http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23289757/


U.S. orders some diplomats to leave Serbia


Move comes a day after mob attacks U.S. Embassy in Belgrade


 <http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23278127/displaymode/1176/rstry/23289757/>
Image: U.S. Embassy in Belgrade

Str / AFP - Getty Images

Serbian nationalists opposed to Kosovo's independence storm and set alight
the United States embassy in Belgrade on Thursday. 

 <http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23278127/displaymode/1176/rstry/23289757/>
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/images/icons/slideshow.gif
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23278127/displaymode/1176/rstry/23289757/> View
related photos


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/images/icons/video.gif

Video

 


 <javascript:vPlayer('23279957','b43d6730-2def-4963-a270-96e912d8bf42')>
http://msnbcmedia1.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Video/080221/nn_aspell_protest
s_080221.vsmall.jpg


 <javascript:vPlayer('23279957','b43d6730-2def-4963-a270-96e912d8bf42')>
<javascript:vPlayer('23279957','b43d6730-2def-4963-a270-96e912d8bf42')>
Attacked
Feb. 21: A burned body was found inside the U.S. embassy in Belgrade after
protesters invaded the building. NBC's Tom Aspell reports.

Nightly News

 


http://msnbcmedia2.msn.com/i/msnbc/Components/ColorBoxes/Styles/img/video_ic
on_v2.gif

                

 

Department on Friday ordered nonessential diplomats and the families of all
American personnel at the U.S. Embassy in Belgrade to leave Serbia,
following an attack on the compound.

The move, made at the request of U.S. Ambassador to Serbia Cameron Munter,
came as U.S. diplomats across the Balkans went on alert, girding for more
anti-American violence after Serb rioters stormed and torched the Belgrade
embassy Thursday, causing as-yet undetermined damage and drawing fierce
condemnation from Washington.

"We are not sufficiently confident that they are safe here," Munter said in
an interview in Belgrade.

 

A State Department official said 14 embassy employees were on the site when
a mob attacked but that all American and local staff are safe. The charred
body of one person found in the compound is believed to be that of a
protester, spokesman Sean McCormack said.

Protests over the declaration of independence by the former Serbian province
of Kosovo have increased tensions across the region. And new mass
demonstrations are expected following recognition of Kosovo by the United
States and other Western countries.

On Friday, Serbs used stones, glass bottles and firecrackers to attack U.N.
police guarding a key bridge in northern Kosovo.

U.S. diplomat Nicholas Burns called on Serbia's main ally, Russia, to
repudiate a suggestion by one of its officials that it may need to use
military force to earn respect after the U.S. and other countries recognized
the independence of Kosovo, which is mainly ethnic Albanian, over strong
Serb and Russian protests.

"We strongly advise Russia to be more responsible in its public comments
toward Kosovo," Burns said, responding to questions in an online written
discussion. "Russia is isolated this week -- very few countries are
supporting its position."

Earlier, Russia's envoy to NATO Dmitry Rogozin said the move to recognize
was Kosovo a "strategic mistake" and suggested that Moscow might "have to
use brute military force" if the alliance expands its current peacekeeping
operation in the territory.

The U.S. State Department said the lack of protection for its mission —
police were absent when Thursday's attack began — was intolerable and
demanded a response from the U.N. Security Council.

 “The members of the Security Council condemn in the strongest terms the mob
attacks against embassies in Belgrade, which have resulted in damage to
embassy premises and have endangered diplomatic personnel,” the 15-member
body said in a unanimous statement late on Thursday.

Embarrassed, Serbia said it regretted what it called acts of isolated
vandals who did not represent a nation which, while bitter at Kosovo’s
declaration of independence on Sunday, did not want further violence.

'Absolutely unacceptable'
“The acts that were committed are absolutely unacceptable, absolutely
regrettable,” Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic told Reuters in an interview.
“They hurt Serbia’s image abroad.”

Germany, Croatia and Britain also said their missions were vandalized. Local
media added Bosnia’s and Turkey’s to the list.

Some 200,000 people attended the state-backed rally. Jeremic said police
were overwhelmed by what was Serbia’s biggest march since protesters stormed
the old Yugoslav parliament building in 2000 to oust nationalist leader
Slobodan Milosevic.

But police were nowhere to be seen when just a few score of rioters — many
wearing balaclavas — attacked the U.S. embassy for the second time in a
week.

As a crowd of about 1,000 cheered “Serbia, Serbia,” one protester ripped the
Stars and Stripes off its pole and others jumped up and down on a balcony,
holding a Serb flag. Smoke billowed out of the embassy as papers and chairs
were thrown out of windows and burning doors were wedged in the frames.

American officials said only security personnel were at the embassy at the
time, in a different area.

Condemnation
Riot police arrived later and fired teargas to disperse the crowds. A
charred body was later found inside, probably of a protester; the embassy
said its U.S. staff were accounted for and Marines protecting it had not
engaged in any fighting.

Hospital officials said around 150 people were injured in street clashes,
including 30 police and some journalists.

The Security Council said a 1961 Vienna Convention obliged host governments
to protect embassies, but also welcomed steps taken by the Serbian
authorities to restore order.

The council has been a battleground over Kosovo, with Russia refusing to
accept Western moves to legitimize the mainly Albanian region’s independence
after nine years as a U.N. ward.

 

<<image001.jpg>>

<<image002.gif>>

<<image003.gif>>

<<image004.jpg>>

<<image005.gif>>

Reply via email to