


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Source: AAP

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