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 bne October 2020 Southeast Europe I 43
 Among important projects that were agreed, Mali singled out the completion of the motorway from Nis to Pristina worth €1.1bn and the reconstruction of the Nis-Pristina railway line estimated at €1bn that will be financed by the US government.
Mali underlined that it is especially important that the US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), with an annual budget of more than $60bn, agreed to open an office in Belgrade.
“This is of great importance because
it will bring an even larger number of investors, give credibility to the entire process of economic development of our country and help improve our credit rating,” the minister said.
He added that one of the most important parts of the agreement is that Kosovo agreed to be part of the so-called "mini- Schengen", which is an economic area so far agreed between Serbia, Albania and North Macedonia.
Meanwhile, Kosovan PM Hoti announced that the US president pledged that the projects agreed in Washington will be implemented within a year, Gazeta Express reported.
Hoti also announced important news for his country: Israel will recognise Kosovo and soon both countries will establish diplomatic relations.
“This is extraordinary news for the state of Kosovo. This support from the White House is essential to our journey towards the EU, the UN and other international organisations," Hoti said.
The Kosovan prime minister said he
is convinced that the economic deal represents a big step towards reaching a final agreement with Belgrade.
"We see this agreement as a big step towards reaching a final agreement and mutual recognition with Serbia," Hoti said.
The delegations from Serbia and Kosovo started the meetings in Washington on September 3 mediated by White House
EU’s relationship with Turkey has reached “watershed moment” says foreign policy chief Borrell
bne IntellIiNews
The European Union’s relationship with Turkey is at a turning point, the bloc’s top diplomat said on September 15. Speaking in the European Parliament, Josep Borrell urged Ankara to back down from conflict in the eastern Mediterranean and uphold the basic human rights of its citizens.
“[Our ties] are at a watershed moment in history, which will go to one side or the other, depending on what happens in the next days,” Borrell said.
EU leaders are set to meet at a September 24-25 summit to discuss Turkey and further consider whether a strategy driven by sanctions should be adopted. Ankara’s gunboat-backed showdown with bloc members Greece and Cyprus over gas and oil exploration entitlements in various parts of the eastern Mediterranean is top of the agenda, while the Turkish interventions in the Libyan and Syrian civil wars, and Turkey's bellicose posturing on the side of Azerbaijan following its border skirmishes with Armenia in July,
are also causing consternation, with eurocrats concerned that Turkey is increasingly asserting itself as a regional bully. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s stark lurch into authoritarianism since the failed coup against his administration in July 2016 had already rid Brussels of any notion that Turkey could progress its decades-long ambition of becoming an EU member in the foreseeable future.
Call for “tangible solidarity”
Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis called on September 15 for “tangible solidarity” from the EU in tackling both the migrant crisis and east Mediterranean tensions with Turkey.
Mitsotakis was reported by Reuters as saying that Greece was ready to enter exploratory talks with Turkey “immediately” on the maritime zones if Ankara ended its “provocations” in the region.
Turkey’s Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said his country has been proposing to restart exploratory talks with Greece. “Exploratory talks
actually cover all disputed issues between Turkey and Greece... The previous government [in Greece]... didn’t want to actually restart. And this government also has not been willing to restart the exploratory talks, so we have to make an agreement,” he said.
Recent weeks brought a war of words between French President Emmanuel Macron, Greece’s most outspoken ally in the eastern Mediterranean dispute, and Erdogan. Macron drew the wrath of his Turkish counterpart by stating that his problem is not with the Turkish people, for whom he has great respect, but with the Erdogan government. Erdogan responded with characteristic angry rhetoric on September 12, telling Macron “not to mess” with Turkey.
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