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BAKU: Push at UN for Kosovo independence could bolster secessionists

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  • BAKU: Push at UN for Kosovo independence could bolster secessionists

    Push at U.N. for Kosovo independence could bolster secessionist
    demands around the world

    18 May 2007 [10:20] - Today.Az

    >From the jungles of Indonesia to Spain's Basque country, separatists
    of the world are drawing hope from the approach of U.N.-approved
    independence of Kosovo.

    "The Kosovo precedent will be important for us," said Igor Smirnov,
    leader of the Trans-Dniester region that seeks to break away from
    Moldova. He maintains that his tiny enclave has an even better case
    for independence than Kosovo.

    Another hopeful Kosovo-watcher is Iraqi Kurdistan. "It's important
    that Kosovo achieves independence through a U.N. Security Council
    resolution because that will establish a legal principle which will
    also some day apply to Kurdistan," said Mahmoud Othman, a senior
    Kurdish member of the Iraqi parliament.

    The United States and European Union, which are backing a U.N. plan to
    grant "supervised independence" to the predominantly ethnic Albanian
    province of Serbia, dismiss suggestions that it would encourage
    separatist movements elsewhere.

    But the plan is strongly opposed by Serbia and Russia, which will
    settle at most for wide local autonomy.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin warned in February that independence
    for Kosovo would be taken as a precedent by others, including
    pro-Russian breakaway provinces in the ex-Soviet republics of Georgia
    and Moldova.

    This issue has become a major irritant in the already strained
    relations between the West and a resurgent Russia.

    The latest attempt to defuse tensions foundered this week after Putin
    and U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice failed to find common
    ground. Kosovo also figures in Russia's wider dispute with the EU,
    jeopardizing plans to create a "strategic partnership" between Moscow
    and Brussels.

    The author of the Kosovo plan, former Finnish President Martti
    Ahtisaari, said he did not believe a precedent would be set by
    granting the province independence. "No two problem areas are the
    same," he said.

    But in some of the four dozen territories around the world aspiring to
    break free, Kosovo's future looks set to have far-reaching effects '
    especially if separation is engineered through a Security Council
    resolution.

    "Kosovo's independence would certainly have broad and destabilizing
    consequences for many other secessionist conflicts," warned Bruno
    Coppieters, head of the Political Sciences Department at Brussels Free
    University.

    In Indonesia, it could have a powerful impact on the two
    separatist-minded provinces of Aceh and West Papua, said Damien
    Kingsbury, a key adviser to the separatist Free Aceh Movement.

    Indonesia, which has already lost East Timor, "is always sensitive
    about is sues affecting territorial integrity, so it will be very
    worried," Kingsbury said.

    The U.S. and EU insist Kosovo is a special case because it has been a
    ward of the international community since a U.N. administration was
    set up in 1999. That followed a brief aerial war during which NATO
    ejected Serb forces accused of mounting a campaign of ethnic cleansing
    against the 2 million ethnic Albanian inhabitants.

    "A new Security Council resolution would clearly specify that this was
    a unique case not applicable to other regions," Assistant
    U.S. Secretary of State Daniel Fried said in a recent interview.

    Fried said the Bush administration intends to sponsor the new
    resolution, based on Ahtisaari's plan. "Kosovo will be independent one
    way or the other," he said.

    While the European Union also insists Kosovo is no precedent, some of
    its member states have their own restive regions to contend with '
    Catalonia and the Basque country in Spain, Flanders in Belgium,
    Hungarian nationalists in Slovakia and Cyprus' breakaway Turkish
    Republic.

    A parliamentary spokesman for the Basque Nationalist Party, the main
    party in the regional government of northern Spain's Basque region,
    sees the Kosovo plan as "a very positive development."

    "We think this could be a very good precedent, and someday we could
    aspire to something similar," said Josu Erkoreka.

    Othman, the Kurd, said it is inaccurate to argue Kosovo is somehow
    special.

    "Just like Kosovo, Iraqi Kurdistan has also been under international
    protection (since the 1991 Gulf War). There is no difference," he said
    in a telephone interview from Baghdad.

    Any move by Iraq's Kurdish provinces to break free would create a
    major political headache for Washington and invite armed intervention
    from neighboring Turkey, which has its own restless Kurdish minority.

    Tim Judah, a London-based Balkan analyst and author, said the Security
    Council ideally should grant Kosovo independence but simultaneously
    repudiate unilateral secessions elsewhere.

    But he expects that "whatever the Security Council does may
    nonetheless encourage some secessionist groups somewhere." The
    Associated Press

    /The International Herald Tribune/

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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