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EU offers Serbia deal on Kosovo

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  • EU offers Serbia deal on Kosovo

    EU offers Serbia deal on Kosovo

    BBC
    15-12-2007 10:36:12 - KarabakhOpen


    Serbia said it would never accept anything in exchange for Kosovo
    EU leaders have offered to accelerate Serbia's membership in the bloc,
    but only after Belgrade hands over war crime fugitives still at large.
    The move is seen as a way of keeping the Balkans stable, with Kosovo
    set to declare independence from Serbia.

    The leaders also agreed in principle to send a 1,800 security force to
    Kosovo.

    French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the breakaway region's
    independence was "inevitable" but the leaders refrained from backing a
    unilateral declaration.

    Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica said the recognition of
    Kosovo's independence would be "the most dangerous precedent after
    World War II".

    Mr Kostunica also said the EU plan to send its mission to Kosovo would
    create "a puppet state" on Serbian soil.

    'Clearest signal'

    At a one-day summit in Brussels, the EU leaders stated that the current
    situation in Kosovo was unsustainable.

    They said that they had agreed "in principle" to send its mission of
    1,800 police and judicial officials to the province.

    Portuguese Prime Minister Jose Socrates, whose country currently holds
    the EU presidency, said it was the clearest signal the EU could
    possibly send that it intends to take the lead role in the future
    status of the province.

    This was a sentiment echoed by UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown who said:
    "Europe wants to manage the next stage in Kosovo in a pro-active and in
    a united way."

    The BBC's Oana Lungescu in Brussels says Europe is also sending a
    political message of encouragement to Serbia, ahead of a presidential
    election next month where the pro-Western incumbent will face an
    ultra-nationalist candidate.

    Mr Socrates also said the EU was confident that Serbia's progress
    towards EU candidate status could be accelerated, but it hinged on
    Belgrade's full co-operation in handing over war crimes fugitives.

    But the Serbian Deputy Prime Minister Bozidar Djelic rejected any
    linkage.

    Serbia, he said, would work on speeding up European integration but
    would never accept anything in exchange for Kosovo.

    A majority of Serbs see Kosovo as an historic part of their country and
    the issue will play a prominent part in the run-up to the election.

    Serbian President Boris Tadic has said he is not prepared to distance
    himself from the EU if it pushed for Kosovo's independence, even though
    he opposes it.

    Some EU member states are against independence for Kosovo.

    Cyprus is the most strongly opposed, but Greece, Slovakia, Spain and
    Romania have all expressed concern about the possible repercussions for
    separatist movements elsewhere in Europe.

    Following the summit, Romania's President Traian Basescu said: "Based
    on the principle of territorial integrity and inviolability, we cannot
    recognise Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence."
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