http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,538661,00.html

SPIEGEL ONLINE (GERMANY)

February 29, 2008, 06:06 PM

KOSOVO CLASH

Serbia Divided on Approach to EU

Tension in Serbia and Kosovo has not erupted into widespread violence so
far. But in Belgrade, the government is split on what to do about a European
Union that is pro-Kosovo indpendence.

REUTERS
Serbs everywhere, including this woman in France, have been demonstrating
against Kosovo independence.

The flood of news from Kosovo may have slowed, but tension in the freshly
minted Balkan country remains palpable. And much of that tension is being
fed by the Serbian government up north.

On Thursday, Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica said in a statement
that a new international committee -- founded to monitor all foreign
activities in Kosovo and which met for the first time in Vienna on
Thursday -- is "the most brutal transgression of international law." He also
called on United Nations General Secretary Ban Ki Moon to bring the "policy
of naked violence and perversion of justice against Serbia" to an end.

The comments by Kostunica are just the latest in a week full of indications
that Serbia isn't going to give in quickly when it comes to Kosovo's Feb. 17
declaration of independence. Belgrade insists that Kosovo, which is 90
percent ethnically Albanian, is an inalienable part of Serbian territory and
it has withdrawn ambassadors from all countries that have recognized an
independent Kosovo. On Wednesday, Kostunica said on Russian television that
the European Union "must recognize Serbia complete with an indivisible
Kosovo." He also said that the 1,900 police, justice experts and
administrative professionals sent to Kosovo by the EU "infringes on Serbia's
sovereignty."

"I am certain that Kosovo will be a part of Serbia as long as we exist as a
nation," Kostunica continued. "It is significant and assured that there will
be no normalization of relations with those countries that have recognized
Kosovo."

The war of words comes amid a noticeable lack of violence in Kosovo and
Serbia since a huge protest in Belgrade against Kosovo's independence last
Thursday. During the demonstration, 150 people were injured and one person
died when part of the US Embassy went up in flames. This Thursday, an
explosion rattled windows in the town of Mitrovica -- located in northern
Kosovo but divided between ethnic Albanians and Serbs. Two UN vehicles were
damaged in the blast but no one was hurt.

Still, the Serb enclave around Mitrovica remains tense and protests there
have been a daily occurrence since mid-February. According to the AP, scores
of Serb police officers working in the Kosovo police force have turned in
their badges since Kosovo declared independence with many more saying they
are planning to do the same, police officials said Thursday. The police
force had been one of the few integrated institutions in Kosovo, but now 170
of the 800 officers have quit.

According to a Reuters report, Germany is planning to send more troops to
Kosovo in response to the uneasiness. Citing an army source, Reuters says
that the extra troops are being sent as part of a training exercise, but
that the beef-up is also meant to send a message of strength.
Much of the wrangling, though, is taking place behind closed doors in the
Serbian capital Belgrade. Boris Tadic of the pro-Western Democratic Party
was re-elected as Serbia's president in early February on a platform
pledging to guide Serbia toward EU membership. Even as Kostunica expressed
understanding for the destruction of checkpoints on the border between
Kosovo and Serbia, Tadic was sharply critical of the attack on the US
Embassy in Belgrade. Deputy Serbian Prime Minister Bozidar Djelic, a member
of Tadic's party, reiterated this week that the Democratic Party would work
together with Kostunica's government only if it continued to support EU
integration and cooperated with the international community. "Of course we
can make decisions on an emotional basis, but our responsibility is to ask
what is in the best interests of our citizens."

On Friday, Belgrade took a small step toward improving damaged relations
with the West by filing criminal charges against 80 people involved in last
Thursday's attack on the US and other embassies. But Kostunica once again
made clear where his priorities lie. He spent part of Friday morning in a
pedestrian zone in central Belgrade where some looting took place last week.
He was there to hand out badges reading "Kosovo is Serbia."

cgh/dpa/AP/Reuters

Reply via email to