Kosovo future fuels serious EU divisions

10.09.2007 - 09:27 CET | By Ekrem Krasniqi
EUOBSERVER / VIANA DO CASTELO – EU member states meeting in Portugal over the 
weekend confirmed their deep divisions on what to do if Kosovo eventually makes 
a unilateral declaration of independence.

The 27-nation union only recently managed to agree to a UN plan that offers the 
breakaway Serbian province a strong degree of independence but not full 
autonomy.

But now they are faced with the prospect of Pristina making a separate 
independence declaration – something outside UN structures and to which Russia 
is strongly opposed.

The meeting at Viana do Castelo, under the EU presidency of Portugal, produced 
no progress on what the bloc would do under this scenario.

At the moment, Russia and the West are mediating a new round of negotiations 
between Kosovar and Serbian leaders, but the chances for a compromise solution 
between the two sides are low.

Portuguese foreign minister Luis Amado admitted to reporters that he sees no 
guarantees on how each EU member state would behave if the talks failed, but 
warned that lack of unity was a critical risk. 

"I cannot conceive that we could have at the end a situation where there is a 
strong position of Russia, a strong position of the US and where Europe simply 
does not exist," Mr Amado said after the meeting, according to dtt-net.com

A group of nations, including Spain, Greece, Slovakia and Romania, say they are 
not prepared to recognise such a unilateral move.

"The status of Kosovo has to be resolved within the UN," Spain's Miguel Angel 
Moratinos insisted.

Germany crucial
But according to many western diplomats, Germany is at the forefront of 
European nations against any unilateral move.

One Western diplomatic source told dtt-net.com that without having Berlin 
"backing the US and UK's eventual move on unilateral independence, both 
capitals would not be ready to provoke blow ups inside the EU and risk a 
serious crisis with Russia".

Last week top Berlin officials warned against any attempts by western countries 
to sidestep the UN and Russia on Kosovo independence, saying that such a risky 
move would harm Germany's and the EU's relations with Moscow.

During a conference of German ambassadors held in Berlin last Monday, German 
foreign minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said that there is nothing that can be 
solved without Russia, including the issue of Kosovo.

"As you know, we had very tough talks with Russia already. However, I still 
think that with all the different points of view, Russia for us remains an 
important, strategic partner even if in the future we may not share the same 
opinions," Mr Steinmeier was quoted as saying.

 

http://euobserver.com/9/24731/?rk=1

Reply via email to