BELGRADE, May 4./TASS/. Serbia must gradually coordinate its foreign policy with the European Union, however it does not share the approach of most of its member countries to the sanctions, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic said at a joint news conference in Berlin with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, broadcast by the Serbian national television.
"Like all countries on their way into the EU we have the commitment to gradually coordinate our policies with all decisions of the European Union. I listened to Chancellor Scholz today, he was very clear and powerfully reiterated Germany’s positions and demands," President Vucic said.
"As for Serbia, it has a different attitude towards the issue of Kosovo and Metohija, that is why we have a lot of problems. I won’t reiterate that Serbia was under the sanctions for almost a decade, and we have a different feeling towards sanctions unlike the majority of the others. Serbia understood well the signal from Germany and the signal of all the rest," he stressed.
Earlier, Vucic said in an interview with German newspaper Handelsblatt that Serbia had been a victim of restrictions for many years and that it did not believe in the policy of sanctions.
Earlier, in an address to the nation following a meeting of the UN Security Council, Vucic said that Serbia supported the territorial integrity of Ukraine, but it would not impose sanctions against Russia. The president said that his country was halting for the time being the army and police exercises with all foreign partners. He noted that Serbia saw Russia and Ukraine as fraternal states, that it regretted the developments in the east of Europe and was ready to offer humanitarian aid to Kiev.
On February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a special military operation in response to a request for help by the heads of the Donbass republics. He stressed that Moscow had no plans of occupying Ukrainian territories. Afterward, the US, EU, UK and some other countries said they were imposing sanctions on Russian individuals and legal entities.