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UN Fails To Break Kosovo Impasse

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  • UN Fails To Break Kosovo Impasse

    UN FAILS TO BREAK KOSOVO IMPASSE

    BBC
    KarabakhOpen
    20-12-2007 10:37:58

    The US and EU have said the potential for further negotiations over
    the future of Kosovo has been exhausted.

    In a statement after talks at the UN Security Council failed to break
    the impasse, they said the EU would take the lead in implementing
    a settlement.

    Backed by the US and EU members, the Kosovo Albanians are expected
    to declare independence from Serbia.

    Serbia, and its ally in the council, Russia, said that such a move
    would be illegal and urged further negotiations.

    Last week, the EU said it was prepared to send 1,800 police officers
    and administrators to Kosovo.

    Legal dispute looms

    Following a closed debate described as tense, in which the Security
    Council heard from the Serbian prime minister and Kosovo's president,
    representatives from the US and EU stood together and said the two
    sides were irreconcilable.

    "It's clear in our view that more negotiations in this or any
    other format will not make a difference," said Belgium's permanent
    representative, Johan Verbeke.

    Planning Kosovo's future

    "We therefore endorse the view of the European Union and US negotiators
    that the potential for a negotiated solution is now exhausted."

    The statement said the EU stood "ready to play a leading role in
    implementing a settlement defining Kosovo's future status".

    In April, UN special envoy Martti Ahtisaari put forward a plan offering
    Kosovo "supervised independence".

    Under the proposal, international agencies would gradually steer
    Kosovo towards full independence and membership of the UN. But they
    would also prevent it from merging with Albania, or having its Serb
    areas split off to become part of Serbia.

    Both the US and UK representatives said Security Council resolution
    1244, which was passed after Nato threw Serbia out of Kosovo in 1999,
    allowed for the implementation of Mr Ahtisaari's plan.

    "We would have preferred to do that through the Security Council, but
    we are entirely confident that resolution 1244 provides a sufficient
    legal base to move forward to a final settlement and to establish the
    necessary authorities needed to achieve that," said the UK's envoy,
    Sir John Sawers.

    'Null and void'

    But the joint US-EU statement drew a sharp reaction from Russia.

    Its representative at the UN, Vitaly Churkin, insisted there was
    still "ample ground" for negotiations between Belgrade and Pristina
    to continue.

    "Any move towards unilateral independence would clearly be outside
    the limits of international law and outside the limits of resolution
    1244," he told reporters after the meeting.

    Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica said his country would
    declare "all unilateral acts of Albanian separatists null and void"
    - Kosovo would remain and integral and inalienable part of Serbia
    forever.

    The BBC's Laura Trevelyan in New York says Western diplomats expect
    Kosovo to declare its intention to become independent early next year
    and for the EU to take up the issue once Serbian elections have taken
    place in February.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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