Serbia asks UN for partitioning of Kosovo

*        <http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/iantraynor> Ian Traynor, Europe
editor 
*        <http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian> The Guardian, 
*       Tuesday March 25 2008 
*       Article history


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This article appeared in the Guardian
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian>  on Tuesday March 25 2008
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2008/mar/25>  on p18 of the
International
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2008/mar/25/mainsection/international
>  section. It was last updated at 00:00 on March 25 2008. 

Serbia has formally proposed partitioning Kosovo along ethnic lines for the
first time, asking the United Nations to ensure that Belgrade can control
key institutions and functions in areas of the newly independent country
where Serbs form a majority.

In a document sent to the UN in New York, proposed to the UN in Kosovo last
week and published in the Belgrade press yesterday, the government in
Belgrade insists that Serbia be allowed to control the police, the courts,
the judiciary and customs in the Serbian enclaves in Kosovo and in the
northern strip around the tense Serb-controlled town of Mitrovica.

Described as a blueprint for the "functional division of Serbs and Kosovo
Albanians" by the Serbian minister pushing the policy, the proposal is the
nearest Serbia has come to calling openly for partition, although it is
working on the ground on Kosovo to make the division a reality.

The Serbian government of Vojislav Kostunica, which utterly rejects Kosovan
independence, never officially urges the ethnic partition since to do so
would be to forfeit its claim to Serbian sovereignty over all of Kosovo. But
the proposal acknowledges the UN as the sole authority in Kosovo, rejecting
the legitimacy of both the Kosovo government and the EU mission that is
supposed to take over from the UN over the next three months.

Clashes between Serbs and UN and Nato forces in Mitrovica last week left one
Ukrainian dead and scores injured. The UN said Belgrade was behind the
trouble, which erupted over a Serbian takeover of a local courthouse.
Mitrovica Serbs are promising to stage a large demonstration again today in
the town, which Serbia has controlled for most of the nine-year UN mission
in Kosovo.

Slobodan Samardzic, the Serbian minister running the partition policy along
with Kostunica, implicitly threatened more unrest in Mitrovica if the
demands were ignored. "If [the UN] want peace and stability, they must reach
a lasting agreement with the Serbs, and not try to put out a fire 

 

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