EU Deal 'Signed with Serbia, without Kosovo'

 

Karel De Gucht

06 May 2008 Belgrade _ EU and Belgrade officials have criticised Belgium’s
Foreign Minister for saying the EU pre-membership deal was signed “with
Serbia alone, without Kosovo.” 

“My understanding is that we signed the Stabilisation and Association
Agreement, SAA, with Serbia alone, without Kosovo,” said Karel De Gucht.

In Belgrade, Serbia’s Minister for Kosovo, Slobodan Samardzic said De
Gucht’s words “confirmed what Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica has been
saying all along.”

Samardzic, of Kostunica’s nationalist Democratic Party of Serbia, DSS, said
the statement proved that the signing of the SAA in fact meant signing off
Kosovo’s independence.

Serbia’s Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic, however, said De Gucht’s remarks were
“for internal political use only.”

Belgium joined Netherlands in opposing Serbia’s signing of the SAA, widely
seen as the first step toward EU membership, until Belgrade is deemed to be
fully cooperating with the International Criminal Tribunal for Former
Yugoslavia, ICTY, based in The Hague.

The two countries eventually gave in and accepted to sign the deal on April
29, although Belgrade will only gain benefits of the deal when there is
cooperation with The Hague Tribunal.

“Belgium opposed the SAA with Serbia and De Gucht’s words therefore have an
exclusive domestic political purpose,” Jeremic said.

In Brussels, EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana's spokeswoman Cristina
Gallach also criticised De Gucht’s statement, saying that the SAA signed
with Serbia “has a neutral stand towards Kosovo’s status.”

The SAA’s text which Kostunica’s cabinet unanimously agreed to initial last
November, stipulates that Kosovo is under United Nations’ administration as
per UN Security Council Resolution 1244, passed at the end of the 1998-1999
conflict between Serb forces and Kosovo’s ethnic Albanian majority.

In the SAA’s article 135, it says the treaty does not deal with the status
of Kosovo, Serbia’s former southern province, which declared independence on
February 17.

The signing of the SAA, however, prompted a bitter row in Belgrade between
pro-European and nationalist politicians who are about to face each other in
early general elections due on Sunday.

The main topic dominating the election campaign is Serbia’s future links
with the EU, with pro-Europeans pushing for closer ties with Brussels,
arguing Serbia’s interests will be best defended within the bloc, while
nationalists say Serbia should not join the EU unless it accepts Kosovo as a
part of Serbia.

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