Slobodan Milosevic, Serbia�s strongman, is hoping that democracy will
fail to take root in Kosovo. So far, that grim hope is being fulfilled


 WHICH place will become a decent democracy first�Kosovo or Serbia
proper? The answer will greatly affect the outcome of the unresolved
battle between the Serbs, who hope the breakaway province will remain
within their orbit, at least notionally, and Kosovo�s ethnic-Albanian
leaders, who demand independence.

If Kosovo looks incapable of becoming a decent, law-governed state,
even under western tutelage, its leaders� case for a final break with
the Yugoslav federation will weaken�especially if Serbia itself
becomes more democratic after this weekend�s presidential and
parliamentary poll in Serbia and, more contentiously, in Montenegro.

That may be one reason why Yugoslavia�s masters have in recent weeks
been trying harder than usual to destabilise Kosovo, and make life
difficult for its international administrators, who are preparing to
hold local elections�arguably the first above-board test of Kosovar
opinion ever conducted�in late October.

So far, things have been going quite well for Yugoslavia�s sitting
president, Slobodan Milosevic, and other would-be wreckers. The
foreigners running the province of Kosovo�the United Nations, NATO and
the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe�have been
struggling against mounting odds to maintain a minimum of stability
and open political debate.

Early this month, Mr Milosevic cunningly sent a delegation from his
Socialist party to the southern province, to urge the 100,000 or so
ethnic Serbs still living there to vote in the Yugoslav elections.
That put Bernard Kouchner, the Frenchman who runs Kosovo for the UN,
on the spot. Should he allow the Serbs to cast votes in what is still,
under the terms of UN resolutions, their own country? Or should he
risk seeming weak or unfair by insisting that, because of security
problems, no residents of Kosovo could take part in Yugoslav ballot?

In the end, he came up with a fudge. While denouncing the Belgrade-run
contest as hopelessly flawed, he agreed that local Serbs could take
part�and promised that NATO would do its best to let them do so in
secure conditions. But neither NATO nor the pro-Milosevic camp is
saying anything in advance about how exactly they expect voting to be
conducted in Kosovo�s highly abnormal conditions. If Serbs are
attacked by Albanians on the way to vote, that will be a blow to the
credibility of NATO�as the supposed guarantor of safety for all Kosovo
�s residents�and a boost, paradoxically, for Serb nationalist
propaganda.

With tension rising steadily, NATO troops this week raided a Serb
enclave and arrested some former and serving members of the Yugoslav
army who had infiltrated from Serbia on a mission to blow up targets
in Kosovo. Meanwhile an ethnic-Albanian group trying to seize power in
part of southern Serbia said it had lost three men in a gun-battle.

As well as coping with the Serbs, Kosovo�s international protectors
have picked up some worrying and contradictory signals from the
province�s Albanian politicians. Privately, at least, many of them
confide that they would prefer Mr Milosevic to remain in power; that
way Serbia will remain a pariah.

More specifically, some Kosovars fear that a post-Milosevic Serbia
would compete with their province for a finite pool of international
assistance. So, in a bid to allay these fears, the EU has assured them
that the province will receive at least euro360m ($306m) next year,
whatever happens in Belgrade.

But these Machiavellian arguments are not the ones that Kosovar
politicians use in public. Instead, Hashim Thaci, the ex-commander of
the Kosovo Liberation Army guerrillas who now heads a political party,
has been stressing that the Yugoslav election is illegitimate and that
no voting for Belgrade institutions should be taking place on Kosovar
soil. To some ears, this may sound like a thinly-veiled call to his
supporters to stop Serbs, by force, from voting.

Nor is it only the Serbs who feel intimidated by the two parties which
have sprung out of the ethnic-Albanian guerrilla movement. (In
addition to Mr Thaci�s PDK, there is a rival group, headed by his
erstwhile comrade-in-arms, Ramush Haradinaj.)

Opinion polls suggest that the most popular politician among the
Kosovars is still Ibrahim Rugova, the pacifist leader who led the
province�s shadow administration when it was still under direct Serb
control. But the UN fears that supporters of Mr Rugova who do well in
the forthcoming local elections could then be attacked by the ex-KLA
parties.

If Kosovo�s internal politics are shown to be dominated by the bullet
rather than the ballet box, the western governments who keep troops
and administrators in the province will find it harder to justify the
outlay. Dr Kouchner has said that any party in Kosovo that uses force
will be banned from taking part in the election. But it is hard to
prove the links between acts of violence and their ultimate sponsors;
nor is it likely that the UN and NATO could cope with the uproar which
would ensue if an ex-KLA party was banned.

So what is the most the Frenchman can hope to do? His best chance lies
in persuading the Kosovars to switch their attention away from
Machiavellian games, and even from the long-term aim of independence,
and concentrate instead on convincing the world that they are proper
democrats. Otherwise Serbia may even beat them to it.





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