Qeku was speaking in response to the statement made on Wednesday by the head of the German office in Pristina, Eugen Wollfarth, that the forming of a Kosovo army would not be among the future priorities of the international community and that Berlin did not support its formation.
Qeku said that security structures for Kosovo would be the subject of talks and that at the request of the Kosovo negotiating team he would be personally involved, together with a group of experts, in preparing a proposal to form a Kosovo army.
The KZK commander, General Sulejman Selimi, said on Thursday that in defining the final status of Kosovo a military component should also be defined and that Kosovo should be independent and have its own army.
The commander of the NATO-led Kosovo Force (KFOR), General Giuseppe Valotto of Italy, visited the Kosovo Protection Corps earlier on Thursday. He said that Kosovo should have trust in the KZK, which he described as a well-prepared and well-led organisation ready to carry out any assignment.