----- Original Message -----
From: "Boba" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <Recipient list suppressed>
Sent: Thursday, November 17, 2005 6:37 AM
Subject: [sn-vesti 26767] Trifkovic on riots in Frnace, Kosovo and Joseph
Biden


http://www.serbianna.com/columns/borojevic/027.shtml

Colonized Kosovo: Muslim demands and Western servitude

By Boba Borojevic

Ottawa, November 14, 2005 - The violence that started Oct. 27 among Muslim
youths in the dreary industrial suburbs northeast of Paris soon grew into a
nationwide insurrection in the banlieus, of arson and clashes with police.
Prime Minister de Villepin said the nation faced a "moment of truth" over
its failure to integrate Arab and African immigrants and their children into
its mainstream.
A thousand miles away and 16 months ago, on March 17, 2004, Albanian mobs
burned down hundreds of Serbian houses and some thirty Serbian Orthodox
churches. They also expelled over 2000 non-Albanians from Kosovo. Some
voices in the "international community" tried to explain this violence as
the result of Albanian frustration for not getting independence from Serbia.
Is there any significant similarity between demands and actions of Albanian
Muslims in Kosovo and Muslim "youths" in France?

Dr Srdja Trifkovic, director of the Institute for International Affairs at
The Rockford Institute in Illinois says that the difference is two-folded.

The riots in Kosovo in 1981, 1989, in the 1990s and than on several
occasions following the NATO occupation but most notably on March 17, 2004,
are based in a combination of nationalist and Islamic motives. It would be
inappropriate to ascribe them completely to the influence of religious
teaching, just as it would be wrong to exclude Islam from the mix of
emotions that drive the Albanian political mainstream. Significant segments
of the Albanian Kosovo youths active in the KLA and associated groups are
primarily driven by the desire to declare independence from Serbia, to expel
the remaining Serbs and other non-Albanians, and to have a mono-ethnic
Kosovo. Their murderous antagonism is not fully explicable, however, without
some reference to the gap that Islam breeds between Muslims and non-Muslims,
in the Balkans and elsewhere.

In France by contrast, many of the North African youths of Arabic origin,
most of them of an Algerian, Moroccan or Tunisian parentage, want their
self-rule within France, rather than independence from France. For at least
some of them the ultimate objective is to take over France and the rest of
Europe altogether, but for now they have one key political demand that is
not sufficiently publicized in the Western media: the acceptance of no-go
areas for the police in certain "difficult" areas with a Muslim majority,
and de facto autonomy for those areas. Young Muslims want their turf to be
governed by themselves, within the boundaries of the French state but
definitely outside the French society. Their community leaders, imams and
sheikhs, hope that eventually the application of the Sharia law within their
communities will be only a matter of time.

The exclusion for the French state, its police forces, judicial and
administrative authorities from the areas in which the Muslims comprise a
majority would be only the first step. What they are asking for is
reminiscent of the Turkish millet system of local authority exercised by
different religious and ethnic units within the Ottoman Empire. "It
presupposes the right of the Muslims in Europe to be treated as a separate
community, guided by its own rules and not subject to the prevailing laws
and mores of the secular host society," explains Trifkovic.

Although many rioters in France have rather vague notions of what they
reallt want, Trifkovic cautions that we need to look at the statements by
their community leaders, by people who are demanding "negotiations" with the
French government. "What we are witnessing is the first step of the intifada
that will seek to gradually establish pockets of Muslim-ruled areas that
will be inhabited solely by Muslims. We have seen the same progression in
North Africa and the Middle East in the early stages of Muslim expansion in
the 7th and 8th centuries."

The reason why western governments and the mainstream media have failed to
address the issue of intifada in Europe, Trifkovic says, is that it would
imply the recognition that integration and assimilation have failed
miserably.

"What we have witnessed in the past 40 years is a massive influx of Muslim
immigrants into Europe. We are talking about 20-plus million people - the
greatest migration of people ever recorded in history! It far exceeds the
European emigration into North America. Even in the late 19th century, in no
single year had more than half a million Europeans migrated to the rest of
the world, including North and South America, Australia, South Africa etc.
This massive migratory onslaught has been accompanied by the demand of the
European elite class for the newcomers' "inclusion," for the host-nations'
"tolerance" of alien practices and cultural assumptions, for
multiculturalism, for an irreversible welcoming mat for the newcomers who
have never intended to be integrated. They have compact communities, which
can function on their own terms and in their own right without ever learning
the language of the host society and without ever accepting any of its
cultural assumptions and values," concludes Trifkovic.

Colonial Attitudes

According to Finish newspapers the appointment of Martti Ahtisaari as an UN
Special Envoy authorized by the United Nations and the great powers to lead
the talks on the future status of Kosovo is another impressive demonstration
of the authority and confidence the former President enjoys among the
international community in such matters. Trifkovic sees Martti Ahtisaari as
the one of ever-present faceless bureaucrats picked up by the so-called
international community when they want a process with the preordained
outcome to get underway.

