“If Belgrade considers any settlement option acceptable to Serbia, we will be ready to consider it in a constructive manner. It’s inappropriate to speculate about the possible content of one or another option,” Lavrov said in an interview with the newspaper Srpski Telegraf.
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Moscow will keep supporting Belgrade's position on Kosovo in the international arena and will remain Serbia's ally in the process of the Kosovo settlement, Lavrov said.
"In Russia, our Serbian friends have the most consistent and sincere ally in the process of the Kosovo settlement. I am certain that the main help on our part is in support of Belgrade's position, based on the need to adhere to the requirements of Resolution 1244, in the international arena," Lavrov told Srpski Telegraf.
The upcoming visit of Russian President Vladimir Putin to Serbia, where he is expected to hold talks with his Serbian counterpart Aleksandar Vucic, will contribute to the further strengthening of Moscow-Belgrade ties, according to Sergei Lavrov.
Vucic on Wednesday expressed hope that Putin's January visit would become the most productive ever in terms of substance and the number of agreements to be signed.
"We believe that the results of the upcoming high-level talks will contribute to the further strengthening of multi-aspect Russian-Serbian ties," Lavrov told Srpski Telegraf.
The foreign minister added that the high-level dialogue between Russia and Serbia was regular and usually had a tightly packed agenda.
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Lavrov remarked on the nations' continuing cooperation with respect to trade and the economy, the implementation of joint investment projects and plans for the development of Serbia's gas transport network.
"We see a lot of interest in student exchanges between Russian and Serbian universities. We will facilitate it as much as we can. So, there are really many topics that our leaders could discuss," Lavrov said.
Putin's visit to Belgrade is expected to take place in mid-January, but the exact date is still unknown.
The West insists on trying to turn the Balkans into yet another "staging ground" against Russia; no lessons have been taken from the situation in Ukraine, Lavrov added.
"It seems as if the lessons from the tragedy in Ukraine have not been learned. Today, there are persistent efforts to turn the Balkans into yet another staging ground against Russia," Lavrov told Srpski Telegraf.
According to Lavrov, the countries of the region "are being asked insistently to make a choice: Either they are with Moscow, or with Brussels and Washington."
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The minister said that Moscow knew that Belgrade was under pressure to decrease cooperation with Russia and saw that Serbia was "resisting confidently."
"Moscow appreciates Serbia's independent multi-faceted foreign policy that, I am sure, corresponds to the key interests of your people," Lavrov said.
Kosovo unilaterally proclaimed independence from Serbia in 2008 but Belgrade did not recognise the decision. UN Security Council Resolution 1244, in particular, provides the framework for the resolution of the conflict between the two sides.
Pristina and Belgrade are engaged in an EU-facilitated dialogue aimed at the normalisation of relations between the sides.