http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7372253.stm

BBC (UK)

Crisis looms over Kosovo's future 

By Nick Thorpe 
BBC News, Pristina 

A crisis is looming for the international community's
effort to oversee Kosovo after independence. 

The United Nations, which has administered the
province since 1999, had been preparing to move out,
while alternative EU missions have already begun
moving in. 

But a full UN withdrawal is now in doubt, and it is
far from clear whether the EU and the UN can work
together after 15 June, when Kosovo's declaration of
independence is meant to take effect. 

The head of the UN Mission in Kosovo (Unmik), Joachim
Ruecker, has confirmed in a BBC interview that his
mission will continue longer than expected. 

"It is certainly clear that the UN has a
responsibility, that the mission will continue," Mr
Ruecker told the BBC. 

And referring to the 2,000-strong Europe Union Law and
Justice Mission (Eulex), which has already begun to be
deployed, he added: "We do take note of the fact that
Eulex is coming in... and in principle we do not want
to duplicate. 

"But whether and how there can be co-operation with
Eulex remains to be decided." 

Extra cost 

That spells a major headache for the EU. It had
expected to inherit a fleet of around 400 Unmik police
vehicles, plus headquarters, outbuildings, and other
equipment. 

According to one estimate, the extra cost of buying
and building a mission from scratch could be as high
as 100 million euros (£78m; $156m). 

INTERNATIONAL BODIES IN KOSOVO 
Unmik - UN body that has administered Kosovo from
1999, in the wake of Nato bombing of Serbia 
Eulex - EU mission to assist Kosovo's police and
judiciary 
International Civilian Office (ICO) - EU mission
intended to supervise independent Kosovo 

The Eulex deployment deadline has already been set
back to August. Informed speculation in Pristina is
that October is more realistic. 

Mr Ruecker's comments underline deep divisions within
the international community over the independence of
Kosovo - and there is a sense of growing confusion and
unease within Kosovo itself. 

Accusations of being "pro-Serb" or "pro-Albanian" are
flying, even among international officials. 

Considerable autonomy 

On 15 June, the new Kosovo constitution comes into
force. Based on the plan drawn up by the former UN
envoy, Martti Ahtisaari, it decentralises Kosovo and
allows considerable autonomy to Kosovo Serbs. 

The date forces the hand of UN Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon, who will soon have to announce his own plans
for Kosovo, and explain how any residual UN mission is
supposed to co-exist with the Europeans. 

When the constitution comes into effect, "it is likely
that we will be in a situation where the mandate as we
know it cannot be implemented any more," says Joachim
Ruecker. 

One idea is a "double-hatted" arrangement, under which
Mr Ruecker would be replaced in June by a diplomat
working both for the UN, and the EU. 

The UN has been quietly scaling back its own
activities in Kosovo for some time - 23% of posts in
the organisation are now empty, though UN headquarters
in New York has instructed that the figure should not
reach beyond 30%. 

Most UN staff, currently on contracts which end on 30
June, have been told that their contracts will be
extended to 31 December. 

What next? 

Several scenarios are now under consideration,
according to well-placed sources. 

The most radical would be to scrap the EU Law and
Justice mission, and its sister mission, the
International Civilian Office altogether, and leave
everything to the UN. 

A second would be to deploy Eulex only in Albanian
areas, with the residual UN mission in Serb enclaves. 

"The problem with that is that it will provide an
excuse to hardline Serbs in the north to continue to
resist an EU deployment," said one Western diplomat in
Pristina. "And that would intensify the degree of
partition." 

Alex Anderson, head of the Pristina office of the
International Crisis Group, describes that idea as "a
risk of tribalism emerging among the international
presences". 

"There is certainly a great need to find creative ways
to allow the EU to extend its reach over the whole of
Kosovo," he says. 

Elections 

A third scenario is to delay, in the hope that the
situation will eventually improve sufficiently to
allow Eulex to deploy throughout the country,
including in the majority-Serb north. 

All eyes are now on the Serbian elections on 11 May.
If the pro-European Democrats of President Boris Tadic
win, emotions over Kosovo might die down. 

If the nationalists, including the Serbian Radical
Party, form the next government, defiance of the EU
missions in Kosovo could intensify. Polls currently
predict a narrow victory for the nationalists. 

"It is important for the international community to
continue to contribute to peace and security, and the
well-being of all communities in the north - as Unmik
has been doing," said Gerry Galluci, regional head of
Unmik North, in Mitrovica. 

But very different opinions of Unmik North can be
heard in Pristina. 

"Unmik in the North of Kosovo has done nothing but
appease Serb warlords," said one international
official. "And their allies, the nationalist parties
in Belgrade."

00:35 GMT, Tuesday, 29 April 2008 01:35 UK

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