"In a situation when the international community is forgetting us, we are faced with Bosnia and Herzegovina's unacceptable disinterest in our problems and the prospect of our survival in Kosovo, and now also in the negotiations on Kosovo's future status," Murati said on Sunday. His party is a member of VAKAT, the Bosniak (Bosnian Muslim) coalition in the Kosovo parliament.
According to Murati, Kosovo Bosniaks wanted to know if Bosnia wanted to be involved in the negotiations in any way. He said Albania would take part in them on the side of Kosovo's Albanian majority, while Serbia "is using all means and a very active political diplomacy to stop these processes".
Murati said he would formally ask the Bosnian government to appoint officials to support Kosovo Bosniaks in the negotiations.
The Kosovo Bosniak population is 60,000. They live mainly in Prizren and Dragas municipalities. After Albanians and Serbs, they are the third largest ethnic community in the province in south Serbia.