http://uk.news.yahoo.com/rtrs/20080217/tpl-uk-kosovo-serbia-ex-soviet-43a8d4f.html
 
<http://uk.news.yahoo.com/rtrs/20080217/tpl-uk-kosovo-serbia-ex-soviet-43a8d4f.html>

Ex-Soviet separatist regions take heart from Kosovo
By Christian Lowe and Dmitry Solovyov Reuters - 56 minutes ago

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Breakaway states in the former Soviet Union said on
Sunday Kosovo's independence would give new impetus to their decades-long
campaign for international recognition.

Georgia's breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Azerbaijan's
rebel Nagorno-Karabakh region and Transdniestria, which split from Moldova,
all declared independence in the 1990s but have not received international
recognition.

Western backers of Kosovo's independence say it does not create a precedent
that can be applied elsewhere, but the ex-Soviet rebel regions say that is a
double standard which will be harder to defend now Kosovo has declared
independence.

"South Ossetia will appeal to the countries of the (ex-Soviet) Commonwealth
of Independent States and the United Nations with a request to recognise our
independence," said South Ossetia's separatist leader Eduard Kokoity.

"We have a stronger case under international law for recognition than
Kosovo," Kokoity's spokeswoman quoted him as saying.

"For us, Kosovo is an opportunity to once again bring attention to the
problem of political entities like South Ossetia.

"For 18 years South Ossetia has been building its statehood and has all the
attributes of a state, unlike Kosovo. Nevertheless, Kosovo is being
recognised but the problem of South Ossetia and Abkhazia remains unclear."

Abkhazia's President Sergei Bagapsh said that following Kosovo's move on
Sunday his separatist region on Georgia's Black Sea coast would be making a
new appeal for recognition to the U.N. and Russia, its biggest backer.

"The situation with Kosovo is a precedent," Russia's Interfax news agency
quoted Bagapsh as saying. "All the talk about the Kosovo situation being
unique is an example of a policy of double standards."

RESTORE CONTROL

Nagorno-Karabakh's foreign minister said Kosovo demonstrated a breakaway
region could win international recognition even if the state it broke away
from opposes the move.

Ethnic Armenian separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh threw off Azerbaijan's rule
in a 1990s war that killed about 35,000 people. Azerbaijan has vowed to
restore its control.

"The recognition of Kosovo's independence will become yet another factor
solidifying Nagorno-Karabakh's position in its talks on settling the
conflict with Azerbaijan," the separatist region's foreign minister Georgy
Petrosyan told Reuters.

In Moldova's Transdniestria region, the separatist parliament was expected
to issue a statement on Monday responding to Kosovo's declaration of
independence.

Former colonial power Russia is likely to play a crucial role in the
breakaway regions' renewed bids for recognition.

It backs the separatists in Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Transdniestria and
some analysts have predicted it could grant them recognition in the wake of
Kosovo independence.

Russia's foreign ministry said last week international recognition for
Kosovo would influence its policy towards the breakaway regions in its own
backyard.

Kosovo declared its independence from Serbia despite objections from
Belgrade and Russia, Serbia's big-power ally. The United States and most
European Union states are expected to recognise Kosovo independence soon.

(Reporting by Hasmik Mkrtchyan in Yerevan and Dmitry Chubashenko in
Chisinau; writing by Christian Lowe; editing by Robert Woodward)



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