http://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics-article.php?yyyy=2007&mm=07&dd=09&nav_category=92&nav_id=42319


9 July 2007 | 10:34 -> *18:53* | Source: B92
*PRIŠTINA -- U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried met Monday
with ethnic Albanian leaders in Priština.

* After holding separate meetings with Kosovo president Fatmir Sejdiu
and members of the Priština negotiating team, Fried held a press
conference where he said that the U.S. believed the next step in
Kosovo's future status settlement was to restart negotiations between
Belgrade and Priština in a limited period of time.

"It is highly likely that we would have a limited amount of time on our
hands for a new round of negotiations," he said, without explaining when
the talks might start and how long they would last.

By reiterating U.S. President George Bush's statement given during his
visit to Albania that Kosovo would be independent and supervised by the
international community, Fried said that the international community was
now facing a challenge of how to proceed in the Kosovo process.

He added that negotiations with a set deadline were one of the options,
adding that Bush and Russian president Vladimir Putin did not go into
details of the Kosovo status issue during their July 1-2 meeting in Maine.

Fried refused to comment on Priština negotiating team's position
regarding the prospects of a new Belgrade-Priština dialogue, but he said
he was "impressed with the seriousness with which the Priština
negotiators approached the proposal."

Fried's visit came at a delicate time for Kosovo, with officials
expecting the postponement of the status solution to be announced soon.

The postponement is expected to last until the fall, after which
discussion between Belgrade and Priština will resume for another four to
six months.

Earlier Monday, Fried said that the situation was made worse by the fact
that Albanian leaders in Kosovo, specifically Kosovo President Sejdiu,
after returning from Germany, said they would reject new talks with
Belgrade and that there was "nothing left to discuss" regarding UN envoy
Martti Ahtisaari's Kosovo plan.

Fried arrived in Priština from Montenegro, where he stated that the U.S.
supports a continuation of Kosovo talks for another six months, as was
proposed by French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

"The U.S. and the member countries of the Contact Group believe that
Ahtisaari's Kosovo plan is good for continuing discussions between
Belgrade and Priština, but only if there is concrete dialogue."

"U.S. President George Bush also clearly stated that Kosovo independence
will be the final outcome, a supervised independence, with protection
for the Serbian community in Kosovo, its monasteries and property. That
is a responsibility we take seriously," Fried said.

Prime Minister Vojislav Koštunica's advisor Srđan Đurić said that
Ahtisaari's plan cannot be used as basis for new talks, because Serbia
has already rejected it.

He told the Beta news agency that the discussions will be more useful
without Ahtisaari's document.

"It is realistic to expect that the international community will
realize that new negotiations need to begin in the fall, and that should
not be burdened with Ahtisaari's unsuccessful plan," Đurić said.

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