<http://www.iht.com/> International Herald Tribune

Kosovo's independence drive kindles ethnic fears 

By CRAIG S. SMITH

Sunday, February 4, 2007 

MITROVICA, Kosovo 

Thuggish Serbian "bridge watchers" still maintain their vigil on the north side 
of the Ibar River here, ready to punish any ethnic Albanian who dares to cross 
the unofficial boundary between Serbian and ethnic Albanian territory in 
Europe's unfinished war.

Kosovo, still officially a province of Serbia, is bitterly divided between 
Serbian enclaves, including a large chunk of the north, and the rest of the 
territory, which is overwhelmingly ethnic Albanian. Now, as the United Nations 
nudges Kosovo toward what it calls "final status" and Belgrade calls 
independence, many of northern Kosovo's Serbs are threatening to break away.

"Northern Kosovo will secede," warned Oliver Ivanovic, a moderate Serbian 
politician here. Mr. Ivanovic says he has been warning the United Nations, 
NATO, the European Union and the United States that, nearly eight years after a 
NATO bombing campaign drove the Serbian Army and other security forces out of 
Kosovo, it is still too early to settle the status of the disputed territory. 
"Kosovo's independence will leave no space for the moderates to act."

Secession by northern Serbs could provoke Albanian reprisals against Serbian 
enclaves elsewhere in Kosovo, warn Serbs and Albanians alike, and could 
destabilize a still fragile region full of ethnic slivers separated from their 
homelands.

Kosovo, which is more than 90 percent ethnic Albanian, has struggled since the 
early 20th century to free itself from the dominance of Belgrade. With the 
breakup of Yugoslavia in the early 1990s the fight began anew, but Serbia 
resisted fiercely.

The war was marked by atrocities on both sides and a horrific cycle of "ethnic 
cleansing," as the formerly mixed Serbian and ethnic Albanian populations 
pulled apart. Nearly 10,000 ethnic Albanians died as well as many Serbs. 
Thousands more, mostly ethnic Albanians, remain missing.

It ended with NATO's intervention in 1999, and the province has been 
administered by the United Nations ever since.

[A United Nations mediator, Martti Ahtisaari, presented his proposals for 
Kosovo's final status to officials in Belgrade and Pristina on Friday, but the 
two sides remained far apart. The Serbian president, Boris Tadic, immediately 
rejected the plans as a prelude to independence while Kosovo Albanians — who 
with the United States' blessing have said they will accept nothing less than 
independence — welcomed them. The continued standoff suggested that the 
intended end may instead be a prologue to another difficult chapter in a 
troubled history.]

Most of the Kosovo Serbs insist that they will never accept an independent 
Kosovo. Even if the government in Pristina does hoist a new national flag, they 
say, they will fight to recover the province that Serbs still consider their 
cultural heartland — the cradle and, in 1389 at the hand of the Turks, the 
grave of their great medieval empire.

"It would create a situation like Iraq or Lebanon here in Serbia," said Milan 
Ivanovic, a doctor at Mitrovica's hospital and head of Kosovo's hard-line 
Serbian National Council (no relation to Oliver Ivanovic). He cited the 
Christian reconquest of Moorish Spain and France's eventual recovery of the 
Alsace-Lorraine region from Germany as models. "We would fight to get Kosovo 
back with all legitimate means."

Kosovo Albanians and their international supporters hope that a high degree of 
autonomy in Serbian areas with guarantees for the protection of Serbian rights 
and strict international oversight will eventually persuade Serbs in the 
territory to accept an Albanian-led government in Pristina.

"Hopefully, with independence, a local Serb leadership will emerge to address 
the needs of the Serbs within the Kosovo system," said Muhamet Hamiti, an 
adviser to Kosovo's president, Fatmir Sejdiu.

Some moderate Serbian politicians are already willing to work within a Kosovo 
national system, even if their political support in the Serbian community is 
small.

But Serbian enclaves, particularly northern Kosovo, still operate under Serbian 
national authority and draw most of their financial support from Belgrade, 
raising questions about how Pristina could enforce sovereignty over Kosovo 
Serbs without coercive actions that would risk provoking more violence.

Nowhere is the divide as clear as in the region around this northern city. A 
United Nations-financed train that links the rest of Kosovo's Serb enclaves 
with the north carries Serbs and Albanians alike until it reaches the Mitrovica 
station south of the river. There, even the Albanian conductor gets off. Only 
Serbs ride on for another 15 minutes across an iron railroad bridge to the end 
of the line.

"I'm not brave enough to go up there," the conductor said, watching the train 
pull away. "I survived the war. I don't need another challenge."

Cars carry Serbian license plates and the economy still operates on the Serbian 
dinar even though the Albanian areas of this long-disputed territory, now 
administered by the United Nations, long ago converted to the euro. Serbia's 
Ministry of Education in Belgrade has even set up what it calls the "University 
of Pristina, Temporarily Located in Mitrovica."

"How can they force us to accept independence?" asked Dr. Ivanovic, the Serbian 
politician, who like many people working for Serbian institutions in Kosovo's 
Serbian enclaves is paid an above average salary by Belgrade as a reward for 
his loyalty.

While many people see fixing Kosovo's eventual independence as the last chapter 
of Yugoslav disintegration, Serbs see it as the dismemberment of their homeland.

The province, ringed by snowy mountains and populated with great colonies of 
inky rooks that gave it its name (kos means blackbird in Serbian), is home to 
the Serbian Orthodox Church's most sacred sites.

"This is the spiritual center of the Serbian Church," said Sister Dobrila, a 
nun at the monastery of the Patriarchate of Pec, which was built around a 
richly frescoed Byzantine church from the 13th century that holds the tombs of 
Serbia's medieval archbishops.

She noted that western Kosovo, the site of the monastery, is called Metohija in 
Serbian, which means "church land." "It's sacred territory," she said.

Even the birds, which swarm over Pristina to settle in its trees at night, are 
woven into the nationalist myth. According to Serbian folklore, the birds are 
the souls of the dead from the 14th century battle of Kosovo, in which a 
Serbian-led Christian army sought to stop the Ottoman advance — an advance 
whose legacy is the nominally Muslim Albanian majority in the province today.

The common analogy given to Americans, imperfect but pertinent in the emotions 
it stirs, is the notion of secession by Florida or New Mexico, if the 
Spanish-speaking populations in those states became a majority. The analogy is 
imperfect because few Americans, most of whom are already long separated from 
their cultural roots, have as deep an emotional connection to place as many 
Europeans have.

That is why Europe, understanding the violence of such emotions, is not united 
behind the United Nations plan. Countries facing their own secessionist 
movements — Spain with the Basques, Romania with ethnic Hungarians, and Russia 
with Chechens and peoples of other rebellious territories — are skeptical of 
what they see as an American effort to jam a solution into place so Washington 
can turn its attention elsewhere.

"A forced solution is not a solution," said Marko Jaksic, head of the 
Democratic Party of Serbia and widely regarded as the most powerful politician 
in Mitrovica.

  _____  

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 <http://www.iht.com/> International Herald TribuneCopyright © 2007 The 
International Herald Tribune | www.iht.com 


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