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Belgrade's Offer Unlikely To Sway Kosovo

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  • Belgrade's Offer Unlikely To Sway Kosovo

    BELGRADE'S OFFER UNLIKELY TO SWAY KOSOVO
    Slobodan Lekic in New York

    Brisbane Times, Australia
    Sept 29 2007

    SERBIA is prepared to offer its secessionist province of Kosovo
    the "largest autonomy in the world" in talks on the future of the
    independence-seeking region, the Serbian President has said.

    Boris Tadic described as "unhelpful" statements by the US President,
    George Bush, and his Administration to the effect that Kosovo will
    gain independence at the end of the present negotiating process,
    due to finish on December 10.

    "These statements are not encouraging Kosovo Albanians to show
    flexibility in the talks," Mr Tadic said on Thursday.

    He was due to meet Kosovo's ethnic Albanian leaders in New York
    yesterday for the first face-to-face talks between the two sides.

    They will be mediated by negotiators from the US, Russia and the
    European Union.

    The issue of Kosovo's future status has become one of the main
    irritants in the increasingly tense relationship between a resurgent
    Russia and the US. Washington strongly supports eventual independence
    for the province, but Moscow backs Belgrade in its insistence that
    Kosovo must technically remain part of Serbia.

    The province of 2 million people - most of them ethnic Albanians -
    has been administered by the United Nations since 1999, when NATO
    waged a 78-day aerial war to prevent a Serbian military crackdown
    against Albanian separatists.

    Previous negotiations collapsed earlier this year. On Thursday Mr
    Tadic said that Serbia was willing to make further concessions, but
    would still demand that its "sovereignty and territorial integrity
    remain intact".

    "We are offering to Kosovo Albanians the best possible rights, which
    means the largest autonomy in the world, [including] some elements
    of sovereign countries, for example access to international financial
    institutions," he said.

    But Veton Surroi, a key member of the ethnic Albanian negotiating
    team, said there was little likelihood of a deal being reached at the
    talks unless Serbia accepts "that our place is in Europe together,
    as two independent nations".

    Mr Tadic warned that independence for Kosovo from Serbia could create
    a precedent that separatists around the world would use to justify
    their struggle.

    "It would have very serious consequences," he said. "There are many
    'Kosovos' in the region [including] Nagorno-Karabakh, Abkhazia,
    South Ossetia ... Macedonia, Bosnia or Kurdistan."

    At the United Nations the US Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice,
    met the Russian Foreign Minister, Sergey Lavrov, and representatives
    of EU nations forming the Contact Group of Kosovo negotiators.

    Participants agreed that "the status quo" in Kosovo was unsustainable,
    the British Foreign Secretary, David Miliband, said after the
    talks. "It's the view of all members of the Contact Group that
    representatives in Belgrade and Pristina need to engage with the
    [mediators] with a real constructive spirit," he said.

    Delegates also said that Mr Lavrov, Belgrade's ally with UN Security
    Council veto power, bluntly told Western nations in the Contact Group
    to stop saying Kosovo's independence was inevitable.

    One European delegate put the chances of an agreement at barely 10
    per cent but said the negotiations could at least smooth the way for
    a more amicable separation, even if Serbia was unable to accept the
    principle of independence.
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