http://www.voanews.com/english/news/europe/Clinton-to-Push-for-Wider-Kosovo-Recognition-104901414.html

 

Voice of America News

October 14, 2010

 


Clinton to Push for Wider Kosovo Recognition


David Gollust 


 

  U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Kosovo's Prime Minister 
Hashim Thaci give a press conference in Pristina, Kosovo, 13 Oct. 2010 

  

 

Brussel: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pledged to work for broader 
international recognition of Kosovo on Wednesday during a visit to Pristina, 
the first by a U.S. chief diplomat since Kosovo's independence in 2008....

 

Secretary Clinton received a hero's welcome from hundreds of Pristina residents 
as she stopped her motorcade at a nearly four-meter-high statue honoring her 
husband - former President Bill Clinton - along a boulevard named for him.

 

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton smiles in front of a statue of 
her husband former President Bill Clinton, in Pristina, Kosovo, 13 Oct. 2010

 

The Clinton administration is revered in Kosovo for having backed the 1999 NATO 
air campaign that ended a...crackdown by Serb forces, and put the majority 
ethnic-Albanian region on the road to independence.

In talks with Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci and other officials, the 
Secretary of State pledged continuing U.S. political support for Kosovo, and 
its quest for broader international recognition and full European Union and 
NATO membership.

At a press event with Mr. Thaci, Clinton said she was heading for Brussels, the 
last stop on her four-day European trip, with a list of countries the United 
States will try to persuade to recognize the Pristina government.

About 70 nations, with some EU members notably absent, have recognized Kosovo's 
2008 declaration of independence from Serbia.  Clinton said that number should 
increase following the International Court of Justice's ruling upholding the 
legality of the independence move. 

"We think it's important to continue to increase the numbers of countries that 
recognize [Kosovo], especially after the ICJ opinion, which we believe settles 
the matter of independence once and for all," she said.  "I also believe that 
the approach that the government of Kosovo has been taking has really earned 
admiration and support from around the world."

Clinton, who visited Belgrade prior to her stop in Kosovo, welcomed Serbia's 
commitment to heed a U.N. General Assembly appeal to open dialogue with its 
former province, even though Serbian President Boris Tadic on Tuesday 
reaffirmed his government's refusal to recognize Kosovo.

Standing alongside Clinton at a press event, Kosovo's Prime Minister Hashim 
Thaci said the ICJ opinion and the U.N. resolution should end any debate over 
his country's political legitimacy.  He added that Kosovo is ready to engage 
with Serbia on an equal footing.  He is heard through an interpreter.

"We see a new chapter being opened now, a new phase being opened in our 
relationships between the state of Kosovo and Serbia," he said. "The future 
chapter of cooperation between these two countries has been opened. It's time 
to close the more that one century-long conflict between Serbia and Kosovo. The 
time is to cooperate and look toward the future."

Clinton balanced her political support for Kosovo's government with gestures 
toward the country's ethnic-Serb minority, which has dwindled in recent years. 

She went to the Serb enclave of Gracanica, outside of Pristina, and visited a 
14th century Serbian Orthodox religious shrine, where the chief cleric 
complained to her that Kosovo is impeding the return of Serbs who had fled 
unrest in the country.
....
Clinton said she will press for full European integration for Balkan states in 
meetings in Brussels with EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and at a 
meeting of NATO defense and foreign ministers on Thursday.

 

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