Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Russia issues warning over breakaway states

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Russia issues warning over breakaway states

    Russia issues warning over breakaway states

    The Times/UK
    February 16, 2008

    Michael Evans, Defence Editor, and Tony Halpin in Moscow


    Kosovo's imminent unilateral declaration of independence is set to
    drive deep divisions in the international community, with Russia and
    the European Union at loggerheads over the planned breakaway from
    Belgrade

    Even within the EU, which will help the former Yugoslav province to
    implement its plans to become a separate sovereign state, three members
    are expected to reject formal recognition of the new-look Kosovo, and
    others will bide their time before coming to a decision.

    Russia warned the West today that recognition of Kosovo's independence
    would affect its attitude towards two breakaway regions of neighbouring
    Georgia.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow stopped short of saying that Russia
    would recognise Abkhazia and South Ossetia, which declared independence
    from Georgia in the early 1990s in wars that followed the collapse of
    the Soviet Union.

    But it said: `The declaration and recognition of the independence of
    Kosovo will doubtless have to be taken into account as far as the
    situation in Abkhazia and South Ossetia is concerned.'

    Kosovo will make its declaration on Sunday and the following day, David
    Miliband, the Foreign Secretary, will announce Britain's immediate
    recognition of the new state by exchanging letters with his counterpart
    in the former Yugoslav province. The United States will also
    immediately recognise Kosovo.

    Mr Miliband will make Britain's position clear after a meeting of the
    EU General Affairs Council on Monday. The three EU states expected to
    reject recognition of Kosovo are: Cyprus, Slovakia and Romania. France,
    Germany, Italy and possibly Poland are expected to join Britain with
    instant recognition, but others, including Spain, Greece and The
    Netherlands, are likely to delay a decision. The Dutch say they have to
    get approval from their parliament.

    Inside Kosovo itself, the momentous decision is not expected to lead to
    violence and bloodshed between the majority ethnic Albanians and
    minority Serbs. Diplomatic sources said that the Serbs who lived in
    communities in the north, close to the border with Serbia, were the
    most likely to voice their anger at Sunday's announcement in Pristina,
    the Kosovan capital.

    However, Belgrade has pledged that it is not planning any form of
    military action - nor will it end diplomatic relations with Britain or
    any other countries which recognise the breakaway republic - and any
    public opposition by the Serbs in the north will be tempered by the
    presence of 15,000 Nato troops which are still on duty in Kosovo.

    The Russians are expected to demand an emergency meeting of the United
    Nations Security Council after Kosovo's declaration. President Putin
    has already warned the West that Moscow had plans ready for when Kosovo
    declared independence.

    The Russian foreign ministry said that Western recognition of Kosovo
    `presupposes a revision of commonly accepted norms and principles of
    international law'.

    Russian recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia would almost
    certainly trigger a war with Georgia, which insists that they are part
    of its territory. Formally, Russia supports Georgia's territorial
    integrity. But it has granted Russian citizenship to most of the people
    living in the two provinces and maintains peacekeeping troops there.

    Georgia's President Mikheil Saakashvili has repeatedly accused Moscow
    of trying to destabilise his country by aggravating divisions with
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia. He came to power on a pledge to recover the
    two provinces and reunify Georgia.

    Russia rejects the argument of the US and some EU countries that Kosovo
    is a unique case that sets no precedent for other separatist movements.

    The leaders of Abkhazia and South Ossetia made clear that they regard
    Kosovo as a model for their own claims. Abkhazia's President Sergei
    Bagapsh said: "We have been watching the Kosovo situation very closely
    and we will announce our further steps if Kosovo declares its
    independence.'

    Events are also being studied in neighbouring Armenia and Azerbaijan
    which are locked in another `frozen conflict' over the future of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. The Armenian-dominated enclave has had de facto
    independence from Azerbaijan since a bitter war ended in a ceasefire in
    1994.
Working...
X