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former Serbian province of Kosovo

Posted by franksupa on December 28, 2008

Two events got 2008 off to a running start in the Balkans.

The first was the narrow victory of Serbia’s pro-democratic president, Boris Tadic, in early elections against an ultranationalist rival, Tomislav Nikolic.

The second was an independence declaration by the former Serbian province of Kosovo, where 1.8 million ethnic Albanians celebrated the end of their long wait for statehood.

Together, those February events appeared to mark a turning point for the former Yugoslavia — a break from the ethnically driven politics of the past, and a step toward greater integration with the West.

There were other signs of a growing political maturity, as well.

Slovenia, the EU’s only Balkan member, assumed the rotating EU presidency at the start of the year pledging a smooth transition for Kosovo and improved ties between Brussels and Belgrade.

In April, Croatia and Albania received invitations to join the NATO military alliance. (A third country, Macedonia, had its invitation blocked by Greece amid a lingering dispute over its name.)

And Radovan Karadzic — the former Bosnian Serb leader seen as an architect of the Srebrenica massacre and the siege of Sarajevo during the 1992-95 Bosnian war — was arrested in Serbia in July, after 13 years in hiding.

The so-called “Butcher of Bosnia” will now be tried at the UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity. It’s a move some hope may bring a sense of closure to one of the grimmest chapters in the Balkan wars of the 1990s.

“His arrest is very important for the victims of the war and genocide in Bosnia,” says Senad Pecanin, the editor in chief of “Dani,” an independent Sarajevo weekly. “It obviously brings a kind of relief for them and their expectations of justice. It was late — his arrest was expected much earlier. But it was still a very important moment in the current history of Bosnia.”

Kosovo Fallout

As 2008 comes to a close, however, any steps toward reconciliation and stability seen in those early months have given way to a more muddled and volatile picture.

The focus of Kosovo’s debut as an independent state quickly shifted from the fireworks and jubilation in Pristina to mounting anger in Serbia, where officials refused to acknowledge the loss of a territory they consider the cradle of Serbian civilization.

Just days after the Kosovo declaration, Serb protesters angered by Western support for Pristina’s independence mobbed the streets of Belgrade, setting fire to the U.S. Embassy and attacking other diplomatic buildings.

Boris Tadic

The violence soon dissipated, only to be replaced by a bureaucratic affront, with Serbia blocking for nearly six months the transfer of administrative powers in Kosovo from the existing mission of the United Nations to EULEX, the new team run by the European Union.

Tiny Kosovo ends 2008 with dangerous divisions remaining between the Albanian majority and its Belgrade-backed Serb minority. A defiant cluster of EU states — Spain, Greece, Cyprus, Slovakia, and Romania — have yet to recognize the Pristina declaration, complicating efforts by Brussels to address the Kosovo issue with one voice.

Still, Peter Palmer, the Balkans project director for the International Crisis Group, says from Pristina that the transition is going “more smoothly than anyone would have dared to hope.”

“This is irreversible. There are those, of course, in Belgrade but also nonrecognizing states — Russia and five EU members — who have not accepted it. But no one else has put forward a viable alternative to Kosovo independence,” says Palmer. “It’s certainly true that things have not gone exactly as the recognizing states and Kosovo itself would have hoped. It’s not an ideal situation. But nevertheless, Kosovo independence is a reality.”

The Kosovo declaration had far-ranging ramifications, most notably in Georgia, where separatists in the breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia cited Pristina’s example in making their own independence bids with full recognition from Moscow.

Within the Balkans, Kosovo’s independence was seen as reigniting old tensions. A number of ex-Yugoslav states stepped forward to recognize Pristina’s independence, to Serbia’s mounting displeasure. When Macedonia and Montenegro became the 50th and 51st states to recognize Kosovo, Belgrade denounced the move as a betrayal and expelled both countries’ ambassadors.

In Bosnia, Simmering Unrest

Bosnia-Herzegovina was the one state besides Serbia not to recognize Kosovo. That, however, did not prevent Milorad Dodik, the voluble prime minister of Bosnia’s Serb entity of Republika Srpska, from using Kosovo as a precedent he said could clear the way for a theoretical secession from Sarajevo.

That threat is part of a running nationalist feud between Dodik and his Bosniak rival, Haris Silajdzic, the Muslim member of the country’s tripartite presidency, who himself has called for the abolition of Republika Srpska.

