Jessen-Petersen said in a press release on Tuesday he was very satisfied with the visit and that he would inform the United Nations Security Council.
The press release was issued following his meeting with representatives of the Kosovo government and opposition parties, which focused on Tadic's two-day visit.
Jessen-Petersen said Kosovo showed during the visit that it was becoming a tolerant democracy. He commended Albanian reporters' coverage of the visit, the first by a senior Serbian official to the province since 1987, when Slobodan Milosevic, currently on trial before the Hague war crimes tribunal, visited.
Kosovo Parliament Speaker Nexat Daci told the press he asked the UN civil administrator also to inform the Security Council of Tadic's statements.
In the past, ethnic Albanian officials and politicians criticised Tadic's opposition to Kosovo's independence, which he also stated during the recent visit.
Kosovo President Ibrahim Rugova did not comment on Tadic's statements but repeated he hoped Kosovo would be independent. He called on the international community, notably the United States and the European Union, to recognise the province's independence as soon as possible.
Daci told the press the definition of Kosovo's status was exclusively the issue of Kosovo and the international community.
The leader of the opposition Kosovo Democratic Party, Hashim Thaqi, said Tadic could have brought more messages advocating understanding and tolerance which would contribute to Kosovo's stability and participation of local Serbs in Kosovo institutions.