Army chief wants KFOR to react to ANA 14 November 2007 | 13:27 -> 21:41 | 
Source: FoNet, Beta, Tanjug BRUSSELS, PRIŠTINA, LONDON -- Lt. Gen. Zdravko 
Ponoš has today in Brussels asked NATO to take necessary measures over a Kosovo 
Albanian terror group. 

Ponoš, middle, with Russian and Slovak counterparts at NATO HQs (Tanjug)
The Serbian Army chief of staff was at the NATO HQs for meetings with top 
alliance officials when he urged a Euro-Atlantic Partnership Military Committee 
session to undertake steps and prevent extremist activity in Kosovo.

His statement came a day after a number of media reports indicated that the 
Albanian National Army (ANA), as of 2003 designated terrorist by the UN 
administration in the province, was active and recruiting new members. 

Ponoš told Beta news agency that he expected NATO to react and prevent the 
group from bringing a feeling of insecurity to the Serb population in Kosovo. 

The top Serbian general's interlocutors included chair of the NATO Military 
Committee, Canadian General Ray Henault, and Italy's chief of staff, Admiral 
Giampaolo Di Paola. 

They told Ponoš that KFOR was satisfied with cooperation with the Serbian Army, 
and assured him the peacekeepers were ready to provide security for all 
residents of the province. 

Earlier, the Forum for Security and Democracy NGO called for a Serbia-NATO 
meeting following emergence of the ethnic Albanian paramilitary group. 

The Forum said that Serbia, as a member of the Partnership for Peace, has every 
right and obligation to ask for an urgent meeting with the NATO 
secretary-general following the most recent information concerning the 
existence of Albanian paramilitary formations in Kosovo. 

“Such an approach would be much more effective for Serbia, than political 
comments and statements that only go to spread fear both throughout Kosovo and 
Serbia itself,“ reads the statement. 

The Forum concludes that KFOR and NATO “are obliged to take measures at their 
disposal to counter and eliminate threats posed to both the security situation 
in Kosovo, and the regular resumption of the negotiating process.“ 

Also Wednesday, spokesmen for the Kosovo Police Service (KPS) and KFOR told a 
news conference in Priština that the two forces "control the entire territory 
of Kosovo" and consider "organizations such as ANA illegal." 

They added that an investigation into the resurfacing of ANA was ongoing, but 
that "at this stage no information was available to the media." 

KFOR has enough troops on the ground to provide security in Kosovo, a spokesman 
for the peacekeepers said, and added that contingency plans for extra troop 
deployment also existed, but downplayed the possibility that they may be 
needed. 

KFOR currently has some 16,000 soldiers in Kosovo. 

Meantime, a professor at Kent University’s Faculty of Political Science, 
Florian Bieber, said that although the Albanian National Army paramilitary 
formation might not currently be a threat, it could turn into a serious 
problem, depending on the outcome of the Kosovo talks. 

The situation Kosovo finds itself in needs to be fully understood, as there are 
quite a few scenarios whereby some sort of conflict could be forecast in 
December or January, Bieber told the BBC. 

“In the event of a unilateral declaration of independence, the big question is 
what will happen in the north of Kosovo, around Kosovska Mitrovica, and if an 
unofficial partition of Kosovo takes place, what will happen to the 
Serb-populated enclave in the south?" 

"In the event of a further postponement, there will be pressure from extremists 
in Kosovo to do something,“ he said, adding that the situation also had to be 
considered from the point of view of the November 17 provincial elections

http://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics-article.php?yyyy=2007&mm=11&dd=14&nav_id=45386


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