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  • UN envoy recommends Kosovo independence

    UN envoy recommends Kosovo independence

    Agencies
    Monday March 26, 2007
    Guardian Unlimited


    Independence is "the only viable option" for Kosovo, according to the
    UN's envoy to the province.

    Martti Ahtisaari, who mediated in year-long talks between ethnic
    Albanians and Serbs in the former Yugoslav province, delivered his
    proposals to the UN security council today.

    In an introductory report, Mr Ahtisaari made his conclusions clear,
    saying that "upon careful consideration of Kosovo's recent history,
    the realities of Kosovo today, and taking into account negotiations
    with the parties, I have come to the conclusion that the only viable
    option for Kosovo is independence, to be supervised for an initial
    period by the international community".

    It was the first time he had explicitly mentioned independence in a
    document dealing with the 90% Albanian province's future.

    Mr Ahtisaari's proposals would grant Kosovo its own constitution,
    flag, anthem and army, combined with some rights of self-government
    for the 100,000-strong Serb minority.

    But the province would not be totally autonomous immediately, with the
    plans envisaging a European Union overseer. The UN has administered
    Kosovo since 1999, when Nato air strikes ended a Serbian crackdown on
    ethnic Albanian separatists. An estimated 10,000 ethnic Albanians and
    1,000 Serbs were killed during the 1998-1999 war.

    The UN plan is an attempt to resolve the final major dispute remaining
    after Yugoslavia's bloody break-up in the 1990s.

    The foreign secretary, Margaret Beckett, said Mr Ahtisaari's proposals
    gave Kosovo clarity over its future, that "would enable the Balkan
    region as a whole to draw a line under the conflicts of the recent
    past".

    "We look forward to working with our partners in the UN security
    council, on the basis of the UN special envoy's settlement proposals,
    to bring the status process through to completion," she said in a
    statement.

    Stressing the urgency of the issue, Mr Ahtisaari said that allowing
    the territory's status to remain ambiguous was a destabilising factor.

    "Independence is the best safeguard against this risk," he wrote. "It
    is also the best chance for a sustainable long-term partnership
    between Kosovo and Serbia."

    The envoy presented his proposals to regional leaders in
    February. Ethnic Albanians supported the plan, while Serbian
    officials, opposed to the province's secession, rejected it, saying it
    granted Kosovo de facto independence.


    "A return of Serbian rule over Kosovo would not be acceptable to the
    overwhelming majority of the people of Kosovo," Mr Ahtisaari wrote in
    his report.

    "Belgrade could not regain its authority without provoking violent
    opposition.

    Autonomy of Kosovo within the borders of Serbia - however notional
    such autonomy may be - is simply not tenable."

    He added that continued international administration was not
    sustainable, saying: "Only in an independent Kosovo will its
    democratic institutions be fully responsible and accountable for their
    actions. This will be crucial to ensure respect for the rule of law
    and effective protection of minorities." Mr Ahtisaari noted that
    Kosovo's Serb community continued to face difficult living conditions.

    After the war, the Serb minority was targeted in revenge attacks and
    about 200,000 of them were forced to flee the province.

    "I therefore propose that the exercise of Kosovo's independence ... be
    supervised and supported for an initial period by international
    civilian and military presences," he wrote. "Their powers should be
    strong - but focused - in critical areas such as community rights,
    decentralisation, the protection of the Serbian Orthodox church, and
    the rule of law."

    The plan faces an uncertain future in the security council, which is
    split on the issue. Russia supports Serbia, while the United States
    and the EU back the UN plan.

    The Russian president, Vladimir Putin, and other officials have said
    that granting Kosovo statehood could set a precedent for separatist
    regions in former Soviet republics.
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