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Serbia Doesn't Have To Choose Between EU And Kosovo

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  • Serbia Doesn't Have To Choose Between EU And Kosovo

    SERBIA DOESN'T HAVE TO CHOOSE BETWEEN EU AND KOSOVO

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    24.12.2007 17:42 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Serbia's future lies within the European Union and
    its eventual entry into the bloc must not be tied to developments
    in Kosovo, the Foreign Ministers of Bulgaria, Romania and Greece
    said Saturday.

    "Nobody wants to put Serbia into this kind of dilemma (to choose
    between EU entry and holding on to Kosovo).

    These are two separate issues; any attempt to link Serbian accession
    with developments in Kosovo would be wrong and counterproductive,"
    Greek Foreign Minister Dora Bakoyannis told reporters in a joint
    news conference with Bulgaria's Ivailo Kalfin and Romania's Adrian
    Mihai Cioroianu.

    Greece, which has consistently opposed any change in Balkan borders
    over the past couple of decades, opposes recognizing an independent
    Kosovo state if the Albanian majority in the province unilaterally
    declares independence from Serbia. Greece fears this could undermine
    the Balkans' fragile stability.

    Romania, which has a substantial Hungarian minority, shares Greece's
    position.

    Bulgaria looks more favorably at the idea of an independent Kosovo, but
    Kalfin did not openly disagree with his two colleagues. He agreed that
    "any solution not based on compromise is bad" but said EU membership
    "is a community of values" to which the Serbs must adhere. Both the
    Serbs and Kosovars must show "commitment to a political process and
    (avoid) recourse to violence," he added.

    Cioroianu said that "we need a democratic Serbia sparing no effort
    to implement reforms" that will help it join the EU.

    Kosovo Albanians have threatened to declare independence unilaterally
    if the U.N. Security Council remains deadlocked on the issue. Russia
    threatens to veto any Security Council resolution that is not supported
    by the Serbs, and the latter continue to reject an independent Kosovo,
    offering broad autonomy within Serbia instead.

    Asked directly whether Greece and Bulgaria would recognize an
    independent Kosovo, Bakoyannis said that "we are not there yet. ... We
    will evaluate the situation on the ground (and) we must strive for a
    unified EU position." Bakoyannis and Kalfin agreed the EU must strive
    to keep communication channels open between the Serbs and the Kosovo
    Albanians "to keep the region as peaceful as possible".

    Serbia should be ready to take the first step toward EU membership
    by signing a Stabilization and Association Agreement with the EU
    in January 2008 and achieve candidate status later that year, the
    ministers said. "Serbia has no alternative to a European perspective,"
    said Cioroianu.

    The meeting was part of the three countries' regular rounds of
    consultations. The foreign ministers will meet early next year in
    Bucharest to prepare a summit meeting of their respective heads of
    state and government in Sofia next year, The Associated Press reports.
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