http://www.worldpress.org/link.cfm?http://www.independent.co.uk/

 

 

30 November 2007 18:17 


Kosovo's future uncertain as talks collapse 


By Peter Popham 


Published: 29 November 2007 


Talks to find agreement on the future of Kosovo ended in failure yesterday
with the Serbian and Albanian sides unable to hammer out a compromise.
Mediators said the peace of the region was now at stake.

Three days of UN-sponsored talks in the Austrian spa town of Baden – with
the European Union, United States and Russia playing referee – failed to
break the deadlock. Now Kosovo's 90 per cent Albanian majority is preparing
to declare independence within months. Serbia has said this will lead to
chaos.

All involved in the Austrian talks hastened to say a descent into violence
was out of the question. "Both sides have made it clear to us they are
committed to avoiding violence," a leading EU negotiator, Wolfgang
Ischinger, said. "This commitment to peace must continue."

Nonetheless, there are fears that the Balkans is in imminent peril. "The
peace of the region is very much at stake," the chief American mediator,
Frank Wisner, said. "It is a volatile region. We are going into a very
difficult time."

The failure of the talks was no surprise. Serbia has never budged from its
fixed stand that Kosovo is, always has been and always will be a province of
Serbia, whatever the wishes of the Albanians. But during recent elections in
Kosovo, the only issue on which all ethnic Albanian candidates were united
was the need for independence, rather than the partial autonomy offered by
Serbia.

The troika of mediators will pay final visits to Belgrade and Pristina
before submitting their report to the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, on
10 December. Serbia continues to maintain that talks must continue beyond
that, but Kosovo's leaders insisted they were already at the end of the
road. "We consider this process thoroughly exhausted," said Kosovo's
President Fatmir Sejdiu, making it clear he would not agree to further
talks.

If the problem were to be passed back to the UN Security Council, a decision
in favour of Kosovan independence would almost certainly be blocked by
Russia.

Despite the promise to avoid violence, Serbian leaders did not hide their
anger. "We are going to cancel all these decisions taken by the Kosovo
authorities leading to independence, and we will use all legal means to do
so," warned the Serbian President, Boris Tadic. "This is a very serious
situation."

Possible steps would include de facto border closures, forcing Kosovars to
make long detours, and a ban on energy exports to Kosovo – which takes about
40 per cent of its energy from Serbia. But, as a Serbian negotiator
conceded, there would be no way to prevent such measures also hurting
Kosovo's Serbs.

Although Kosovo remained tense but largely at peace during the wars that
consumed Croatia and Bosnia, war finally engulfed it in 1998 when vicious
fighting broke out between the Kosovo Liberation Army and the Serb forces of
Slobodan Milosevic. Around 10,000 Albanians and 3,000 Serbs were killed.
Nato forces intervened in 1999, starting a 78-day war and UN forces have
been stationed there ever since. Russia has raised the possibility that
Kosovo's independence could spark a wave of copycat declarations by tiny,
would-be nations inside and outside the Balkans. Serbs, who have their own
"Republika Srpska" inside Bosnia, might secede, while Albanians in Macedonia
could be tempted to do the same. The Balkans, in other words, could be in
for another round of Balkanisation.

 

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