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Kosovo, Montenegro, And Then What Next?

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  • Kosovo, Montenegro, And Then What Next?

    KOSOVO, MONTENEGRO, AND THEN WHAT NEXT?
    Polina Slavcheva

    Sofia Echo, Bulgaria
    May 15 2006

    EXTENDED HANDS: Bulgarian President Georgi Purvanov, right, meets
    Macedonian and Serbian-Montenegrin colleagues Branko Crvenovski,
    centre, and Boris Tadic, left, on December 15 2005 in Ohrid, where
    Mecadonia signed its Ohrid Agreement, setting relations with its
    ethnic Albanian minority. Bulgaria has repeatedly stated its bid to
    be a factor of stability in the region.It may be hard to notice, but
    it is there: the anxiety that the future of Kosovo and Montenegro,
    two slabs of land on their way to a possible chip-off from Serbia,
    might affect other countries and open a Pandora's box of separatism,
    as Ukrainian prime minister Boris Tarasyuk put it.

    Hungarians in Vojvodina, Moldova's Transdniestria, Caucasus republics,
    European Muslims, Serbs in Bosnia and Herzegovina and, why not,
    Bulgaria's Turks in the Rhodope Mountains are all examples of potential
    provocateurs. Even if most of those are in the sphere of speculation,
    however, when the ghost of separatism in Southern Europe and the
    Caucasus is awake, it seems that anxiety and caution is "the game of
    the rule", to quote Romanian playwright Eugene Ionesco, or helpful
    to those temporary glitches in logic so terribly reminiscent of the
    Balkans and the wider Eastern European region, not just of Ionesco's
    dramas about discordant families.

    When the Contact Group for Kosovo issued hints in January that Kosovo
    may become independent by the end of the year, too few were those
    convinced that a Kosovo status solved like this would be timely or
    enhance regional stability. That uncertainty was recently expressed
    by Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov at a conference on NATO
    expansion held in Sofia, the above-mentioned Tarasyuk, and Serbian
    foreign minister Vuk Draskovic. Draskovic said on May 3 in an interview
    with Greek news agency ANA-MPA that a change of the existing borders of
    his country would be an omen of "a new Balkan catastrophe", and Lavrov
    told Bulgarian newspaper Standart that "Kosovo's independence is a
    dangerous road that could not only lead to many dangerous consequences
    in the region, but set a precedent to other conflict situations".

    A quick peek at Caucasus reveals what he means. ̉he predominantly
    Muslim Chechnya, Ingushetia and Dagestan, Russia's separatist
    republics, might ask for independence, and so might the
    breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia, and the
    Armenian-occupied Azerbaijan region Nagorno-Karabakh, UK-based analyst
    Oksana Antonenko told the EU Observer in February. All of that makes
    Russia quite sour about the prospects for independence, with China
    the only other country supporting Serbia's territorial claim to Kosovo.

    Moldova's Transdniestria and Bosnia and Herzegovina's Republika Srpska
    have also said that they would call for independence if Kosovo gets it.

    What the European Union should worry about is Nagorno-Karabakh because
    a conflict there would spell trouble for the EU's Caspian Sea gas
    link and ambitions to move away from Russian gas dependency, the EU
    Observer said. The EU has promised peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh
    but refuses to recognise it, just as it wouldn't recognise Abkhazia or
    South Ossetia. Since it would, seemingly, recognise Kosovo, discussion
    on that obvious discrepancy appears to be what the EU should have on
    its to do list.

    At the moment, however, a international community priority is avoiding
    disunity on the issue of Kosovo before the next stage of negotiations,
    as UN special envoy for Kosovo Martti Ahtisaari said in Sofia on May 8.

    So, as to whether independence is a timely and inevitable move or
    a United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK)
    move out of its inability to solve the province's problems, as
    the International Crisis Group said last year, is of secondary
    importance. And that makes debate on how status talks would promote
    a multi-ethnic society, enhance regional stability and Serbia's
    Euro-Atlantic perspectives a bit vague.

    While the EU prospect helped in the case of Romania's Hungarian
    minority in Vovodina (in 1995, Hungary renounced all territorial
    claims to Vojvodina and Romania reiterated its respect for the rights
    of its Hungarian minority), it would take a while to help Serbia,
    especially since accession negotiations were stopped on May 3.

    What's a more serious problem, however, is that the international
    community itself fails to discuss its own principles on the issue of
    sovereignty. Even to some European observers, diplomats and experts,
    certain dilemmas of the western Balkans look unsolvable without
    a change of borders, as a Bulgarian European Community Studies
    Association report said in 2004.

    Still, the discourse on Kosovo seems to stop at saying that there
    shouldn't be a change of borders, period. A decision on what to
    do about borders should be reached through a consensus both within
    the EU and the region itself, the report says. The latter, however,
    would be quite difficult.

    >>From the inside, it looks like Kosovo would be a time bomb if
    it remains a UN protectorate for long. From the outside, though,
    an independent Kosovo looks a bit scary.

    Macedonia, for one, might be a bit ruffled about its dubious border
    with the province, although a visit by Kosovar prime minister Agim Ceku
    to Macedonia seemed to settle the issue with a friendly handshake:
    Ceku and Macedonian foreign minister Vlado Buckovski agreed that the
    problem should be treated as a technical, rather than a political,
    one and that its settlement should only be a matter of time and US
    cartographic co-operation. Previously, Ceku had said he would push
    for a renegotiation of the 2001-set and UN-approved border (then
    quite porous and a route for smugglers and rebels).

    As to the wider Muslim community in the Balkans, and the potential
    for further country splits, the problems that seem to arise come from
    the lack of deep knowledge about the Muslim community as a whole.

    During a debate on the the Muslim community in Bulgaria and the global
    challenges it faces, Bulgarian journalist Georgi Koritarov said that
    his impressions from a study on media coverage of Muslim topics in
    Bulgaria was that media coverage showed a negative approach and lack
    of deep understanding of Bulgarian Muslims' problems.

    However, he also expressed concern about the conflict potential of
    Muslim societies, which he said had still not been exhausted because
    of the unsolved Kosovo status.

    "I am not sure that things are moving toward a stable formula,"
    he said. Bulgaria was, so far, successful in painting itself as an
    island of stability to a backdrop of war, he said. It also did well
    in promoting its Bulgarian ethnic model. What it will do from then on,
    however, is another issue.

    The Muslim community in Bulgaria, Koritarov said, has the potential to
    become the representative of Balkan Muslims in the EU as an integral
    party of a future multicultural Europe. However, at the moment
    Bulgaria lacks the civil and intellectual resources to capitalise on
    this potential. Moreover, whoever pronounces such an idea in Bulgaria
    automatically gets shoved to the sphere of so-called corruption rings
    of the Movement for Rights and Freedoms, he said.

    If Bulgaria can use its Muslim minority as part of a successful EU
    diplomacy, choices and decisions for Serbia are much harder: it is
    either Kosovo, or the EU, as former US ambassador to the UN Richard
    Holbrooke told Serbian television. At least at the moment, however,
    gazes seem turned toward Montenegro and its May 21 Montenegrin
    referendum on independence. If Montenegro and then Kosovo become
    independent, that would be the end of Balkan and Eastern European
    disintegration, or would it?

    --Boundary_(ID_K+1EU2GU+w4NdqkndowOhA)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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