Serbia wants army, police back in Kosovo 
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 August 2007 | 17:08 | FOCUS News Agency 
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Belgrade. Serbia wants to send soldiers and policemen back to Kosovo, a top 
official said Friday, amid increased tensions over the future status of the 
UN-administered province, cited by AFP. 
"We believe the time has come for that," Aleksandar Simic, an adviser of 
Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica, told the Beta news agency. 
The UN Security Council resolution which ended the Kosovo conflict between 
Serbian forces and ethnic Albanian separatists, included an option that up to 
1,000 Serbian policemen and soldiers could be sent back to the province to 
guard cultural and religious sites. 
The option has never been taken up amid fears that it would exacerbate 
tensions. 
In June 1999, Serbian armed forces were driven out of the province following a 
NATO bombing campaign that ended their crackdown against Kosovo's 
independence-minded ethnic Albanian majority. 
While technically remaining a Serbian province, Kosovo has been run by a UN 
mission ever since, with some 16,000 NATO-led peacekeepers deployed there. 
Under the recent proposals of UN envoy Martti Ahtisaari -- rejected by both 
Serbia and Russia, but supported by the United States -- Kosovo would be 
granted supervised independence. 
Simic joined a number of Serbian ministers in accusing the United States of 
influence peddling in the region. 
"If they (the US) gave up a creation of a NATO state in the Balkans, real 
negotiations would be possible" on Kosovo's future status, Simic said. 
The international troika of the United States, the European Union and Russia 
has launched a new round of negotiations on Kosovo following Moscow's rejection 
of the Ahtisaari plan. 
The talks are expected to resume on August 30 in Vienna. 
Kosovo's ethnic Albanians, who comprise 90 percent of the 1.8 million 
population, want nothing but independence, while Belgrade balks at anything 
more than a high degree of autonomy

 

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