Kosovo follows risky path with plan to give EU sweeping powers 

By Vesna Peric Zimonjic in Belgrade 

Published: 11 December 2006 

Kosovo is set to follow the path of Bosnia-Herzegovina in giving the balance of 
power to international overseers enabling them to ignore elected leaders, under 
draft UN plans seen by The Independent. 

The European Union mission which is set to take over from the UN in the 
breakaway province of Kosovo, will be given sweeping powers over locally 
elected authorities in a scheme which strongly resembles the fruitless 
international effort in Bosnia.

The future of the province is subject to tense talks between international 
mediators, the Serbian government and representatives of the province's ethnic 
Albanian majority.

Kosovo's Albanian community - more than 90 percent of the province's 2 million 
population - wants to establish an independent state, while Serbia has insisted 
Kosovo remain part of its territory.

The US and Western powers expect the upcoming UN ruling to result in 
conditional independence for Kosovo, despite Serbia's objections.

Once that status is agreed the draft plan calls for the establishment of an 
International Civil Representative (ICR), much like that existing in Bosnia. 
They would then have the authority to annul Kosovo government decisions as well 
as laws adopted by the local parliament and to replace officials whose policy 
is not in tune with the demands of the EU.

Similar powers in Bosnia-Herzegovina have already created huge resentment 
against the Office of the High Representative, particularly among Bosnian Serbs 
and Croats.

The office of the ICR will also overlook the work of Kosovo's police, 
judiciary, customs and penal institutions.

Besides Pristina, there will be two subordinated offices, one in the northern 
town of Mitrovica where most Kosovo Serbs live and another in the Serbian 
capital of Belgrade.

Kosovo is currently run by a UN administration supplemented by a nucleus of 
local democratic institutions. In effect, it ceased to be part of Serbia in 
1999, after 11 weeks of Nato air strikes prompted by Belgrade's violent 
oppression of the ethnic Albanians. Local leaders have insisted on independence 
since the Serbian surrender, but it is not mentioned in this plan.

Instead the only describes what happens once the status is decided, through 
negotiations undertaken by the UN's Finnish special envoy Martti Ahtisaari. 
However, the plan, which was created under the mandate provided by the EU 
security chief Javier Solana earlier this year, foresees the steps that will 
lead to the EU presence in Kosovo.

Once the status is clear, the office of ICR will take over from the UN 
administration. At the same time, Nato peacekeepers will remain in the 
province, as well as the OSCE, much like in Bosnia.

International diplomatic sources in Belgrade say that the decision on Kosovo's 
status is likely to be made in the first months of 2007. 


View article...  http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article2064707.ece



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Одговори путем е-поште