The situation surrounding Russian Defense Minister Sergei Lavrov’s visit to Belgrade announced earlier this week is “extremely complicated” because some countries cannot be overcome, Serbian Prime Minister Ana Brnabic said today.
The visit was announced following an agreement reached in late May during a telephone conversation between the Presidents of Russia and Serbia on the continuation of Russian gas supplies to Serbia over the next three years, at favorable prices. .
The news was announced by Serbia, a candidate country for EU membership, at a time when the coalition was trying to break free from Russian fossil fuels as part of sanctions it adopted due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
While negotiating its EU membership, Belgrade maintains close ties with the Kremlin. Although Serbia has condemned the UN invasion of Ukraine, it refuses to agree to sanctions against Moscow.
Serbian President Aleksandar Vuτςiτς regularly states that Belgrade is under strong pressure from the West for this reason.
Speaking today on Pink TV, the Serbian prime minister acknowledged that her country’s position was “difficult”, “in a world where, unfortunately, no one wants to talk anymore, much less listen to anyone else”.
Brnabic explained that Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic was working to organize the visit and that he had “a series of meetings with representatives of Russia, the United States, Germany and the EU”.
“The situation is extremely complicated,” Brnabic said, because of the “logistics” and more precisely the “overflights” of countries on the route of the Russian government plane.
As of February 25, the day after the invasion, Sergei Lavrov has been the target of EU sanctions, as has Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The Russian minister was scheduled to arrive in Serbia tomorrow, Monday, and continue his visit there on Tuesday, before heading to Turkey. In Belgrade, he is scheduled to meet with Serbian President, Serbian counterpart Nikola Selakovic and Serbian Orthodox Church Patriarch Porphyrios.
The Serbian daily Vecernje Novosti reported in its online edition that “Lavrov’s visit is uncertain”. According to the newspaper, three of Serbia’s neighbors – Bulgaria, northern Macedonia and Montenegro – have banned Russian government aircraft from flying over their territory.
Vuτςiτς’s office announced that the Serbian president would meet with the Russian ambassador in Belgrade tomorrow, Monday morning.
Aleksandar Vuτςi ίδιος himself had hinted on Thursday that the organization of this visit is not without obstacles and that the visit is “complicated”.
Source: ΑΠΕ-ΜΠΕ
Source: Capital

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