http://spc.yu/eng/letter_honourable_kevin_rudd_mp_prime_minister_australia

The Letter to The Honourable Kevin Rudd MP, Prime Minister of Australia
20. February 2008 - 9:06

Honourable Prime Minister:

We write to you on behalf of the Serbian Orthodox Church and the 
substantial, patriotic Serbian community in Australia to urge you and 
the Australian government, in the strongest possible terms, to reverse 
its decision of 19 February 2008 to extend diplomatic recognition of 
Kosovo’s unilateral secession from the Republic of Serbia.

Kosovo and Metohija is Serbia’s spiritual Jerusalem and the very cradle 
of the Serbian nation. Kosovo is and remains an integral province within 
the sovereign Republic of Serbia in accordance with The Charter of The 
United Nations, Security Council Resolution 1244, as well as all 
relevant international conventions on human rights, the rights of 
peoples and on the inviolability of internationally recognized borders. 
Therefore, the recognition of Kosovo as an independent entity violates 
every established norm of International Law concerned with state creation.

First, customary International Law, for very good reasons, holds that 
secession from a recognised state can only be granted if it has the 
consent of the host state, in this case Serbia. As the former 
Secretary-General of the United Nations Boutros Boutros-Ghali observed 
in 1992: “[I]f every ethnic, religious or linguistic group claimed 
statehood, there would be no limit to fragmentation, and peace, security 
and economic well-being for all would become ever more difficult to 
achieve”. (Boutros Boutros-Ghali, An Agenda for Peace, Preventive 
Diplomacy, Peacemaking and Peace-keeping, United Nations, New York, 
1992, para. 17.) Second, the putative state of Kosovo fails to meet the 
essential criteria of statehood set out in the Montevideo Convention of 
1933. In particular, Kosovo’s present situation of effectively being an 
international protectorate renders it incapable of satisfying the 
requirement that a state should be possessed of a government and 
capacity to enter relations with other states. Kosovo simply does not 
meet the threshold of independence required by International Law. Third, 
recognition of Kosovo violates the European Union’s Guidelines on 
Recognition in relation to states emerging from the former USSR and 
Yugoslavia issued in 1991. In particular, prospective states had to 
establish that they respected and guaranteed various international law 
norms relating to human rights and the rights of ethnic and national 
minorities. The situation of the remaining Serbian population in Kosovo, 
which is segregated behind barbed wire and protected only by the 
presence of international forces on the ground, is a horrific 
demonstration of the violation of these requirements in Kosovo.

Prime Minister, not quite three months ago, the Australian people 
elected you and your government with a mandate to provide new leadership 
for this country. In terms of Australia’s foreign policy, it was clear 
that this mandate meant that Australia would exercise its own 
independent policy and no longer be part of any ‘coalition of the 
willing’. Recognition of Kosovo betrays this trust placed in you and 
your government by the Australian people. That Australia’s traditional 
allies, such as the United States and Great Britain, have sought fit to 
extend recognition to Kosovo, is not reason enough for Australia to 
automatically fall into line. Instead, it is in Australia’s interest to 
follow the lead of its closest regional ally, New Zealand, and not 
recognise a state in circumstances where, to do so, would be to ignore 
fundamental norms of International Law.

As the war in Iraq has led to massive instability in the region and 
exacerbated the growth of terrorism, in like manner the precipitate 
recognition of Kosovo will lead to the same consequences in the Balkans. 
Australia should take note of the concerns and interests of states in 
the region, such as Greece, Cyprus, Romania, Bulgaria, and Slovakia that 
are most likely to suffer from the regional instability that will 
inevitably follow recognition, and that have, therefore determined not 
to recognise Kosovo.

For all of these reasons Prime Minister, we urge you and your government 
to revoke the decision to extend recognition to Kosovo, and further, to 
use Australia’s standing as a good international citizen that respects 
the Rule of Law to impress upon all interested parties that the only way 
to resolve the status of Kosovo is through equitable, constructive 
dialogue and peaceful negotiations.

Yours sincerely,

+IRINEJ Bishop of Australia and New Zealand The Serbian Orthodox Church

 

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