David Cameron, the Minister of Foreign Affairs in the United Kingdom, made his first visit abroad to Kosovo, in which he promised continued support for Kosovo.
The former Foreign Minister, Paskal Milo, reads the visit of the British Foreign Minister Cameron to Pristina as a first message that the international community gives for Kosovo, he also offered his country's support in several other aspects.
Britain, according to him, clearly showed support for the issue of security and integration of the country in the EU, even though it is not a member country.
According to Milos, Cameron provided great support for Kosovo, guaranteeing that Great Britain will help Kosovo throughout the processes it is going through, both at home and abroad.
Cameron's visit is important from several points of view, the first is that a foreign secretary finds time to make his first visit abroad to Kosovo.
This has its own meaning, because Britain is a big country, etc. The second, the visit to Kosovo, precisely in these circumstances takes on a different meaning and is precisely the first message that the international community gives to Kosovo.
The first was the liberalization of visas, and the second was the visit of Cameron, who is not a member of the UK, but who goes to Kosovo on the same EU line, and it is a great message.
And thirdly, the most important are Cameron's statements in Pristina, with the leaders of Kosovo, where I underline the support in two main directions, the first, in the matter of security, where he underlined that there are 600 British troops already in Kosovo and that there is readiness for them strengthened more and secondly, Great Britain engages in two other important aspects which are the issue of international recognition and secondly in the issue of Kosovo's integration in international institutions, said the former minister.
For Professor Milo, Serbia was extremely hurt by Foreign Secretary Cameron's visits and messages to Kosovo.
'Direct messages, that's why this visit was important and the visit itself and the message caused a reaction in Belgrade.
It was Minister Dacic, who reacted very harshly with unacceptable language for a diplomat to Cameron's address, so Serbia does not agree.
She was hurt by his visit to Pristina, and as a result there is a reaction that is not even in line with the European tendency to reduce tensions between Kosovo and Serbia and to go towards that much talked about agreement for the normalization of relations between the two countries.
So, the visit was a good start for Kosovo's diplomacy," she said.
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