Greek minister expected in Belgrade
Greek Alternate Foreign Minister Dimitris Droutsas will arrive in Belgrade today for a two-day visit to Serbia.
Friday, 30.07.2010.
11:03
Greek Alternate Foreign Minister Dimitris Droutsas will arrive in Belgrade today for a two-day visit to Serbia. He is expected inform his interlocutors that the future of the region is within the European Union (EU) and that the Greek government's stand on the issue of Kosovo and Metohija is unaltered. Greek minister expected in Belgrade According to the announcement of the Greek Embassy, the aim of the visit of Dimitris Droutsas is to promote the initiative of Premier Georgios Papandreou to reopen the dialogue between Belgrade and Pristina after the advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and to discuss future steps with the Serbian authorities. Droutsas is also expected to be received by Serbian Orthodox Patriarch Irinej upon his arrival in Belgrade. The Greek official will hold bilateral talks with Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic, with whom he will sign a Memorandum of cooperation between Greece and Serbia on the EU issues. Droutsas is scheduled to meet with Serbian President Boris Tadic the same day. Droutsas is expected to leave for Pristina from Belgrade, where he will meet with representatives the Kosovo Albanian institutions. Greece is one of five EU member states that did not recognize the unilateral declaration of independence made by Kosovo's Albanians in February 2008. The other countries are Spain, Romania, Slovakia and Cyprus.
Greek minister expected in Belgrade
According to the announcement of the Greek Embassy, the aim of the visit of Dimitris Droutsas is to promote the initiative of Premier Georgios Papandreou to reopen the dialogue between Belgrade and Pristina after the advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and to discuss future steps with the Serbian authorities.Droutsas is also expected to be received by Serbian Orthodox Patriarch Irinej upon his arrival in Belgrade.
The Greek official will hold bilateral talks with Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremić, with whom he will sign a Memorandum of cooperation between Greece and Serbia on the EU issues.
Droutsas is scheduled to meet with Serbian President Boris Tadić the same day.
Droutsas is expected to leave for Priština from Belgrade, where he will meet with representatives the Kosovo Albanian institutions.
Greece is one of five EU member states that did not recognize the unilateral declaration of independence made by Kosovo's Albanians in February 2008.
The other countries are Spain, Romania, Slovakia and Cyprus.
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