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"Non-paper" shook the region: New borders in the Balkans


8-10 minutes

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"Uncensored" from Slovenia published a "non-paper" on the new divisions. 

Source: B92 Friday, April 16, 2021 | 10:46 



Ilustration: olinchuk/ Depositphotos

The document, which has raised many eyebrows in the region in recent days
reads about the idea for the dismemberment of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the
accession of the Republic of Srpska to Serbia and the unification of Kosovo
with Albania, and speculates that Slovenian President Janez Jansa sent the
"non-paper" to Brussels.

No one has officially confirmed that the President of the European Council,
Charles Michel, received a document of such content from Slovenia. But an
unofficial diplomatic document that predicts the disintegration of Bosnia
and Herzegovina, the annexation of the Republic of Srpska to Serbia and the
unification of Kosovo with Albania actually exists, Uncensored wrote, as the
Klix.ba portal reports. 

According to the information published by the Slovenian portal, the document
entitled "Western Balkans - the way forward" was received by the office of
Charles Michel in February. 

The author is still unofficially unknown. According to Slovenian
journalists, it was certainly not written in the Slovenian Ministry of
Foreign Affairs. 

Allegedly, part of the content could have been written in Budapest. However,
in diplomatic circles in Brussels, it was referred to as a "Slovenian"
document, because the office of Mr. Jansa allegedly participated in sending
it to various addresses. 

Since it is an unofficial diplomatic document intended for communicating
various views and initiatives without an official character, it has neither
a header nor a signature. It arrived to Michel outside official diplomatic
mail, so its existence can be publicly denied at any time. 

Therefore, this is not the official position of Slovenia, but one of many
informal proposals for a possible solution to the issue concerning the
countries of the former Yugoslavia. Its content is completely in
contradiction with all valid documents on which Slovenia's foreign policy is
based. How to dismember Bosnia

The introduction of the document thus mentions the "unresolved national
issues of Serbs, Albanians and Croats", which emerged after the break-up of
Yugoslavia. The authors of the document point out that even after the
establishment of peace after the end of wars promised European perspectives
and the progress of Northern Macedonia and Montenegro in this direction in
the region, "key issues remain unresolved". These are the questions: 

*       The Dayton Accords of 1995, which ended the war in Bosnia and
Herzegovina, which claimed more than 100,000 lives, practically recognized
what had been achieved in the war, but not in principle.
*       That it is currently difficult to imagine the European perspectives
of Serbia and Kosovo.
*       Membership of Bosnia in the EU can be completely excluded.
*       In the meantime, the gap has been used by Turkey, which has
increased its influence in Bosnia and Northern Macedonia.
*       Except for Turkey, a few local politicians and their supporters, who
personally benefit from the chaos and dysfunctional institutions, no one
else is content with the situation in Bosnia.

A key section of the "non-paper" are the proposed "solutions" to the
previously described problems. 

The authors of the document emphasized that Serbia, Croatia, and Albania
currently have stable governments and that their elected politicians are
capable of making strategic decisions. What do they propose?

1. Unification of Kosovo and Albania. "In Kosovo, 95 percent of the
population wants to unite with the Albanian nation. The situation is similar
in Albania. The border between Albania (a NATO member) and Kosovo is
practically non-existent. The Serbian part of Kosovo would receive a special
status - modeled on South Tyrol." It was written in the document. It is an
autonomous province in northern Italy, where the majority of the population
speaks German. 

2. Unification of a larger part of the territory of the Republic of Srpska
with Serbia. "The Serbian national question can be largely resolved by
annexing part of the Republic of Srpska to Serbia. In this case, Serbia is
ready to agree to the unification of Kosovo and Albania," the document
reads. 

3. The Croatian national question maybe resolved by merging most of the
Croatian cantons in Bosnia with Croatia or by giving the special status to
the Croat part of Bosnia (following the example of South Tyrol)." 

4. "This would give Bosnians an independently functional state and to take
full responsibility for it. In a referendum, people would decide whether to
join the EU or a future outside the EU (following Turkey's example.) For
now, the vast majority of Bosnians support the EU, but with this Turkish
influence and radical Islam, the situation could worsen drastically in the
next decade."

 

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