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Recurent Round Of Kosovo Talks Held In London

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  • Recurent Round Of Kosovo Talks Held In London

    RECURENT ROUND OF KOSOVO TALKS HELD IN LONDON

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    19.09.2007 16:24 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Kosovo's ethnic Albanian leaders were joining talks
    Wednesday on the future of the disputed province with envoys from
    the United States, European Union and Russia.

    Kosovo's President Fatmir Sejdiu has said he will seek an explanation
    from the Contact Group troika over comments made by the European
    Union's representative, which appeared to indicate independence for
    the province is not on offer.

    "I would leave open independence. I would rather talk about a strong
    supervised status," German negotiator Wolfgang Ischinger told The
    Independent newspaper on Tuesday.

    The process of granting independence to Kosovo can take a long time,
    according to him.

    The troika, as the group of envoys is known, opened talks on Tuesday
    and is due to report on progress to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon
    by Dec. 10.

    Serbia and Russia strongly oppose Kosovo's claims for full
    independence.

    After meeting with Britain's Foreign Secretary David Miliband, Serbian
    Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic called on all parties to tread carefully.

    The Serbian and ethnic Albania representatives are to meet face-to-face
    for the first time in New York on the sidelines of the UN General
    Assembly on Sept. 28.

    Russia's foreign minister warned the West Tuesday against rushing
    a decision on Kosovo's independence, saying that there must be no
    artificial deadlines for the province's Albanians and the Serbs to
    reach a solution.

    Sergey Lavrov reaffirmed that the Kosovo issue remains a "red line"
    for Moscow and he rejected the Dec. 10 deadline, the Associated
    Press reports.

    Kosovo remains formally part of Serbia, but the province has been run
    by the United Nations and NATO since 1999, when NATO bombed Serbia
    to stop a military campaign against ethnic Albanian separatists.

    Ethnic Albanians, who make up 90 percent of Kosovo's 2 million people,
    insist on independence. But Serbia, backed by Russia, refuses to let
    go of its historical heartland.

    Kosovo talks have been held for 15 months already. In February UN
    Special Envoy for Kosovo Martti Ahtisaari developed a plan providing
    for Kosovo's independence under international control. Basing on
    Ahtisaari's plan, the U.S., France UK prepared a draft resolution
    submitted to the UN Security Council. However, Russia blocked the
    draft rating it as inadmissible.
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