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EU likely to put off Kosovo mission until February

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  • EU likely to put off Kosovo mission until February

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    Jan 15 2008


    EU likely to put off Kosovo mission until February
    17:23 | 15/ 01/ 2008



    BRUSSELS, January 15 (RIA Novosti) - The European Union is likely to
    wait until February to launch a police and justice mission in Kosovo,
    so as not to influence elections in Serbia, media in Brussels
    reported on Tuesday.

    A spokesperson for the government of Slovenia, which holds the EU's
    rotating presidency, was quoted as saying there is a high probability
    that the decision will not be made until February, since an earlier
    move could interfere with the situation in the region.

    The United Nations Security Council is to meet Wednesday to review
    the work of the UN's interim mission in Kosovo, which has been
    engaged in training the local police force, along with other
    administrative tasks.

    According to Kosovo's newly elected prime minister, Hasim Taci, the
    breakaway province of Serbia will unilaterally declare its
    independence in a few weeks.

    "I assure you that we will declare our independence in a few weeks.
    It's already an accomplished fact - we only need to declare it," said
    Taci, who was sworn in by parliament last Wednesday.

    Taci's Democratic Party of Kosovo (DPK) has formed a governing
    coalition with President Fatmir Seidiu's Democratic Alliance of
    Kosovo.

    Russia has warned that it will block any resolution on Kosovo's
    status at the UN Security Council until both parties have found a
    mutually acceptable settlement.

    Throughout long-running talks aimed at finding a solution to the
    status of Serbia's breakaway province, Russia has backed Belgrade in
    opposing Kosovo's sovereignty, warning it would have a knock on
    effect for other secessionist areas, such as Transdnestr in Moldova,
    South Ossetia and Abkhazia in Georgia and Nagorny Karabakh in
    Azerbaijan, so-called frozen conflicts since the 1990s.

    The Albanian-dominated Serbian province has been a UN protectorate
    since the NATO bombing of the former Yugoslavia ended a conflict
    between Albanian and Serb forces in 1999.

    Most Western states have backed the volatile area's drive for
    independence, and said recently that Kosovo's status would now be
    determined by the European Union and NATO. Russia is insisting that
    Belgrade and Pristina continue to try to reach a compromise.
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