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Russia raises prospect of UN veto on Kosovo

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  • Russia raises prospect of UN veto on Kosovo

    EUObserver, Belgium
    Feb 9 2007

    Russia raises prospect of UN veto on Kosovo

    09.02.2007 - 18:08 CET | By Andrew Rettman


    EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - Russia has made clear it will veto any UN
    security council resolution that proposes Kosovo independence without
    Serb agreement, adding it would favour a confederation between
    Belgrade and Pristina instead to help soothe separatist tension in
    the Western Balkans and beyond.

    "If it is a negotiated solution, Russia will not oppose it. But if it
    is an imposed solution, Russia will oppose it," Russia's EU
    ambassador Vladimir Chizhov told EUobserver on Thursday (8 February).
    "Russia may not be happy even with a negotiated solution because of
    its impact on other parts of the world."

    "If a negotiated solution based on something different from
    independence is found then it makes Kosovo a positive precedent -
    it's hard to speculate, maybe a loose confederation, a union or
    whatever," he added. "But if there is an imposed solution based on
    independence, it will serve as a negative precedent."

    The remarks come after UN envoy Martti Ahtisaari last week presented
    a draft blueprint for Kosovo's future that puts the UN-administered
    region on the road to statehood, with talks between Belgrade - which
    has condemned the plan - and Pristina to take place in Vienna on 21
    February.

    The Kosovo issue will ultimately be decided by a new UN security
    council resolution in the next few months, with Russia and China
    holding vetos at UN level and with the other veto powers, the US, the
    UK and France broadly in favour of giving Pristina the independence
    it craves.

    Ravaged by ethnic conflict just eight years ago, Kosovo continues to
    see skirmishes between its ethnic Serb minority and ethnic Albanian
    majority in a situation that risks plunging Europe back into the
    darkest period in its recent history and causing ripples in disputed
    territories around the world.

    "Whether you or I like it or not, Kosovo will serve as a precedent
    for others," Mr Chizhov said, outlining a "concentric circle" effect
    that could see future calls for independence by ethnic Albanian
    enclaves in Serbia's Presevo Valley, parts of Macedonia and
    Montenegro as well as by the Serb portion of Bosnia.

    "Then if you look further afield, people in Transdniestria [Moldova],
    South Ossetia [Georgia], Abkhazia [Georgia], Nagorno-Karabakh
    [Azerbaijan], not to mention Northern Cyprus...would say they have
    more reasons to claim independence than Kosovo," the ambassador went
    on.

    "What about Quebec? And if you look to the other side of the planet,
    what about Taiwan? This is a concern for another member of the
    permanent security council [China]," he said, adding there is "no
    sense of inevitability" about Kosovo's independence in Moscow today.
    "The Ahtisaari proposals...might change."

    The Russian ambassador also criticised the EU and US' excessive focus
    on the sensitivities of Kosovo Albanians and the safety of
    international peacekeepers, while neglecting the rights of the Serb
    nationalist camp - associated in the EU with Slobodan Milosevic's
    bloody crackdown against ethnic Albanians in 1998.

    "You cannot count on a solution that requires difficult choices for
    one side and easy choices for the other," Mr Chizhov said. "Everybody
    is afraid of the Kosovo Albanians going ballistic, but nobody is
    talking about what the Serbs might do."

    "Let's face it: UN resolution 1244 [which currently governs
    Serbia-Kosovo relations] has been implemented only partially, only
    those parts that favour Kosovo Albanians," he explained, giving the
    example of a UN mandate for a contingent of 999 Serb soldiers to
    guard Serb holy sites in Kosovo "which never materialised."

    EU seeks ways to placate Serbia
    Meanwhile, EU foreign ministers meeting in Brussels on Monday will
    discuss the possibility of re-starting EU integration talks with
    Serbia despite Belgrade's non-compliance with the UN war crimes
    tribunal in the Hague, which has demanded the hand-over of fugitive
    general Ratko Mladic.

    UN prosecutor Carla del Ponte last week urged the EU not to re-engage
    with Belgrade until Mladic is in the dock in a line championed by the
    Netherlands at EU level, but with an increasing number of EU states
    swinging toward giving Serbia a political gift to improve the
    prospects for Mr Ahtisaari's plan.

    "We won't necessarily follow her advice," an EU diplomat told
    EUobserver on Friday, before questioning Ms del Ponte's judgment by
    saying she is prone to "mood swings" and "may be focusing on Mladic
    too much."
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