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http://www.independent.co.uk/news/europe/tadic-victory-boost-for-kosovo-inde
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Tadic victory boost for Kosovo independence


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<http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/ivor-roberts-the-threat-o
f-a-balkan-flareup-has-not-gone-away-778043.html> Ivor Roberts: The threat
of a Balkan flare-up has not gone away 

By Vesna Peric Zimonjic in Belgrade
Tuesday, 5 February 2008 

Boris Tadic's re-election as president of Serbia was wholeheartedly welcomed
by European leaders yesterday, as they looked forward to the prospect of the
Balkan country moving along a smoother path to EU membership as the
breakaway province of Kosovo prepares to declare its independence.

While opposing Kosovan independence, Mr Tadic does not want bitterness about
losing the province to get in the way of boosting Serbian prosperity from
within the EU fold. The man he defeated by a mere 100,000 votes, the
ultranationalist Tomislav Nikolic, was in favour of turning to Russia and
away from the EU in protest at its planned recognition of Kosovo.

"We will continue working with Serbia and we'd like Serbia to get as close
as possible as rapidly as possible toward the European road," said Javier
Solana, the EU foreign policy chief, after Mr Tadic's victory.

The EU and Serbia are due to sign a deal on Thursday concerning closer trade
relations and more relaxed visa rules, a prelude to cementing its membership
bid. The full Stabilisation and Association Agreement is being held up by
demands from some European countries that Serbia hands over war criminals
who are still at large. The Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic and his
military commander Ratko Mladic are wanted by the international war crimes
tribunal in The Hague for the massacre of more than 7,000 Muslims in
Srebrenica in 1995. 

Analysts in Kosovo agree that Mr Tadic's re-election is good news, because
of the much-needed stability in the region ahead of the expected
proclamation of independence. The province has been run by the United
Nations and patrolled by Nato since 1999 in response to ethnic cleansing.

"It's good news that the Serb people have shown they want to move toward the
future, not turn back to the past," said Kosovo's Prime Minister, Hashim
Thaci . The date for Kosovo's proclamation of independence will be set this
week, he added. And the parliamentary speaker suggested it would be all
wrapped up by the end of February. "We are ready and in co-ordination with
our Western allies, the US and the EU, we will declare independence this
month," said Jakup Krasniqi.

Yesterday the EU formally agreed to send a joint action force of 1,800
police and justice officials to Kosovo, without setting a date for
deployment. Although parts of the EU force are in place in Pristina, full
deployment will take several weeks.

Serbian newspapers devoted headlines to the pro-European tack on which Mr
Tadic's re-election will set the country. The daily Danas said that "Serbia
elected Europe," while others declared his win the "Victory of the European
Serbia".

But political observers said the President could not sit back and enjoy a
honeymoon because of deep rifts with the conservative Prime Minister
Vojislav Kostunica. Serbia's government is an uneasy coalition of Mr Tadic's
Democrats and Mr Kostunica's Democratic Party of Serbia. Mr Kostunica
opposes signing any treaty with the EU if it backs Kosovo's independence.

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