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Kosovo PM Plans To Declare Independence In November

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  • Kosovo PM Plans To Declare Independence In November

    KOSOVO PM PLANS TO DECLARE INDEPENDENCE IN NOVEMBER
    Mark Tran

    Guardian Unlimited
    Friday July 20, 2007

    Kosovo prime minister, Agim Ceku. Photograph: Hrvoje Polan/AFP/Getty Images

    Kosovo should declare unilateral independence on November 28, the
    prime minister of the UN-administered Serbian province said today.

    Agim Ceku said Kosovo's parliament should push ahead with a declaration
    of independence from Belgrade because of a lack of movement at the UN.

    November 28 marks Albanian independence day, a date also celebrated
    by Kosovo's 90% Albanian majority. Mr Ceku said the Kosovo parliament
    should set the date in a resolution after his return from Washington
    next week, where he is due to meet the US secretary of state,
    Condoleezza Rice.

    "It is a day of celebration," he told reporters after meeting Kosovo's
    UN governor, Joachim Ruecker. "The United Nations has failed to act."

    Mr Ceku has made such statements before, mainly to placate restive
    Kosovo Albanians who are increasingly impatient at the country being
    run by UN bureaucrats. Observers said Mr Ceku was having to shore
    up his steadily eroding credibility by maintaining that independence
    was just around the corner.

    The west has been trying to push through a plan drawn up by the
    UN special envoy, Martti Ahtisaari, that sets Kosovo on the path
    towards independence at the UN security council, but Russia, Serbia's
    traditional ally, has repeatedly blocked a UN resolution.

    Faced with a threatened Russian veto, the west was set to shelve the
    latest, watered-down UN resolution on the fate of the province.

    Moscow rejected the latest draft UN resolution, which called for
    another 120 days of Serb-Albanian talks and would mandate the EU to
    take over from the UN mission. Russia said it amounted to independence
    by the back door.

    Kosovo has been run by the UN since 1999, when a Nato air campaign
    forced out Serbian troops that were killing and expelling Albanians
    in a two-year war with guerrillas.

    The US has indicated that it would support a unilateral declaration,
    but the 27-member EU is divided. Britain has been a strong backer of
    independence, but others such as Greece and Spain are opposed.

    Ms Rice yesterday again said Washington was fully committed to
    achieving independence for Kosovo, despite Russia's opposition. She
    told reporters that Kosovo would get its independence "one way or
    another", without specifying whether the US was prepared to recognise
    Kosovo's independence unilaterally. But even if the US does recognise
    Kosovo, it has little leverage to bring along the EU countries,
    apart from Britain.

    In a report to the security council earlier this month, the UN
    secretary general, Ban Ki-Moon, warned that if the province's "status
    remains undefined, there was a real risk that the progress achieved
    by the UN and the provisional institutions in Kosovo can begin to
    unravel", amid reports that former members of the Kosovo Liberation
    Army (KLA) were regrouping.

    Kosovo has been a source of tension between the west and Moscow,
    which fears that it could set a precedent for its own separatist
    problems in Nagorno-Karabakh and other Russian regions. Should Kosovo
    press ahead with a unilateral declaration of independence, relations
    between the west and Russia could become further inflamed.
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