Serbia’s new government is prepared to make “compromises” over Kosovo, Prime Minister Milos Vucevic told AFP during a wide-ranging interview on Tuesday.
Since taking office in May, Vucevic has helped Serbia tread a delicate diplomatic line, as Belgrade simultaneously seeks to join the European Union, secure its place in future energy markets, and remain on friendly terms with both the East and West.
Ahead of a high-profile meeting between Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic and Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti in Brussels on Wednesday, Vucevic assured AFP that Belgrade was ready to negotiate despite a recent flaring of tensions between the neighbours.
“We are ready to make agreements and compromises, compromises that meanneither side is an absolute winner or an absolute loser,” said Vucevic, who took office in May following a dominant victory at the polls late last year by the ruling Serbian Progressive Party.
“Anything else is not and cannot have long-term sustainability,” added the former defence minister, who also spent a decade as mayor of the northern city of Novi Sad.
Vucevic is officially the head of government in Serbia, but is largely considered to be subordinate to Vucic — who has ruled the country for more than a decade.
The talks in Brussels come with tensions having flared between Serbia and Kosovo for months after the Pristina government made the euro its only legal currency and effectively outlawed the Serbian dinar in its territory.
The move followed the collapse of EU- and US-backed negotiations between the two sides and renewed unrest in Serb-majority areas across northern Kosovo.
Animosity between Kosovo and Serbia has raged since the war between Serbian forces and ethnic Albanian insurgents in the late 1990s that drew a NATO intervention against Belgrade, which views Kosovo as a breakaway region.
Pristina declared independence in 2008, a move that Serbia has refused to acknowledge as it views Kosovo as the nation’s historic homeland.
Reaching a lasting settlement has long been seen as a key benchmark to potentially unlock Serbia’s long-sought-after goal of securing EU membership.
Another likely obstacle to joining the bloc is Serbia’s maintenance of friendly ties with Russia, for which it has long been chided by Western powers.
But in a recent interview published by the Financial Times, Vucic acknowledged that the country had sold hundreds of millions of euros worth of ammunition to Western countries that has likely been shipped to Ukraine to help fight off invading Russia troops.
According to the report, Serbia has exported ammunition that ended up in Ukraine through third parties worth an estimated 800 million euros ($855 million), a figure that Vucic said was largely accurate.
“It is not a Serbian contribution to one of the belligerents,” insisted Vucevic.
“I don’t want to prevent companies from selling our ammunition to Spain, the Czech Republic, the United States… because it is not prohibited and it is not immoral for us to produce weapons and ammunition which, unfortunately, are also used where there is war.”
Serbia is a rare outlier in Europe after Belgrade refused to join sanctions against Russia in the wake of its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Serbia has been reliant for years on support from the Kremlin and Beijing to prevent the UN from recognising Kosovo as an independent state.
On the domestic front, Vucevic has also had his hands full, after inheriting an ongoing dispute over the future of a controversial lithium mine in western Serbia.
Debate over the safety of the project sparked mass demonstrations in late 2021 that forced authorities to halt the project, even as officials hinted it could be kick-started again with the proper oversight.
Earlier this month, Australian mining giant Rio Tinto released an eagerly anticipated environmental impact report on the mine, which holds one of Europe’s largest reserves of lithium — a strategically valuable metal crucial for electric vehicle battery production.
The premier said mining has long been an engine of the country’s development but insisted that any future project must face rigorous scrutiny to ensure that no environmental damage is caused by the mine.
“We will never allow anyone to destroy Serbia’s rivers, fields, lakes, forests, meadows, mountains and plains,” said Vucevic.
“But we will also not give up on something that could be a strong economic potential and motor for Serbia’s development in the future,” he added.