Nov 18, 2011

LDK leader Isa Mustafa: No agreement to postpone presidential elections


Seremb Gjergji - Presidential Candidate

LDK leader Isa Mustafa denied on Thursday having reached an agreement with PDK leader Hashim Thaçi to postpone presidential elections for 2013. Mustafa said he heard about this only in the media and that he doesn’t know anything about the postponement of elections.
“It is true that I have met Prime Minister Hashim Thaçi. We met at the inauguration of the ‘Ibrahim Rugova’ highway, but we never discussed the possibility of changing the timeframe of elections outside the agreement that we reached for solving the problem of the President of Kosovo,” Mustafa said.
Daily newspaper Express on the other hand reports that Mustafa confirmed meeting Thaçi and discussing the postponement of presidential elections. The paper also notes that Mustafa tried to involve other actors in the process, by mentioning AAK principal deputy leader Blerim Shala. The Alliance for the Future of Kosovo (AAK) meanwhile denied there was an official meeting with Mustafa and Thaçi, but said in principle they support the idea of having presidential elections in 2013.
Currently the only independent candidate for the Presidential position is Seremb Gjergji. Others, have stated that are ready to candidate. 

PM Thaçi: Redefinition of borders is a very dangerous idea


Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaçi stated that the idea of the former Deputy Prime Minister Lutfi Haziri from LDK on the Redefinition of Borders between Kosovo and Serbia is dangerous and wrong. He also said at the Kosovo Assembly session yesterday that proposals to return to borders of 1956 have raised concerns among Kosovo’s international friends.
PM was surprised by the LDK for failing to publicly reject a statement by one of its leaders. “The division of Kosovo’s territory of Kosovo is very dangerous. Let me also express the concern of the Government for such surprising ideas which are in contravention to the Constitution of Kosovo and its laws, and at the same time I also express the concern of our international friends about ideas which are in contravention with the position of the Kosovo Assembly, the Government and all institutions of the Republic of Kosovo, in contravention with the will of the citizens of the Republic of Kosovo and international documents about Kosovo,” PM Thaçi said.
This important and other important issues for the state PM state that the Assembly must decide, but also recalled that the current Government would never allow the territory of the republic of Kosovo to be violated.
Member of the Parliament and former Interior Deputy Minister Fatmir Xhelili as saying that integrated border management is not a mechanism that solves border problems, “but with the current situation in the northern part of Kosovo, this mechanism can be a starting point for practical and political cooperation between Kosovo and Serbia”.
Xhelili, who was also head of the working group that drafted all documents and policies related to the integrated management of borders, also said that in discussions with Serbia and the EU in Brussels, the red lines should be the non-contesting of border crossing points and the border line.
While German Ambassador to Kosovo, Ernst Reichel, said Germany expects Serbia to give reliable evidence by December 9th that it will implement a constructive approach toward its neighbors. Good neighborly relations, Ernst added, implies dissolving parallel structures in the northern part of Kosovo.
“We must be convinced that agreements which have been reached are being implemented. Time is short, the meeting of the Council of Ministers will take place on December 9th, therefore we need as much as trust as possible, not only for new agreements but also for the implementation of agreements that have already been reached,” Reichel was quoted as saying.

