Eide, who prepared the report after he held talks with officials in Pristina, Belgrade, Brussels and New York following the March riots in the province, described Kosovo as an area marked by rising frustration and disappointment among all ethnic communities living there.
The 18-page report reads that citizens are perceiving the current policy of the UN Mission (UNMIK) as statical and incapable of giving answers to existing problems, the media reported.
The report reads that the time has ripen for the transfer of powers from the UNMIK head to Kosovo institutions, the media added.
Eide wrote that the final solution to the Kosovo status would produce a positive effect on the entire region and that territorial division of the area along ethnic boundary lines would have negative repercussions.
Local media also reported on Friday that the new UNMIK head, Soren Jessen Petersen, who was expected in Pristina next week, had talked with 12 UNMIK senior officials in Geneva to get acquainted with the situation.