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On eve of Kosovar independence, Serbia cools toward West, but doesn't fight 
By Dan Bilefsky

Friday, February 15, 2008 

PRISTINA, Kosovo: As Kosovo prepared to declare its independence Sunday, the 
Serbian president, Boris Tadic, vowed he would never recognize an independent 
Kosovo, indicating that Belgrade would downgrade, but not necessarily break, 
diplomatic relations with any government that recognized Pristina.

"I will never give up the fight for our Kosovo," Tadic, a moderate, said Friday 
as he was formally sworn in for a new five-year term, giving the clearest 
indication yet that the independence declaration would not be met by violence 
or war. He said bilateral ties with countries that recognized Kosovo would be 
circumscribed, but added that a possible decision by Belgrade to withdraw 
ambassadors would "not mean it would stop communicating with those countries or 
cut ties with those countries."

Kosovo, a territory of two million people, has been under United Nations 
protection and policed by 16,000 North Atlantic Treaty Organization troops 
after NATO intervened in 1999 to halt Slobodan Milseovic's repression of the 
territory's ethnic Albanians, who make up 95 percent of the province's 
population. The independence of the poor, predominantly Muslim territory would 
mark the final stage of the dismemberment of the former Yugoslavia. It is 
supported by a majority of European Union countries and Washington, but is 
vehemently opposed by Serbia and its ally Russia.

In war-torn Pristina, pre-independence excitement began to overtake the capital 
Friday as hundreds of ethnic Albanians from around the world flooded into the 
city to celebrate what for many has been a long and bloody struggle for 
self-determination. Smiling Albanian border guards welcomed visitors to "our 
soon-to-be independent country," while hotels erected billboards offering 
discounts to citizens from countries that recognized an independent Kosovo.

"I waited my whole life for this," said Mildim Ukehaxaj, an Albanian from the 
Bronx, who traveled with his family from New York for the independence 
celebrations. "I lost a brother in the war. We all did. Independence means we 
know we can come to our homeland and be safe."

In Belgrade, the mood was defiant but resigned. The nationalist prime minister 
of Serbia, Vojislav Kostunica, who this week told Serbs that their country was 
about to be illegally severed, lashed out Friday at Western nations that had 
backed Kosovo's independence aspirations. On Thursday, the government adopted a 
resolution declaring any unilateral act by Kosovo's ethnic Albanian leadership 
to be invalid and illegal. Serbs have regarded Kosovo as their heartland since 
medieval times.

Officials in Belgrade said the government had adopted a secret plan of 
retaliation when Kosovo declared independence, including steps to encourage the 
province's 125,000 Serbs to ignore the declaration and keep their territories 
under de facto Serbian control.

Fears are growing in Kosovo's segregated Serbian enclaves in the north of the 
territory, where Serbs live surrounded by Albanians, that independence could 
revive ethnic resentments. Catholic Relief Services said it was preparing for a 
sudden outflow of Serbs from northern Kosovo and had installed soup kitchens in 
Mitrovica, a city in northern kosovo, divided between Serbs in the north and 
Albanians in the south.

Serb officials in Pristina said they expected thousands of Serbs in Kosovo's 
north to take to the streets in protest Monday, but senior European Union 
officials said they were not expecting violence, nor a mass exodus of Serbs.

"Things are tense, we are waiting to see what happens. Many people don't want 
to leave their homes, but they also don't want to live in a Kosovo that is not 
part of Serbia," said Negosava Mrdakovic, a Serb UN official, who herself lives 
in an enclave not far from Pristina.

In Brussels, EU diplomats were hard at work Friday on how to respond to 
Kosovo's expected independence declaration, and were drafting a statement that 
would commit the bloc to eventually offering EU membership and financial aid to 
both Kosovo and Serbia. Senior EU officials said they expected Kosovo's 
independence declaration to be recognized initially by France, Germany, Britain 
and the United States, with other EU countries following suit.

The EU remains divided over Kosovo, and diplomats said that it would be hard to 
get several countries - including Spain, Greece, Romania and Cyprus - to sign 
the EU declaration Monday. These countries fear that Kosovo's unilateral 
declaration will spur secessionist movements in their own territories.

Even with the EU's internal splits, diplomats said the EU was preparing to give 
final approval for an 1,800-strong police and judicial mission that will help 
Kosovo's government administer its new country after the United Nations leaves.

While Kosovo is preparing all of the symbols of statehood - including a new 
flag, a national anthem and a constitution - its national sovereignty will 
remain severely circumscribed, with Brussels exerting a strong oversight role 
and NATO assuring national security.

Russia eyes Georgian separatists 
Russia suggested Friday that Kosovo's expected independence declaration would 
affect its policy on two separatist regions in Georgia, but stopped short of 
saying it would recognize the breakaway provinces, The Associated Press 
reported from Moscow.

"The declaration and recognition of the independence of Kosovo will doubtless 
have to be taken into account as far as the situation in Abkhazia and South 
Ossetia is concerned," the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

The statement, released after Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov met with the 
pro-Russian regions' leaders, did not say how Russian policy toward the 
provinces might change.

Moscow formally supports the territorial integrity of Georgia, but has granted 
Russian citizenship to most residents of Abkhazia and South Ossetia and has 
warned the West that recognizing Kosovo would add legitimacy to their 
independence claims - with the implicit threat that Moscow could recognize them.



 

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