'Israel should learn from Kosovo'
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Tuesday , 07 November 2006

A day after igniting controversy by saying Israel should emulate the divided 
island of Cyprus, Strategic Affairs Minister Avigdor Lieberman found common 
ground with another country caught in a territorial dispute.


In a meeting with Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Draskovic at the Knesset on 
Monday, he said Israel and Serbia had a shared interest in "creating a uniform 
code to deal with minorities."

"Kosovo is the true test case for the rest of the world… to see if the 
international community will try to coerce a solution or allow the two parties 
to reach an agreement on their own," Lieberman said.

Kosovo is a province in southern Serbia that has been under UN control since 
1999, when NATO conducted a 78-day campaign in what was then Yugoslavia. From 
1998 to 1999 more than a million ethnic Albanians fled Kosovo, and tens of 
thousands of Albanians and Serbs were killed.

"There are many similarities between the former Yugoslavia and Israel, in that 
neither have a homogeneous makeup," Lieberman said, adding that this "clash of 
civilizations" was the basis of violence in both areas.

Lieberman told Draskovic the solution here could not be a homogeneous 
Palestinian state on one side, while Israel remained a binational state with a 
22 percent to 23% Arab minority.

In the past, Lieberman has advocated the idea of "transfer" - moving Israeli 
Arabs to a Palestinian state.

"In every solution we need goodwill on both sides," Lieberman said. "In the 
past, we have [shown the Palestinians goodwill]... The problem is that our 
gestures are not being imitated on the other side."

"Everything we see indicates that there is a crash of civilizations here that 
can't be solved as we have been trying to solve it," he added.

Draskovic said he could not understand the Islamic world's reaction to certain 
events, such as the recent controversy over cartoons depicting the prophet 
Muhammad.

"I am a Christian and there are hundreds of cartoons about Jesus, and there are 
books that claimed that he didn't exist or that he was a woman," he said. "But 
you don't see Christians protesting in the way Muslims do… The approach of 
Muslims and the free world are two parallel lines that don't meet."

Jerusalem Post
7 November 2006 
http://www.turkishweekly.net/news.php?id=40760


                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

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