Kosovo still disconnected


By Claude Salhani


In some ways my idle laptop, unable to connect to the outside world, offered
an appropriate analogy to the current political situation in Kosovo. 
    The usual flurry of e-mails -- about 400 a day -- were not trickling
into my computer, leaving me frustrated, as many Kosovars I am sure must
feel about political stagnation in their region. We were alike in waiting
for something to happen. And in both instances, it felt as if the world was
passing us by. 
    The direct Internet connection promised in every room of my hotel in
Pristina, the not-so pristine capital of Kosovo, offered a fitting window
into the state of affairs of the rebellious former Yugoslav province, now
seeking independence from Serbia. 
 
    Last week found me back in Pristina to lecture Kosovar journalists and
police officers on ethics at a seminar arranged by the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe. The OSCE is one of the main
international bodies that manage Kosovo's day-to-day government, police,
security and judicial affairs, among other duties. Although the province has
an elected president, parliament and prime minister, they are answerable to
the U.N.-appointed administrator; "an international," and one of the many
thousands who make Kosovo run or, sometimes, not. 
    For the uninitiated, Kosovo is the disputed region ethnic Albanians and
Kosovar Serbs have fought over for suffice it to say several hundred years.
And the conflict is still unresolved. 
    The region now is administered by the U.N. Interim Mission in Kosovo
(UNMIK) which since its 1999 inception has worked on the issue of "final
status." Under the authority of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1244, the
international community is trying to decide if Kosovo should be independent
of Belgrade or remain part of Serbia and Montenegro, the two remaining
republics of the former Yugoslavia. 
    Kosovo's population is largely ethnic Albanian --a group that makes up
about 92 percent of the autonomous region's roughly 2 million people,
according to one estimate. Kosovar Serbs, the largest minority, are about 7
percent of the population. Before the war their number was higher, but many
fled and others were killed. The rest are a mix of Rom (Gypsies) and other
smaller groups. A whopping 70 percent of the population is unemployed. 
    Back in the Kosovo hotel room, the porter handed me a new, shining red
cable that he pulled out of the night table next to the bed, telling me it
would connect my computer to the Net. He handed me the cable with great
pride, as though offering the keys to the city. But once plugged into my
laptop and to the outlet that hung precariously on two razor-thin wires
sticking out of the wall, nothing happened. The computer idled. Just like
the province I was in. The red cable taunted me, just as the idea of
statehood taunts Kosovars. Both are there, within easy reach, but somehow
still unattainable and waiting for something to happen. 
    Repeated calls to the front desk were answered with vigorous promises to
look into the problem. Twice the front desk dispatched a "technician" to
"fix" the problem. But again, mirroring the political situation in Kosovo,
as an "international" (meaning a foreigner) I knew far more about the
problem than he did. Or at least I pretended to, and he, a Kosovar, accepted
my pretense. In the end, it mattered little, as neither of us could solve
the problem. 
    Promising he "would work on it," the technician sauntered away. Still
the problem remained unsolved. Three days later and just hours before my
departure from Pristina, the hotel manager showed up at my door with a long
cable in his hand. One end of the wire ran out of sight, under a door at the
far end of the hall from where three similar cables of different colors
snaked their way under other hotel room doors. 
    The manager, explaining he had "just been apprised of the problem," laid
the coiling cable across my room, connected it to my laptop. As if a magic
wand had been waved, I was finally connected to the world via the wonder of
the World Wide Web. 
    The manager laying down cables across his hotel floor was Kosovo's own
way of fixing the problem. 
    Again, one can draw on the analogies of the two situations. It was not
until the manager acted that the issue was resolved. Similarly, all the
international help from the United Nations, the European Union and the
plethora of internationals working in Kosovo will help the province limp
along, with promises of addressing the problem but with no real resolution.
Meanwhile unemployment remains frighteningly high. 
    Like my Internet cable, it will only be when the province's managers --
the people of Kosovo and their leaders, Serbs and Albanians alike -- take
their future into their own hands, lay down the cables connecting them to
the outside world that Kosovo can get on the road to nation building. 
    Until then, it will sit idly as my computer did in a room in Kosovo, as
the line from the great film "Casablanca" says, "waiting, waiting, waiting."

     
    Claude Salhani is international editor for United Press International. 


http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20050503-094237-9721r.htm









 
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