http://en.rian.ru/russia/20070717/69085072.html


Russian Information Agency Novosti
July 17, 2007


Russia condemns new Kosovo plan, urges to replace
Ahtisaari


UN - Veto-wielding Moscow will reject a new resolution
of the UN Security Council, which proposes granting
Kosovo independence without Serbia's consent, the
Russian envoy to the UN said.

The latest draft resolution on Kosovo, proposed by the
United States, Britain, and France, gives Belgrade and
Pristina four months to settle their differences.

If they fail to agree, Kosovo is to be granted
independence without the approval of Belgrade in
accordance with the revised proposal of UN special
envoy Martti Ahtisaari.

"We believe that Ahtisaari's plan is flawed. New
impartial talks are needed with a new independent
mediator. We have informed the UN of this," Russia's
Vitaly Churkin said after a closed session of the UN
Security Council.

He said that the plan did not solve the "key issues,"
adding that "the coauthors say that it is the last
chance and they cannot do anything else," but he said
he hoped Ahtisaari's proposal would be reviewed once
more.

As a permanent member of the UN Security Council,
Russia has repeatedly said a solution must be based on
a compromise between Belgrade and Pristina, and that
the position of ethnic minorities in the region should
also be considered.
------------------------------------------------------
http://www.interfax.ru/e/B/politics/28.html?id_issue=11792152


Interfax
July 17, 2007


Serb ambassador slams attempts to recognize Kosovan
independence outside UN


MOSCOW - Serbian Ambassador to Russia Stanimir
Vukicevic has said he believes that certain countries
are interested in recognizing Kosovo's independence
without an appropriate decision of the UN Security
Council.

"If a resolution [that would not suit any of the UN
Security Council's member states] is proposed, it will
mean that some countries are interested in resolving
this problem circumventing the UN Security Council,"
Vukicevic told a news conference in Moscow on Tuesday.


The diplomat called on the UN Security Council to
display "patience and consistency in order to find the
right decision."

"If a draft resolution that would not suit all parties
is submitted, it will raise the issue of recognizing
Kosovo's independence unilaterally. The move would
open Pandora's box and lead to instability in the
region," he said.
------------------------------------------------------
http://www.interfax.ru/e/B/politics/28.html?menu=1&id_issue=11791857


Interfax
July 17, 2007



Russia will not participate in drafting resolution on
Kosovo - ambassador


MOSCOW - Russia will not take part in drafting a new
UN resolution on Kosovo, Russia's UN Ambassador Vitaly
Churkin told the press.

"We don't think the proposed way is correct and we'll
not take part in drafting a document which does not
provide a clue to the key problem," Vesti-24
television quoted Churkin as saying.

Churkin's statement came after the United States,
Britain and France submitted a new draft resolution on
Kosovo, based on the plan proposed by UN special envoy
Marti Ahtisaari, which gives the region de- factor
independence without Belgrade's consent.

The adoption of the resolution would complicate the
return of refugees and the observance of their
security standards, Churkin said.

Russia is a veto-wielding permanent member of the UN
Security Council.
------------------------------------------------------
http://en.rian.ru/world/20070717/69110924.html


Russian Information Agency Novosti
July 17, 2007


Serbia rejects Kosovo-EU linkage - envoy


MOSCOW - Serbia's accession to the EU must not be
predicated on the resolution of the Kosovo problem,
the country's ambassador to Russia said Tuesday.

"Serbia's admission to the EU and the resolution of
the Kosovo problem are absolutely different things. We
do not want them to be interconnected or made
contingent on something," Stanimir Vukicevic told a
news conference in Moscow.

He said Kosovo was not a bargaining chip and that
Serbia was ready to settle the Kosovo problem through
dialogue and compromise with the Albanian side.

Vukicevic warned that the adoption of a UN Security
Council resolution that does not take Serbia's
position into account would destabilize the situation
in the region.

Asked what would happen if Russia vetoed a UN
resolution on Kosovo, he said no UN Security Council
member would want any country to use its veto power in
that situation.

"A veto would mean that a compromise solution has not
been achieved. Diplomacy must be patient," he said.

The Russian and German foreign ministers will discuss
a Kosovo settlement in Berlin July 20, the Russian
Foreign Ministry said.

Veto-wielding Moscow will reject a new resolution of
the UN Security Council, which proposes granting
Kosovo independence without Serbia's consent, the
Russian envoy to the UN said earlier Tuesday.

The latest draft resolution on Kosovo, proposed by the
United States, Britain and France, gives Belgrade and
Pristina four months to settle their differences. If
they fail to agree, Kosovo is to be granted
independence without the approval of Belgrade, in
accordance with the revised proposal of UN special
envoy Martti Ahtisaari.

"We believe that Ahtisaari's plan is flawed. New
impartial talks are needed with a new independent
mediator. We have informed the UN of this," Russia's
Vitaly Churkin said after a closed session of the UN
Security Council.

He said that the plan did not solve the "key issues,"
adding that "the co-authors say that it is the last
chance and they cannot do anything else," but he said
he hoped Ahtisaari's proposal would be reviewed once
more.

As a permanent member of the UN Security Council,
Russia has repeatedly said a solution must be based on
a compromise between Belgrade and Pristina, and that
the position of ethnic minorities in the region should
also be considered.

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