http://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics-article.php?yyyy=2007&mm=09&dd=12&nav_category=90&nav_id=43697

Belgrade to tell Kosovo Serbs to boycott vote
12 September 2007 | 10:32 -> *18:05* | Source: B92, Beta
*BELGRADE, BRUSSELS, LISBON -- Authorities in Belgrade will advise 
Kosovo Serbs against taking part in the November 17 ballot in the province.

*Prime Minister Vojislav Koštunica, on a visit to Brussels Wednesday, 
has not yet officially confirmed this.

However, reports from Belgium suggest he has notified EU foreign policy 
chief Javier Solana about the decision during their meeting today.

UNMIK announced earlier that the deadline for submitting electoral 
lists, which expired at 5 p.m. this afternoon, will not be extended.

Sources close to the top Serbian state officials say that Koštunica and 
President Boris Tadić, who two years ago had a difference of opinion 
when it came to the Kosovo Serbs' participation in the provincial 
elections, now see eye to eye and believe the conditions for 
participation do not exist.

Tadić is on a one-day visit to Portugal today, where he told reporters 
he "had no right" to call on Serbs to take part in the vote for the 
Kosovo assembly.

Tadić and Koštunica will meet in the coming days to discuss whether to 
also advise the Serbs against partaking in local elections in Kosovo, 
scheduled for the same date, November 17.

It was announced earlier that Kosovo Serb parties decided to boycott the 
elections.

Kosovo Minister Slobodan Samardžić (DSS) said Tuesday that Belgrade had 
come to the conclusion that the required conditions for encouraging 
Serbs to participate in the Kosovo elections had not been met.

He said that the final decision on whether or not to support 
participation would be made in the coming days.

Democratic Party (DS) official Nada Kolundžija said that her party would 
not recommend any course of action to Kosovo Serbs until the ruling 
coalition had reached an agreement on the issue.

“The DS’s stance is that Serbia needs to give a united message, and we 
will not make public recommendations until an agreement has been 
reached. I think the worst thing we can do is give several different 
messages from Belgrade to the Kosovo Serbs, which has been the case in 
the past,” Kolundžija said.

Liberal Democratic Party leader Čedomir Jovanović said that Kosovo Serbs 
had gained nothing from boycotting the 2004 local elections.

“I want to call on all Serbs in Kosovo to work with the Kosovo 
institutions as places where their problems can be solved, because it is 
obvious that this won’t happen through relations between Belgrade and 
Priština. It’s not the authorities who will have to cope with the damage 
that’s left, but rather the people and their families,” Jovanović said.

A Serb Radical Party official said that Kosovo Serbs should “under no 
circumstances participate.”

“Serbs should not participate in the elections, considering the kind of 
occupation they are under in Kosovo. The conditions for Serbs to vote do 
not exist, that is certain, and we advise them again to not participate 
in the elections under any circumstances,” he said.

Before the Kosovo elections in 2004, Kosovo Serbs received mixed 
messages, with Prime Minister Vojislav Koštunica calling on a boycott 
and President Boris Tadić calling for participation.

In the end, two Serbian lists participated in the elections, both of 
which entered the Kosovo parliament.

Political analyst Stevan Nikšić said that Belgrade’s stance of 
boycotting the elections was uncooperative in nature.

“The U.S., Europe, and the entire world are looking at what Belgrade is 
doing, and they expect to see Belgrade’s sincerity in their intentions 
to cooperate and maintain stability, and that includes some type of 
cooperation with the Albanians."

"This kind of position represents the antithesis of what Belgrade wants 
to present to the world,” Nikšić said.

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