Serbia warns Europe over Kosovo independence

18 Apr 2007 16:52:31 GMT

Source: Reuters

 

(Adds Russian and Austrian comments)

 

By Beti Bilandzic

 

BELGRADE, April 18 (Reuters) - Serbian President Boris Tadic said on Wednesday 
granting independence to Kosovo against Belgrade's wishes would bring 
instability to the Balkan region and the European continent.

A U.N. plan proposes supervised independence, which Serbia rejects. The United 
States and most European countries support the plan and want a quick U.N. 
Security Council resolution, but Russia -- which has veto powers -- is at odds 
with Washington.

Tadic told a meeting of Danube river countries that Serbia and Europe were 
facing a critical challenge in the coming months when the future status of the 
breakaway province, which has an ethnic Albanian majority, was due to be 
decided.

"I believe it will affect in the most profound way the stability and the future 
not only of the western Balkans but of the whole continent," said Tadic. He 
said "a real compromise over the future status" of Kosovo was required.

Serbia says it would never recognise any move to take away its territory in 
violation of international law, that it could set a dangerous precedent, and 
that Kosovo could become a lawless state.

Belgrade hopes Russia, its Orthodox Christian ally, can delay a Security 
Council resolution and possibly win new talks.

Kosovo has been under U.N. rule since 1999 when NATO mounted a bombing campaign 
to drive out Serb forces to stop them killing ethnic Albanian civilians.

IMPATIENCE

Ethnic Albanians are impatient for independence, and the West fears there could 
be violence if a decision is delayed.

Russia's ambassador to the United Nations, Vitaly Churkin, said on Wednesday a 
U.S. wish to have a Security Council resolution on Kosovo within weeks was 
"destructive".

"I think that this is some kind of element of psychological attack on the 
Security Council," Churkin told reporters by video link from New York.

He did not say if Russia would use its veto to block a resolution on Kosovo but 
said: "We may be sure that Russia has a very firm position."

In deference to Russia, the United Nations is sending a fact-finding mission on 
Kosovo to the area on April 25-27.

"The Russian Federation has its own vision on Kosovo. It's a different view to 
that of the United States," Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told 
reporters in Madrid. He was due in Belgrade later on Wednesday.

At the Danube countries' meeting, Austrian Foreign Minister Ursula Plassnik 
said she hoped the Security Council would make a decision soon because "the 
time for technical manoeuvre is over, we need clarity".

Contrary to speculation in Serbia that Austria favoured further talks, she 
said: "(The U.N. plan) has our full confidence. Austria's position has been 
unchanged." (Additional reporting by Ivana Sekularac, Peter Graff in London 
Oleg Shchedrov in Moscow and Andrew Hay in Madrid) 

 

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L18454592.htm

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