Greek policy on Kosovo 

The final status of the UN-run province of Kosovo is on the international
agenda, but the future looks grim. The status quo cannot go on for much
longer. Belgrade flatly rejects any hint of independence for the region, but
it seems only a matter of time before that very scenario materializes. After
the parliamentary elections in October last year, which were dominated by
ethnic Albanians, demands for immediate independence have intensified.

The UN Security Council report due to be published in June will determine
the course of events. It is an open secret that the United States favors
outright independence, while Germany and France would like to see a more
gradual approach.

So would Greece. Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis's tour to Serbia,
Montenegro, Croatia and Kosovo, which starts today, signals efforts by Greek
diplomacy to put the issue back on the table at a time when the eyes of the
international community are largely fixed on the Middle East.

A tour by Greek diplomats in the region, who then paid a visit to Washington
for talks on the issue, has paved the way to the prime minister's tour. It
should be noted here that Western policies promoting institution building in
the area have failed. So have their efforts to promote economic development
and the protection of minority rights in the disputed province.

Ethnic hatred still runs deep, while half of Kosovo's population is
unemployed. When ethnic Albanians talk about independence they mean an
ethnically pure state, purged of the Serbian element.

The decision on Kosovo's final status will be extremely important in that it
will also influence developments in the Former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia (FYROM) and southern Serbia, where talk of ethnic Albanian
secessionism is rife.

To be sure, Greece has little power to decide on developments. But it is
right to be trying to influence them. Given its geographical proximity to
these volatile areas, Greece has a strong interest in a viable and enduring
solution to all these problems. It is in that context that Athens is backing
the accession of Serbia and Kosovo to the European Union. It would be a long
and winding road, but the question is already on the European agenda.

http://www.ekathimerini.com/4dcgi/_w_articles_columns_555509_02/03/2005_5357
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