The fragility of Bosnia’s power-sharing agreement, brokered by the international community in the Dayton peace accords in 1995, is serving as a reminder in Kosovo that Western-imposed solutions are not necessarily a fail-safe guarantee against ethnic discord — particularly in instances where Belgrade is intent on protecting the interests of the region’s Serbs.

The rising tensions have also sparked fears of a new regional war in multiethnic Bosnia — fears that James Lyon, a Balkans expert with the Democratization Policy Council, says the West should move quickly to counteract.

“If we see violations of Dayton, we may be seeing first and foremost violations of what is primarily a cease-fire, with the implications for that,” Lyon says. “Both sides are now accusing the other of re-arming. And if the Serbs are accusing the Bosniaks and the Bosniaks are accusing the Serbs of re-arming, then there’s probably a good reason to believe that there’s a grain of truth to the complaints of both sides.”

Lyon says part of the problem lies in the fact that the international community — and the EU in particular — has allowed Serbia to pursue with impunity its policy interests in neighboring states, often at the expense of regional stability.

Brussels is eager to bring Serbia — the biggest and most obstinate of the former Yugoslav states — into the EU fold. The result, says Lyon, is a kind of “Serbian exceptionalism” in the EU’s Balkans policy, whereby Belgrade is offered sweeter incentives and milder penalties than other countries making steadier progress toward EU membership.

Managing Belgrade

Brussels this year offered Serbia a Stabilization and Association Agreement, or SAA — a deal seen as a key step toward EU membership. Although Belgrade was not seen as falling short on some reforms required for an SAA, the offer was seen as placating Serbia for the EU’s nearly unanimous backing of Kosovo’s independence declaration.

Radovan Karadzic faces the UN court in The Hague on August 29.

Belgrade, in turn, handed over Karadzic, in a move that earned it near-instant praise from Hague and EU officials. But a handful of EU countries, particularly the Netherlands, say no more concessions will be forthcoming until Serbia arrests Ratko Mladic, Karadzic’s army commander during the Bosnian war and the top remaining Hague suspect still at large.

Serbia is not considered likely to produce such an arrest, however. Mladic enjoys the continued loyalty and protection of the Serbian Army. His testimony, moreover, could potentially reveal lines of command in operations like the Srebrenica massacre — something that could ultimately prove deeply damaging to the political and military elite in Belgrade.

There are high-profile issues, like Mladic, that demonstrate Serbia’s limitations as a viable EU partner. There are also more mundane ones, like Belgrade’s continued failure to bring its laws in line with Schengen visa standards that are highly desired by the Balkan public.

Then there is Tadic, whose Western backers watched with disappointment as his Democratic Party struck a coalition deal with the Socialists, the former party of deceased Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic, after parliamentary elections in the spring.

“Tadic’s choice of coalition partner indicates very clearly that European integration is not necessarily as strong as he would like the West to believe it is in terms of his government’s priorities,” says Lyon. “He chose a very, very right-of-center party that is the party of Slobodan Milosevic. It’s a party that no one in their wildest dreams here in Serbia today would associate with being pro-European.”

Europe, of course, is not the only player in the Balkans. Many in the region hope the United States, preoccupied under the Bush administration by wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, may redirect some of its attention to the former Yugoslavia when Barack Obama enters office in January, bringing with him a vice president and cabinet members who are well-versed on Balkan issues.

Challenges Ahead

And then there is Moscow, which in 2008 continued to wield considerable influence over the Balkans, serving as a kind of counterbalance to the West. Russia acted as Serbia’s booster in UN Security Council debates on Kosovo and continued a regional energy-driven spending spree.

But while Russia’s patronage has been largely welcome, some of the deals have sparked controversy in the Serbian government. Moscow’s plan to purchase NIS, Serbia’s state energy company, has divided lawmakers because the deal fails to guarantee an initial promise by Russia that its strategic South Stream pipeline would run through Serbia. Refusal to proceed, however, would almost certainly mean an abrupt end to Moscow’s support on Kosovo and other issues.

The question, however, may become moot if the global financial crisis ultimately sets back the Kremlin’s energy-expansion plans.

If 2008 was the year of Kosovo and Karadzic, 2009 may easily prove the year of economic meltdown in a region that still has some of the highest unemployment and poverty figures in Europe.

Adding financial instability to a region already riven by rising ethnic tensions may see the Balkans putting aside a vision of the future and returning to the problems of the past.

