Deep in thought, he read out his government program in parliament. Serbia's new Prime Minister, Gjuro Matsut, outlined his main points in a speech to MPs that gave the impression that he had prepared it in President Aleksandar Vučić's office.
He claimed that one of the biggest challenges of the new government will be the so-called protection of sovereignty and territorial integrity in Kosovo, thus continuing the long line of Serbian prime ministers who have lost touch with reality.
Matsut warned of Belgrade's continued influence-buying of Kosovo Serbs through salaries and pensions, A2 writes. He also leveled accusations at the West, claiming that they are exploiting Serbia's internal problems, as he said in the Belgrade Parliament, to give "new impetus to promoting the unilateral agendas of Pristina's provisional institutions of self-government."
The new Prime Minister also spoke of a war in several directions with the claim to protect Serbs from persecution and extermination, with one of them being carried out through the Serbian List after winning the mandates of the deputy in the Kosovo Assembly: "This success shows the readiness of the Serbs for an unwavering political war and the government will assist them in this war to achieve everything that international law guarantees them, especially the Brussels Agreement, the full implementation of which we will constantly defend everywhere, fighting for the survival and rights of our people in the province, where there is a constant threat that Pristina will unilaterally commit violence and by sponsoring force will try to achieve its goals."
He hinted that he is waiting for major changes in the world's political power centers to take action against Kosovo. Matsut emphasized that peace is impossible without justice, while claiming that he will accept that the dialogue be conducted openly, honestly and without pressure. (A2 Televizion)