independent.co.uk 
<https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/serbia-ap-kosovo-nato-china-b2348132.html>
  


China expresses support for Serbia in renewed Kosovo clashes involving NATO 
troops


Via AP news wire

~3 minutes

  _____  




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China <https://www.independent.co.uk/topic/china>  on Tuesday expressed its 
support for Serbia’s efforts to “safeguard its sovereignty and territorial 
integrity” following renewed violence between ethnic Serbs and NATO 
peacekeeping troops in Kosovo <https://www.independent.co.uk/topic/kosovo> . 

China’s ruling Communist Party has long been a critic of the NATO alliance, 
stemming partly from the bombing of Beijing’s embassy in Belgrade during the 
1999 air campaign to end Serbia’s brutal crackdown on ethnic Albanian 
separatists in Kosovo. 

The bombing, in which three Chinese journalists were killed, has long been used 
by Beijing to mobilize anti-Western sentiment. The U.S. apologized for the 
attack, blaming it on faulty intelligence. Its diplomatic missions in Beijing 
and other Chinese cities were assaulted in the fallout, setting ties on a 
negative trajectory that has grown ever more tense in recent years. 

China, along with Russia and Serbia 
<https://www.independent.co.uk/topic/serbia> , does not recognize Kosovo’s 2008 
independence and Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning on Tuesday placed the 
blame for the violence on a failure to respect Serbian political rights. 

“We oppose unilateral actions by the Provisional Institutions of 
Self-Government of Kosovo," Mao said at a daily news briefing, referring to the 
Kosovo government in Pristina. 

Despite Serbs boycotting recent local elections and seeking to prevent ethnic 
Albanian mayors from taking office, Mao said Serbs should be granted control 
over municipalities where they form majorities. 

Violence was sparked when Serbs tried to take over the offices of one of the 
municipalities in northern Kosovo where Albanian mayors took up their posts 
last week. At least 30 troops from the NATO-led peacekeeping force in Kosovo, 
KFOR, were injured on Monday. 

“We urge NATO to earnestly respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of 
the relevant countries and truly do what is conducive to regional peace,” Mao 
said. 

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic 
<https://www.independent.co.uk/topic/aleksandar-vucic>  was expected to meet 
with the Russian and Chinese ambassadors in an effort to show he has support 
for his policies. 

NATO’s military intervention in 1999 eventually forced Serbia to pull out of 
the territory, but the dispute remains a flashpoint for conflict in eastern 
Europe. 

Russian ally Serbia last year took the delivery of a sophisticated Chinese 
anti-aircraft system in a veiled operation, amid Western concerns that an arms 
buildup in the Balkans at the time of the war in Ukraine could threaten the 
fragile peace in the region.

 

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