<http://www.iht.com/> International Herald Tribune 
U.N. negotiator says he sees no solution in Kosovo status talks 
The Associated Press 
 
MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2006 
 
<http://ad.fr.doubleclick.net/jump/europe.iht.com;cat=index;sz=336x280;ord=123456789?>
 
 
HELSINKI, Finland U.N. envoy Martti Ahtisaari sees no solution in the talks on 
the status of Kosovo because the two sides are too divided, he said Monday.

"I don't see the parties moving on the status issue. The parties remain 
diametrically opposed," the chief U.N. negotiator in the talks said in 
Helsinki. "I can't see there will be a negotiated settlement."

"Pristina has been prepared to make clear concessions, but Belgrade has been 
considerably less so," Ahtisaari said at a seminar on the Balkans organized by 
a Finnish security policy institute. "My overall assessment of these technical 
talks is that the prospect for finding a common ground is very limited."

Ahtisaari said the Serbs and ethnic Albanians in Kosovo would not reach a pact 
"at least not in my lifetime."

However, he added that he and his team "will continue to press forward until 
all potential areas for compromise have been explored."

Kosovo, formally a Serbian province, has been run by the United Nations and 
NATO since a 1999 war. The United States and the Contact Group for Kosovo, 
which includes Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Russia, have sought to wrap 
up the talks by year end.

But the negotiations, which started early this year, have produced no result 
with both sides entrenched in their positions — the ethnic Albanians demanding 
independence from Serbia and Belgrade offering broad autonomy for the breakaway 
region.

Ahtisaari, a former Finnish president, in 1999 negotiated with Serbian 
strongman Slobodan Milosevic to end the fighting in Kosovo. Last year, he 
brokered a peace treaty between the Indonesian government and rebels in Aceh 
province ending 30 years of fighting in the region.

Ahtisaari is due to report to the United Nations within the next few months on 
the status of the Kosovo talks. He stressed that an agreement must be reached 
in Kosovo to bring calm to the troubled region.

"A solution must be found, but that then means that the (U.N.) Security Council 
must take a stand in the issue," he said.

"Kosovo is the last piece of the Balkan puzzle that the international community 
has been attempting to reassemble since the dissolution of the former 
Yugoslavia 15 years ago," Ahtisaari said. "Without a lasting solution for 
Kosovo, there will be no lasting solution for the Balkans."




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 <http://www.iht.com/> International Herald Tribune Copyright © 2006 The 
International Herald Tribune | www.iht.com <http://www.iht.com/>  


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