Post by Dsurazal on Dec 26, 2007 20:21:19 GMT -5
Serbs say No over Kosovo independence
Dec 27, 2007 9:41 AM
Serb parliamentarians of all major parties lined up on Wednesday behind a resolution implicitly rejecting membership of the European Union and NATO if the West recognises the independence of Kosovo.
It was backed by President Boris Tadic and Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica, leaders of the two main parties in Serbia's centre-right ruling coalition, and supported by ultranationalist Radicals and Socialists on the opposition benches.
Focusing on the Stabilisation and Association Agreement that Serbia may sign with the EU next month, the resolution said "any treaty Serbia signs, including the SAA, must be in keeping with preservation of (its) sovereignty and territorial integrity".
Serbia would shelve a decision on NATO membership, it said, and it would oppose the EU supervisory mission preparing to take over from the United Nations in Kosovo without Security Council approval - which Russia has blocked on behalf of its Serb ally.
Rhetoric in the debate was patriotic and defiant. But some analysts said the resolution's wording seemed vague enough to permit hard or soft interpretation at a later date.
"Serbia will never accept the independence of Kosovo," Tadic told parliament. The diplomatic campaign against it would continue at a U.N. Security Council session on Jan 9, he said.
If NATO peacekeepers failed to protect Kosovo's minority Serbs, "the Serbian Army is ready", he added in a tough note possibly meant to help his current campaign for re-election.
Kostunica, usually the more combative of the two, said the resolution would "send a message to Serbs in Kosovo...that they should ignore any unilateral declaration of independence".
Most Serbs live in the north of Kosovo, in effect already partitioned from land dominated by the 90-percent Albanian majority, who are preparing to declare independence in the first months of 2008 with U.S. and EU backing.
Analysts say a Serb partition would be hard to prevent, assuming any side really wanted to prevent it.
Cynical Tone
A senior government source said Wednesday's resolution was a political necessity to preserve Serbia's fragile coalition during the January presidential campaign. He said that the EU had been reassured that it did not signify a change of course.
Pro-Western Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic said he hoped Serbia would sign the SAA by the end of January, regardless of the resolution, but also without ceding sovereignty over Kosovo.
Hardliners were cynical about the coalition's sincerity.
Kostunica's speech "sounded like a lullaby, like anaesthesia before the amputation", said Tomislav Nikolic of the Radicals.
"We're going to vote for this resolution, but you owe us an explanation. Does it mean you'll approve signing the agreement with the EU even if it doesn't say Kosovo belongs in Serbia?" The Socialist Party of the late autocrat Slobodan Milosevic, held chiefly responsible for disastrous wars in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo in the 1990s, also sounded a sarcastic note.
Socialist leader Ivica Dacic said his party would fully support the resolution, but added: "Why did you overthrow us?"
Serbia lost control of Kosovo in 1999 after 11 weeks of bombing by NATO forced Milosevic to withdraw his troops, ending a ruthless counter-insurgency campaign in which 10,000 civilians were killed and 800,000 driven out of the country.
Kosovo has been run by the United Nations and patrolled by a major NATO-led peacekeeping force ever since.
Serbia now offers Kosovo's 2 million Albanians broad autonomy, "a separate life" with no role in Serbia, but short of full self-determination. Kosovo insists on total independence.
Source: Reuters
tvnz.co.nz/view/page/536641/1523784
Dec 27, 2007 9:41 AM
Serb parliamentarians of all major parties lined up on Wednesday behind a resolution implicitly rejecting membership of the European Union and NATO if the West recognises the independence of Kosovo.
It was backed by President Boris Tadic and Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica, leaders of the two main parties in Serbia's centre-right ruling coalition, and supported by ultranationalist Radicals and Socialists on the opposition benches.
Focusing on the Stabilisation and Association Agreement that Serbia may sign with the EU next month, the resolution said "any treaty Serbia signs, including the SAA, must be in keeping with preservation of (its) sovereignty and territorial integrity".
Serbia would shelve a decision on NATO membership, it said, and it would oppose the EU supervisory mission preparing to take over from the United Nations in Kosovo without Security Council approval - which Russia has blocked on behalf of its Serb ally.
Rhetoric in the debate was patriotic and defiant. But some analysts said the resolution's wording seemed vague enough to permit hard or soft interpretation at a later date.
"Serbia will never accept the independence of Kosovo," Tadic told parliament. The diplomatic campaign against it would continue at a U.N. Security Council session on Jan 9, he said.
If NATO peacekeepers failed to protect Kosovo's minority Serbs, "the Serbian Army is ready", he added in a tough note possibly meant to help his current campaign for re-election.
Kostunica, usually the more combative of the two, said the resolution would "send a message to Serbs in Kosovo...that they should ignore any unilateral declaration of independence".
Most Serbs live in the north of Kosovo, in effect already partitioned from land dominated by the 90-percent Albanian majority, who are preparing to declare independence in the first months of 2008 with U.S. and EU backing.
Analysts say a Serb partition would be hard to prevent, assuming any side really wanted to prevent it.
Cynical Tone
A senior government source said Wednesday's resolution was a political necessity to preserve Serbia's fragile coalition during the January presidential campaign. He said that the EU had been reassured that it did not signify a change of course.
Pro-Western Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic said he hoped Serbia would sign the SAA by the end of January, regardless of the resolution, but also without ceding sovereignty over Kosovo.
Hardliners were cynical about the coalition's sincerity.
Kostunica's speech "sounded like a lullaby, like anaesthesia before the amputation", said Tomislav Nikolic of the Radicals.
"We're going to vote for this resolution, but you owe us an explanation. Does it mean you'll approve signing the agreement with the EU even if it doesn't say Kosovo belongs in Serbia?" The Socialist Party of the late autocrat Slobodan Milosevic, held chiefly responsible for disastrous wars in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo in the 1990s, also sounded a sarcastic note.
Socialist leader Ivica Dacic said his party would fully support the resolution, but added: "Why did you overthrow us?"
Serbia lost control of Kosovo in 1999 after 11 weeks of bombing by NATO forced Milosevic to withdraw his troops, ending a ruthless counter-insurgency campaign in which 10,000 civilians were killed and 800,000 driven out of the country.
Kosovo has been run by the United Nations and patrolled by a major NATO-led peacekeeping force ever since.
Serbia now offers Kosovo's 2 million Albanians broad autonomy, "a separate life" with no role in Serbia, but short of full self-determination. Kosovo insists on total independence.
Source: Reuters
tvnz.co.nz/view/page/536641/1523784