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Kosovo nobel

Posted by franksupa on October 18, 2008

Martti Ahtisaari, the former Finnish president awarded the Nobel peace prize for his mediation in Kosovo and a string of other conflicts around the world, said yesterday that Serbia would have no option but to accept the new Balkan state.

In his first interview with a British newspaper since being named Nobel laureate last week, Ahtisaari shrugged off the apparent setback to his work in Kosovo inflicted when Serbia succeeded in having its declaration of independence referred to the international court of justice.

The 71-year old also argued that it did not matter that the former Serbian province had been recognised so far by only 51 of the world’s 192 countries. That was less important than the economic clout of the nations that did recognize Kosovo, including the US and most of western Europe.

“It really doesn’t matter if Paraguay hasn’t recognised,” Ahtisaari said. “Well over 65% of the wealth of the world has recognized. That matters.”

Ahtisaari was commissioned by the UN in 2005 to find a compromise solution for Kosovo’s status as a way of ending the deadlock that followed the 1999 war and Nato intervention. His plan for supervised independence coupled with extensive minority rights for Kosovo’s Serb minority was rejected by Serbia and Russia last year. However, Kosovo – with western backing – declared independence in February.

Belgrade has vowed never to accept Kosovo’s sovereignty, but Ahtisaari said Serbia would have to relent if it wanted eventual European membership. “You can’t be poking the EU in the eye [while] saying you want to join EU,” he said.

He sent private messages to all parties soon after taking his role as mediator, that Kosovo’s secession was inevitable. “[I said] in light of what had happened in Kosovo, the return of Kosovo to Serbia is not a viable option,” Ahtisaari said. “So since March 2006 no one should have had any illusion what my plan was going to be.”

Russia furiously opposed Kosovo’s independence, and pointed to it as justification of its own recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, pro-Russian enclaves in Georgia. Ahtisaari rejected the parallel.

“We did Kosovo within the UN framework. In Georgia there was not even an attempt,” he argued. “You cannot go into an independent country and do whatever you like. Even if you are Russia.”

Ahtisaari was also involved in mediating Namibia’s independence from South Africa in 1989, and brokering peace in 2005 between the Indonesian government and separatists in Aceh. He said the secrets to successful peacemaking were research, having a clear strategy, and hiring staff who offer independent thinking. “You don’t need a single yes man,” he said. “You have to have colleagues who can challenge your own thinking.”

source:guardian.co.uk

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Kosovo Improved Relations with US

Posted by franksupa on September 25, 2008

Serbian President Boris Tadic says he hopes to be able to turn a new page in relations with the United States when a new U.S. president takes office – despite differences on Kosovo.

In an interview aired on VOA Serbian language television Tuesday, Mr. Tadic said Serbia cannot defend its interests in Kosovo without the United States having a different understanding of the issue.

But he said he does not expect Washington to change its position.

Mr. Tadic told the United Nations General Assembly that his government is asking the International Court of Justice to rule on what he called Kosovo’s “illegal and illegitimate” declaration of independence.

He later said on VOA that a favorable ruling would strengthen Serbia’s international credibility, saying Serbia is trying to solve the situation peacefully and diplomatically.

The General Assembly has agreed to debate whether to back Serbia’s request for a court ruling.

The United States and 46 other countries have recognized Kosovo’s independence.

source: voanews.com

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Mr. Obama clarifies Kosovo policy

Posted by franksupa on September 25, 2008

Obama’s personal adviser, Richard Holbrooke, earlier this month visited the Republic of Kosovo, reiterating that “Senator Barack Obama will continue to support Kosovo in every possible way.”

US Senator Barack Obama, the democratic candidate for US President, has stated for the weekly Albanian-American newspaper Illyria that he strongly supports Kosovo independence and its democratic processes emphasizing that “as a President of the United States [he] will assist Kosovo develop a strong economy.”

The US Senator from Illinois by reconfirming his strong support for Kosovo independence has said that he will personally work on strengthening the sovereignty of the newborn nation, the Republic of Kosovo.

The statement by Senator Obama is the first public engagement to communicate directly with the Albanian-American community in the United States.

“Barack Obama supports the independence of Kosovo and its democratic process towards full sovereignty,” was said in the statement. “The United States must work assisting Kosovo in building a vibrant democracy, secured through law and order that guarantees all human rights.”

