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Kosovo sovereignty plan raises tensions in the heart of Europe

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  • Kosovo sovereignty plan raises tensions in the heart of Europe

    Kosovo sovereignty plan raises tensions in the heart of Europe
    Richard Beeston, Diplomatic Editor

    The TimesUK
    January 27, 2007

    Kosovo took an important step on the road to independence from Serbia
    yesterday, after a United Nations envoy revealed plans that could lead
    towards full sovereignty.

    The move triggered an immediate diplomatic row between Western nations
    and Russia, which sought to delay the initiative drawn up by Martti
    Ahtisaari. It also raised fears of violence on the streets.

    Although details of Mr Ahtisaari's plan were kept secret, it is known
    that they would allow Kosovo to join international organisations, such
    as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and, eventually,
    the UN itself.

    Kosovo would also be allowed to raise its own security force and its
    citizens to have dual nationality.

    The plan sets out protections for the rights of minorities, mainly the
    Serb population concentrated in northern Kosovo, who want to remain
    part of the Serbian homeland.

    During the transition period Kosovo would remain in a state of
    `supervised independence', much as Bosnia is today. An `international
    civilian representative', probably appointed by the European Union,
    would oversee the government and Nato would maintain its 16,000strong
    force in the area to deter any ethnic unrest.

    News of the plan met a frosty reception in Moscow. The Russian
    representative at the meeting in Vienna of the six-nation Contact
    Group said that more time was needed and cautioned against `hasty
    moves'. Moscow, which has traditionally supported its Orthodox
    brethren in Belgrade, wants discussions halted until a new Serbian
    government is formed, a process that could drag on until the end of
    May.

    America, Britain, France, Germany and Italy, the other members of the
    Contact Group, insist that the plan must be presented to the Serb and
    Kosovo sides without delay.

    Although Moscow is isolated, it still has the power to block the plan
    when it comes for approval at the UN Security Council, where Russia
    has the right of veto.

    Much of what happens next depends upon Mr Ahtisaari's diplomatic
    skills. On Friday he is due to unveil his plan to Serb and Kosovan
    leaders and is prepared to make changes to the document to reach a
    compromise.

    That did not look very promising last night. In Belgrade, Vojislav
    Kostunica, the Serb Prime Minister, said that he would refuse to meet
    Mr Ahtisaari until a new government was in place. Like many Serb
    nationalists, who did well in general elections this month, Mr
    Kostunica is strongly opposed to independence for Kosovo, which is
    regarded as the cradle of the Serb nation.

    `Any attempt to impose independence for Kosovo would mean a forcible
    change of Serbia's internationally recognised borders,' Vuk Draskovic,
    the Serbian Foreign Minister, said.

    In Pristina, the Kosovo capital, Agim Ceku, the Prime Minister, faced
    the opposite problem from the Albanian community of Kosovo, who make
    up 90 per cent of the population.

    His people have been clam-ouring for independence ever since Nato
    forces drove the Serb military out of the province in 1999, after
    years of oppressive rule against the Albanian population, which
    included murders, arrests and ethnic cleansing.

    While Western leaders are sympathetic to the demands of the majority
    of Kosovo's people, diplomats said that they must move
    carefully. There are fears that any unilateral action could provoke a
    new round of ethnic violence. There is also concern that pushing for
    the creation of a new state in the heart of Europe could prompt other
    separatist territories to press home their demands for independence,
    triggering a new period of instability.
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