Nov 2, 2011

Greek PM faces Franco-German grilling on referendum

By Emmanuel Jarry and Dina Kyriakidou
PARIS/ATHENS, Nov 2 (Reuters) - Greece's prime minister faces a grilling from the leaders of Germany and France on Wednesday after fighting to win the backing of his cabinet to hold a referendum on a 130-billion-euro ($178-billion) bailout package.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Germany's Angela Merkel summoned George Papandreou for crisis talks in Cannes, before a G20 summit of major world economies, to push for rapid implementation of measures to tackle the euro zone debt crisis, which Athens has thrown into doubt.
Sarkozy said the referendum announcement "took the whole of Europe by surprise" and his Europe minister, Jean Leonetti, told Reuters it should be held as soon as possible and preferably before mid-December.
Opinion polls suggest most Greeks think the deal thrashed out by euro zone leaders last week is a bad one, but much will depend on how Papandreou frames the debate, either on the bailout -- and the painful cuts it demands -- or membership of the euro, which remains popular. Greece's European partners will press for the latter.
"The referendum raises a fundamental question -- do you or do you not want to remain in the euro zone because if you do not accept the accord then that means not staying in the euro zone," Leonetti said.
Win or lose, Papandreou's gamble guarantees weeks of uncertainty just as the 17-nation European currency area is desperate for a period of calm to implement the remedies agreed to corral its sovereign debt crisis.
Some of Papandreou's party called for him to quit, accusing him of endangering Greek euro membership with his shock decision to call a popular vote, a move that pummelled the euro and global stocks.
But the cabinet support at least gives him a stay of execution before a confidence vote in parliament on Friday.
"The referendum will be a clear mandate and a clear message inside and outside Greece on our European course and participation in the euro," Papandreou told a cabinet meeting that lasted seven hours.
Even if he wins the confidence vote, the euro zone faces a period of policy vacuum in which markets can create havoc. Lose and Greece faces a disorderly default which would hammer Europe's banks and threaten the much larger economies of Italy and Spain, which the bloc may not have the means to bail out.
As a result, the Greek premier's move has aroused anger and surprise in equal measure around the world.
"That's enough now: Greeks out!" Kronen Zeitung, Austria's biggest-selling paper, said on its front page.
The chairman of euro zone finance ministers, Jean-Claude Juncker, said Greece could go bankrupt if voters rejected the bailout package and Japanese Finance Minister Jun Azumi said: "Everyone is bewildered."
Juncker, European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, IMF chief Christine Lagarde and an ECB official will also attend Wednesday's talks in the southern French resort town.
ECB IN SPOTLIGHT
Doubt about Europe's ability to contain the debt crisis has once more sent markets into a spin and put Italy firmly in the firing line.
The risk premium on Italian bonds over safe-haven German Bunds hit a euro-lifetime high on Tuesday, despite European Central Bank buying of its bonds.
Ireland's finance minister said the ECB would be forced to pledge "a wall of money" to buy bonds, something many of its policymakers are deeply uncomfortable about.
Until the Greek situation is clearer, last week's package of measures is likely to be in limbo, leaving the ECB as the only bulwark against market attacks.
The head of Germany's banking association, Michael Kemmer, said agreement on a 50 percent writedown of Greek debt by its private creditors would have to wait. "I can't imagine a debt exchange taking place before the referendum," he said.
Greek Conservative opposition leader Antonis Samaras said Papandreou had acted as a one-man roadblock.
"How can banks accept a haircut on their debt if they don't know if Greece accepts it in the first place?" he told lawmakers in a speech. "Papandreou has put the country in the centre of a global storm ... a government in such a state of panic is dangerous and must leave as soon as possible."
Meanwhile, another premier under fire, Italy's Silvio Berlusconi scrambled to come up with measures to placate markets, seeing senior aides and ministers ahead of an expected meeting of the cabinet later.
TIMING, RESULT IN DOUBT
Greek government spokesman Ilias Mosialos said the referendum would take place "as soon as possible, right after the basics of the bailout deal are formulated".
Greek officials have suggested it would probably be held in mid-January but the interior minister said it could happen as early as December.
The Greek press, including dailies traditionally friendly to the government, almost unanimously condemned Papandreou.
Centre-left newspaper Eleftherotypia described the prime minister on its front page as "The Lord of Chaos". Ethnos, another pro-government paper, called the referendum "suicidal".
Papandreou said Greece's partners would support its policies and the G20 meeting in Cannes should agree on policies that "make sure democracy is above market appetites".
But his move has made G20 host Sarkozy's efforts to coax big emerging nations such as China or India into throwing the euro zone a financial lifeline immeasurably more difficult and left his hopes of a triumphal Cannes summit in tatters.
Papandreou's most immediate hurdle is a parliamentary confidence vote on Friday which he is far from certain to win. Legislators begin debating at 1600 GMT on Wednesday.
Six senior members of the ruling PASOK socialists said he should make way for a "politically legitimate" administration.
During the cabinet meeting that wrapped up around 3 a.m., some ministers questioned the timing of the popular vote and criticised the fact they had been kept in the dark -- even the finance minister had not been told -- and a handful were openly against it, government sources said.
"I think this was the wrong decision and we must take it back," one minister was quoted as saying. "We must not risk our position in the euro."
A PASOK lawmaker quit the party, narrowing Papandreou's slim majority to 152 of 300 seats, and several others called for a government of national unity followed by a snap election.
Papandreou needs 151 votes to enact the referendum. If any of the dissenters votes against, it cannot be held, and elections would be likely instead which would also herald a period of uncertainty.
Greece is due to receive an 8-billion-euro IMF/EU aid tranche in mid-November, but that is likely to run out during January, around the time of the referendum, leaving the government with no funds if there is a "no" vote.
Berlin said it was an open question whether the next tranche of international aid could be paid before the referendum.
"How things proceed is yet to be seen. But according to everything we hear from Greece, there is no urgent need for the payout until mid-December," said German finance ministry spokesman Martin Kotthaus.