The emphatic statement, giving powerful support to the Republic of Kosovo by Senator Barack Obama who is running for US President in 2008, is the first attempt of Obama to clarify some of the ambiguous and misleading statements made earlier to the Serb media and organizations, and court instead the Albanian-American communities who reside in the most contested states such as Michigan, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Florida, states that have determined the winner in the past two elections, and other ones such as New York, New Jersey, Texas, Connecticut, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts.

Many Albanian-American Democratic voters were ambivalent about Barack Obama due to his absence from national American politics during the Balkan conflicts in the 90’s and dubious statements by various pro-Serbian media and think tanks that Obama could shift the American policy in the Balkans.

However, Senator Barack Obama on the day of the Kosovo declaration of independence, issued a statement expressing his genuine support for Kosovo independence and during one of the debates, in a follow up question, he stressed his commitment to defending Kosovo sovereignty from any possible Serbian aggression.

His running mate, Senator Joseph Biden, has been a long advocate of Kosovo independence and a strong supporter of the human rights of the Albanians throughout the Balkans.

Obama’s personal adviser, Richard Holbrooke, earlier this month visited the Republic of Kosovo, reiterating that “Senator Barack Obama will continue to support Kosovo in every possible way.”

Obama’s latest statements go further, expressing his support for Kosovo’s integration into the euro-Atlantic institutions by building an open and tolerant society that guarantees the rights of minorities and protects the important cultural and religious sites.

As President of the United States, Obama states that he is committed to work on “assisting Kosovo develop a strong and healthy trade, focusing on economic development and creating new jobs, and assisting the country to build a powerful infrastructure and energy system.”

In his statement, Obama also praises the “important achievements in Albania.” He congratulates Albania for the receiving invitation to join NATO and wishes Albania to become a member of the EU in the near future.

Senator John McCain, the Republican Candidate for US President, has already a proven track record advocating for Kosovo. Senator McCain has also expressed his strong support in assisting Kosovo build its economy and strengthens its democratic and sovereign institutions for all Kosovar citizens.

Source: emportal.co.yu

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The one and only Kosovo should become UN Member State – Albanian President

Posted by franksupa on September 25, 2008

24 September 2008 – Kosovo, which declared its independence from Serbia earlier this year, deserves to be a United Nations Member State as soon as possible, Albanian President Bamir Topi told the General Assembly’s annual high-level debate tonight.

In an address to the debate, Mr. Topi said any political, economic, military or diplomatic effort against Kosovo’s consolidation as a State “would be a hopeless attempt against the integrating processes towards NATO and the European Union.

“It would be a regressive move against foreign investments and progress which we need so direly,” he added.

Mr. Topi said “this new political, economical and social reality” that is Kosovo is an irreversible development, adding that formal recognition of it as a State “is to the interest of Kosovo, of Albania, of Serbia and of all its close and distant neighbours, of Europe and Mediterranean space.”

He said the independence move would help with efforts in the region to promote the rule of law, encourage long-term peace and stability and spur closer integration with the rest of Europe.

“The independence of Kosovo finally frees this part of Europe from the nightmare of war, of inter-ethnic conflicts, of ethnic cleansing and genocide; it fulfils and respects the free will of a people to break free from the political oppression, from historical injustices and inability to develop.”

The President noted that Albania was helping the people and government of Kosovo – where ethnic Albanians outnumber other groups by nine to one – to build a society that is genuinely democratic, secular and multi-ethnic.

He added that he was confident that the precise role of the UN peacekeeping mission to Kosovo, known as UNMIK, would soon be reconfigured to take account of the changed circumstances.

source: un.org

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Kosovo Indipendence Similarities

Posted by franksupa on September 16, 2008

Recent developments in Georgia and the possible similarities between the independence of Kosovo and those of South Ossetia and Abkhazia have seized the attention of the media and Kosovar Albanians in recent days. Immediately after the recognition of independence by the Russian authorities and statements on the parallelism between the two cases have taken the reactions of Albanian leaders in Albania and Kosovo, and the media have published editorials and analyses, which are found mainly on same wavelength trying to deny any kind of analogy.

The official position of Pristina was expressed publicly by the vice Premier Hajredin Kuqi. “As stated at the time of the proclamation of its independence, Kosovo is a generis case that can not serve as a precedent to none. Russia is acting according to a logic of the Cold War, “said Kuqi. The same position was taken in several press conferences by Albanian Prime Minister Sali Berisha, who, in addition to underline the fact that South Ossetia Abkhazia one hand and Kosovo are the other results of two different stories and not comparable , Used very harsh words to condemn the position taken by Moscow and its allies.

