Belgrade wants autonomy for Kosovo Serbs: report 

20 December 2012, 18:32 CET 

— filed under:  <http://www.eubusiness.com/search?Subject%3Alist=Serbia> 
Serbia,  <http://www.eubusiness.com/search?Subject%3Alist=Spain> Spain,  
<http://www.eubusiness.com/search?Subject%3Alist=Kosovo> Kosovo,  
<http://www.eubusiness.com/search?Subject%3Alist=talks> talks,  
<http://www.eubusiness.com/search?Subject%3Alist=politics> politics 

(BELGRADE) - Serbia wants for its Serb minority in breakaway Kosovo a "high 
degree of autonomy" modelled on Spain's Catalan region, Beta news agency 
reported on Thursday, quoting a document to be sent to the republic's 
parliament for debate.

Kosovo in 2008 declared itself an independent state, a move which was rejected 
by Serbia and Serbs in Kosovo but which was recognised by much of the 
international community. 

The document, presented to Serbia's opposition leaders by President Tomislav 
Nikolic, called for a "high degree of territorial and political autonomy" for 
all municipalities in Kosovo where the Serbs form a majority, the agency said.

Serbia also wants such a status for some 120,000 Serbs in ethnic Albanian 
majority Kosovo to be guaranteed by the international community and the laws of 
the territory.

Government officials so far declined to comment on the document. 

According to Beta, Serbia, which still considers Kosovo a province, wants this 
autonomy to cover all aspects of everyday life, including police, education, 
justice, economy and financial issues.

Such a request is "in accordance with the international law, the constitution 
and the will of the people," Beta said, quoting the document.

"Serbia will never recognise the independence of Kosovo," it added.

The document stipulates that autonomy should be given to four municipalities in 
tense northern Kosovo -- where some 40,000 minority Serbs live -- as well as to 
the enclaves scattered throughout the territory, home to a remaining 80,000 
Serbs.

In Pristina, where Kosovo Albanian daily Koha Ditore published a document it 
said was a part of the Serbian "platform" obtained from a diplomatic source, 
prime minister Hashim Thaci said such a plan "is not feasible."

"This anti-European and out-of-date platform is against peace in Kosovo and in 
the region... It will remain Belgrade's wishful thinking," Thaci told his 
cabinet.

Improvement in relations between Belgrade and Pristina is a key condition 
Brussels has set for Serbia to obtain the date to start membership talks with 
the European Union.

http://www.eubusiness.com/news-eu/serbia-spain-kosovo.lj3

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