4

Monday, 04.05.2009.

16:59

Electricity back in most villages

Most Serb villages in Kosovo have electricity again after paying a one-time installment of EUR 26 per household.

Izvor: Beta

Electricity back in most villages IMAGE SOURCE
IMAGE DESCRIPTION

4 Komentari

Sortiraj po:

lowe

pre 15 godina

"And serbia announced that the IMF loan will be finally available on May 11th. Coincidence?
(Agim, 4 May 2009 19:10) "

You mean your electricity to the K-Serbs is important enough to secure $3 billion? Please!

Too bad "Kosova" is still outside the IMF or else you could have used its entry to add to your "conincidence" hypothesis. Anyway statehood is not a prerequisite for IMF membership unlike the UN which Pristina will be continued to be vetoed until it reaches an agreement with Belgrade.

About the loan -- actually I do not agree that Serbia should even borrow anything from the IMF -- the conditions attached would be onerous, and the loan will put a strain on future Serbians because loans have to be repaid with interest.

Dim Tuc

pre 15 godina

“Most Serb villages in Kosovo have electricity again after paying a one-time installment of EUR 26 per household. They also signed a collective agreement with Kosovo's power company KEK.”

Done. So is that all the fuss was about? EUR 26 and signing an agreement? Gee, I thought it was supposed to be about a new method to exterminate the K Serbs. Guess I’ve been spending too much time reading comments.

“"This is a misunderstanding because KEK is calling for returnees to pay installment for 70 constructed homes, not the 30 families that have returned to Brestovik," Petrović said.”

While I don’t exactly understand this sentence, I can understand something about 30 returnee families and 70 returnee constructed homes, and that’s just in one little town in Kosovo. But I thought it was necessary to prevent 5 Albanian families from reconstructing their own homes in N Mitrovica until Serbs are “allowed” to return elsewhere in Kosovo. Silly me …

Dim Tuc

pre 15 godina

“Most Serb villages in Kosovo have electricity again after paying a one-time installment of EUR 26 per household. They also signed a collective agreement with Kosovo's power company KEK.”

Done. So is that all the fuss was about? EUR 26 and signing an agreement? Gee, I thought it was supposed to be about a new method to exterminate the K Serbs. Guess I’ve been spending too much time reading comments.

“"This is a misunderstanding because KEK is calling for returnees to pay installment for 70 constructed homes, not the 30 families that have returned to Brestovik," Petrović said.”

While I don’t exactly understand this sentence, I can understand something about 30 returnee families and 70 returnee constructed homes, and that’s just in one little town in Kosovo. But I thought it was necessary to prevent 5 Albanian families from reconstructing their own homes in N Mitrovica until Serbs are “allowed” to return elsewhere in Kosovo. Silly me …

lowe

pre 15 godina

"And serbia announced that the IMF loan will be finally available on May 11th. Coincidence?
(Agim, 4 May 2009 19:10) "

You mean your electricity to the K-Serbs is important enough to secure $3 billion? Please!

Too bad "Kosova" is still outside the IMF or else you could have used its entry to add to your "conincidence" hypothesis. Anyway statehood is not a prerequisite for IMF membership unlike the UN which Pristina will be continued to be vetoed until it reaches an agreement with Belgrade.

About the loan -- actually I do not agree that Serbia should even borrow anything from the IMF -- the conditions attached would be onerous, and the loan will put a strain on future Serbians because loans have to be repaid with interest.

Dim Tuc

pre 15 godina

“Most Serb villages in Kosovo have electricity again after paying a one-time installment of EUR 26 per household. They also signed a collective agreement with Kosovo's power company KEK.”

Done. So is that all the fuss was about? EUR 26 and signing an agreement? Gee, I thought it was supposed to be about a new method to exterminate the K Serbs. Guess I’ve been spending too much time reading comments.

“"This is a misunderstanding because KEK is calling for returnees to pay installment for 70 constructed homes, not the 30 families that have returned to Brestovik," Petrović said.”

While I don’t exactly understand this sentence, I can understand something about 30 returnee families and 70 returnee constructed homes, and that’s just in one little town in Kosovo. But I thought it was necessary to prevent 5 Albanian families from reconstructing their own homes in N Mitrovica until Serbs are “allowed” to return elsewhere in Kosovo. Silly me …

lowe

pre 15 godina

"And serbia announced that the IMF loan will be finally available on May 11th. Coincidence?
(Agim, 4 May 2009 19:10) "

You mean your electricity to the K-Serbs is important enough to secure $3 billion? Please!

Too bad "Kosova" is still outside the IMF or else you could have used its entry to add to your "conincidence" hypothesis. Anyway statehood is not a prerequisite for IMF membership unlike the UN which Pristina will be continued to be vetoed until it reaches an agreement with Belgrade.

About the loan -- actually I do not agree that Serbia should even borrow anything from the IMF -- the conditions attached would be onerous, and the loan will put a strain on future Serbians because loans have to be repaid with interest.