Berisha has reacted with disappointment as the publication of a long list of countries that have supplied arms to Georgia, which also included Albania. “Russia attacks and take advantage of the smaller countries,” said Berisha, inter alia, causing the reaction dell’ambasciatore Russian Tirana, Aleksandr Priscepov, who defined the position of Berisha as well as emotional, and not to be taken into account “, while” Russia wants to really improve its relations with Albania “. Criticism zealous Berisha has caused amazement and have been compared by more than one analyst as identical to those of Enver Hoxha of Albania when alone and isolated criticizing everything and everybody. While the Kosovar leaders were rather cautious in their statements, the Albanian premier has spoken on several occasions strongly against any possibility to compare the two cases.

In the first pages of newspapers and Kosovar Albanians appeared titles as “Kosovo is different”, “You can not compare Kosovo “, “Kosovo sui generis” and “No similarities.” The editorial published many of which included English-speaking media, aimed to demonstrate that Kosovo can not be considered as a precedent to the independence of separatist regions in Georgia. It is pointed mainly on finding similarities type only formal between the two cases, such separatism, the attack by Russia if the Russian-Georgian and by the Born in’99 in the case of Kosovo, or in recognition of a new state without going through the UN Security Council.

But were highlighted substantial differences with regard to human rights violations in Kosovo, which according to many, despite the allegations of Kremlin, were at a level much lower in South Ossetia, and about the legal past of Kosovo, with ‘ then abolished autonomy of Kosovo by Milosevic, other than the status of the Caucasian region. Much space was also given geopolitical importance of the Caucasus, which transforms the last move of the Kremlin in a geopolitical scope what happened in Kosovo.

The arguments were very similar between different analysts and politicians in Albania and Kosovo. “To support the independence of Kosovo were the major Western democracies, while in the case of the Caucasus was only Russia, a state that can not be called fully democratic,” says Bashkim Muça on the pages of Kosovar daily “Koha Ditore” without sparing a critical tone against dell’élite Kosovo for not having reacted appropriately to the events of recent weeks. “There is no parallelism between Saakashvili of Georgia and Serbia of Milosevic,” then Muça. With regard to the geopolitical aspect, the analyst argues that Kosovo “in Georgia will face two superpowers,” leaving that the importance of Kosovo in this field is not even remotely close to that of Caucasian region.

On the pages of the newspaper tirane “Shqip,” the analyst Albanian Kastriot Islami argues that Russia has exploited the case not Kosovo as a precedent, but as an instrument of revenge against all states that have recognized. “Probably there is some parallel between the intervention of NATO and that of Russia,” writes Islami, “but Saakashvili has no conscience on genocide or serious human rights violations, as Milosevic in’99.”

In several talk shows, went on air on TV Albano one more followed, many analysts have questioned whether with its recognition of South Ossetia and Abkhazia Russia does not have indirectly recognized the right of Kosovo to be independent. Someone commented that with the events in the Caucasus Russia has abandoned Serbia, showing indifferent to the interests of its small ally. “Russia no longer has an excuse with which to justify its positions on Kosovo” said Mentor Nazarko in the pages of “Shqip.” Same idea is also the opinion-Kosovar Lulzim Peci: “Now it became obvious that the support of Russia to Serbia was part of political game. Now Russia has lost credibility. “

In Albania and Kosovo was discussed a lot about the consequences of the eruption of Georgian question could have on recognition and further affirmation of Kosovo with the international community. In Albania does not lack those who fear a further slowdown in the process of recognition, or that this is even called into question, while in Kosovo are prevalsi optimistic tone and confidence in Western support. “We need to see if Kosovo Ossetia el’Abkhazia have the same weight geopolitical game on the table of great powers,” he commented about Mentor Nazarko.

In Kosovo, however, any similarities are thinking beyond the schemes discussed so far. During a conference held in the last day of August in Pristina, with the theme “Kosovo and Arab states”, Veton Surroi, known Kosovar analyst, commented: “In fact there is room for similarities, but not between Kosovo and Ossetia South. There is fear that what happened to Georgia with Ossetia, could happen in Kosovo with North Mitrovica. “

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