"He was already involved in 1999 in negotiating the agreement in Kumanovo
that persuaded the withdrawal of Serbian police and military units from
Kosovo before NATO came in. The interregnum assured that most of the Serbian
and other non-Albanian population would be expelled by Albanians. His
subsequent association with the so-called International Crisis Group (ICG),
an organization implacably committed to the concept of the Albanian
independence, is not promising at all. The Serbian authorities would have
been well advised to declare that his services are not welcome for that
reason. The Serbs should have demanded someone more evenhanded, less
compromised by bias and by prior political activities. There is no doubt
that, had the international community appointed someone who has said that
Kosovo should stay within Serbia, the Albanians and their cohorts would have
cried murder and demanded that person's replacement."

Brelgrade's negotiating team consisting of the prime minister of Serbia
Vojislav Kostunica, president of Serbia Boris Tadic and president of the
state union Serbia and Montenegro, Svetozar Marovic, includes vastly
different and mutually incompatible personalities and views on how to
conduct the negotiations and how the future status of Kosovo should look
like, says Trifkovic.

"It is enough to look at the well exploited phrase 'more than autonomy and
less than independence'. Professor Kosta Cavoski, one of the leading Serbian
jurists, has explained that there is nothing in between those two terms. You
either have autonomy, which means self-rule that falls short of
independence, or you have more than that, which means full sovereignty
without even a resemblance or pretence of institutional link between
Belgrade and Pristina.

"The phrase more than autonomy and less than independence is very damaging
for the Serbian side. It implicitly recognizes that whatever Kosovo gets it
will be de facto independence, under whatever name. For as long as Belgrade
does not have a specific plan, the one that will be based upon already
existing models elsewhere in the world, such as the autonomy for Swedes in
Finland, the models of coexistence or, to be more precise, the methods of
separation of Greeks and Turks of Cypress, the models of territorial
autonomy that the Vatican's institutions enjoy in the Italian republic, for
as long as we are always inventing some new models - of which the world
remains unaware to this day - we are following one-way street to de facto
independence of Kosovo under whatever name," says Trifkovic.

Constant Pressure on Serbs by Foreign Powers

Belgrade newspaper "Politika' reported that the American senator Joesph
Biden had said at the meeting of the Foreign policy committee of American
Senate on November 9, that: "If we do the right thing in Kosovo, it'll
remind Muslims round the world the US helped Kosovo Muslim population to
build a strong, independent, multi ethnic democracy."

Biden's opinion does not surprise Trifkovic who said that we had witnessed
that attitude in the past decade. "Joe Biden was consistently wrong on every
Balkan issue and remains wrong to this day. The senator from Delaware does
not understand the Balkans or Islam. Giving Muslims a few morsels in the
Balkans in the hope that the US will justify itself for the policy in Iraq
and the policy of supporting Israel has been proven false under the Clinton
administration. People who still maintain the same cause today are either
politically very naïve, or deliberately mendacious, or just plain stupid.

"As for the issue of substance the declaration of either the House of
Representatives or the Senate that has no legal binding value, that has no
character of policy declaration that the administration has to follow is
symbolic and should not be treated by the Serbs as a tool of heavy
pressure," says Trifkovic.

When push comes to shove, without Serbia's agreement an independent Kosovo
cannot function. If the Serbs declare that they will not accept Kosovo's
travel documents, customs forms, passports, license plates, etc. it would be
impossible for an independent Kosovo to function. The only functional link
between Kosovo and the heartland of Europe goes through Serbia to the north
and west. And if the Serbs are determined in the defense of their concept of
sovereignty, no "independent" Kosovo would be able to function."

According to Trifkovic, the Serbian side strategy at the moment should be
defensive. "The Serbs have no need to accept the deadline of 2006, or any
other year. There are crisie in the world such as Middle East crisis that
has been subjected to many deadlines in the past. We've had Madrid, we've
had Camp David I, Camp David II, and Oslo and yet it remains unresolved. Why
should the Kosovo crisis be subject to any cut-off date? And why should the
Serbs negotiate today if the UNSC Resolution 1244 from 1999 remains
unfulfilled? Those two issues have not been answered in satisfactory
manner," Trifkovic says. The Serbs can insist on 1244 as the preconditions
for negotiations. Belgrade has strong arguments, and that is why the
implicit intention of those who want an independent Kosovo is to make
Belgrade give up on UNSC 1244," concluded Trifkovic his interview for
"Monday's Encounter" on CKCU 93.1 FM in Ottawa.



------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
Help save the life of a child. Support St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/cRr2eB/lbOLAA/E2hLAA/1dTolB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

===============
Group Moderator: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
page at http://magazine.sorabia.net
for more informations about current situation in Serbia http://www.sorabia.net 
Slusajte GLAS SORABIJE nas talk internet-radio (Serbian Only)
http://radio.sorabia.net
 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/sorabia/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Одговори путем е-поште