Serbia tells Kosovo mediator to quit

Web posted at: 11/7/2006 4:9:31
Source ::: AFP

BELGRADE • Belgrade yesterday told the United Nations envoy to Kosovo talks to 
resign, accusing him of bias against Serbia in negotiations on the future 
status of the disputed province.

“It would be best if (Martti) Ahtisaari resigned on his own because he has 
failed to organise serious talks and achieve a compromise,” the independent 
FoNet news agency quoted government spokesman Srdjan Djuric as saying.

Djuric accused Ahtisaari, a former Finnish president, of trying to control the 
talks and impose a solution that he had come up with before they began in 
February.

“Ahtisaari was certainly not given a mandate to secretly write with Albanians 
any paper on Kosovo, so it has been a failure in advance,” Djuric said of the 
negotiations.

Kosovo is formally still a part of Serbia but has been administered by the UN 
for the past seven years. Its ethnic Albanian majority wants independence but 
Serbia is not prepared to allow this.

“It is high time that Ahtisaari leaves this job to a new international 
mediator, who would stick to the UN Charter and international law from the 
beginning,” Djuric said.

Simultaneously, the Kosovo Albanian negotiating team said there was no reason 
to continue direct talks with Belgrade because they had failed so far.

“The Unity Team is convinced that the talks with Belgrade cannot bring any 
outcome. Thus the team is of the opinion that it is absolutely profitless... to 
even think of continuing the negotiations,” said spokesman Skender Hyseni.

Hyseni told reporters the team was “ready to continue contacts and partnership 
with the international community untill the (decision on final) status is 
completed”.

Ahtisaari said in October that eight months of negotiations between Belgrade 
and the leaders of Kosovo’s ethnic-Albanian majority had led nowhere and 
suggested a deal be imposed.

He is expected on Friday to present his recommendations to the Contact Group of 
six powerful nations overseeing peace in the Balkans.

A Kosovo newspaper reported last week that Ahtisaari had proposed offering 
“limited sovereignty” to the ethnic Albanians, who comprise around 90 percent 
of the province’s two million population.

Kosovo has been managed by the UN since 1999, when a 78-day Nato bombing 
campaign halted a crackdown by Serbian forces against Kosovo’s separatist 
Albanian rebels.

Kosovo has been in limbo ever since. Its future status was set to be resolved 
by the year’s end. But a decision could be delayed because of an expected 
Serbian general election in December.

Speaking during a visit the Slovakian capital Bratislava on Monday, Kosovo’s 
ethnic-Albanian prime minister, Agim Ceku, urged the international community 
not to delay its decision on the province’s status.
http://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/Display_news.asp?section=World_News&subsection=Rest+of+the+World&month=November2006&file=World_News200611074931.xml


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