http://d2.cd.b2.a1.top.list.ru/counter?id=1233604;js=13;r=http%3A//mnweekly.ru/world/20070823/55269599.html;j=true;s=1280*720;d=32;rand=0.283474349965699

 

Russia Pessimistic About Kosovo Deal

 

http://mnweekly.rian.ru/world/20070823/55269599.html 
<http://mnweekly.ru/world/20070823/55269599.html> 




23/08/2007

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia acknowledged on Thursday that getting Serbs and 
Albanians to compromise on Kosovo in upcoming talks would be "unbelievably 
difficult." 

The comment came in an interview with Russian diplomat Alexander 
Botsan-Kharchenko, Moscow's man in a troika of diplomats making a last-ditch 
bid to break the deadlock over Serbia's breakaway province. 

The assessment is in line with Western warnings that bridging the gap between 
Albanian demands for independence and Serbia's total rejection of it could be 
impossible. 

But Botsan-Kharchenko insisted that the new talks, which get under way in 
Vienna next week and which Moscow forced on the West, be open-ended and not 
subject to a December 10 deadline favored by the United States, the European 
Union and the United Nations. 

Kosovo has been run by the U.N. and protected by a NATO peace force since 1999, 
when the West bombed Serbia to compel the withdrawal of its forces during a 
counter-insurgency war. The troika was set up last month after Russia, Serbia's 
main ally, repeatedly blocked Western drafts of a U.N. resolution based on a 
plan by United Nations envoy Martti Ahtisaari to give Kosovo independence under 
EU supervision. 

"The troika itself will not offer any solutions - we are waiting for the sides 
to find them," he said. As for making a report to U.N. Secretary General Ban 
Ki-moon by Dec .10, that should not be seen as an end to the mediation bid. 

Washington has said it is prepared to recognise Kosovo even if independence is 
not endorsed by the United Nations. Most of the 27 EU member states agree, 
viewing self-determination for the 90 percent Albanian majority as the only 
viable solution. Russia warns that recognizing Kosovo's independence without 
Belgrade's agreement is a violation of sovereignty and U.N. principles which 
could embolden separatist movements across Europe from the Balkans to the 
Caucasus region.   

RELATED ARTICLES

28/06/2007 Breaking the Kosovo 
<http://mnweekly.ru/columnists/20070628/55259824.html>  Deadlock

22/06/2007 Moscow Rejects New UN 
<http://mnweekly.ru/news/20070622/55259166.html>  Resolution on Kosovo

02/08/2007 The Art Of Response 
<http://mnweekly.ru/comment/20070802/55265041.html> 

12/07/2007 Does the U.S. Have 
<http://mnweekly.ru/columnists/20070712/55261812.html>  Its Priorities Right?


   

© 2007 Moscow News

 

<<image001.gif>>

Reply via email to