Kostunica tells Serbia Kosovo can't be held


Thu Feb 14, 2008 7:49pm EST

 

By Douglas Hamilton

BELGRADE (Reuters) - Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica told Serbs for the
first time on Thursday the imminent loss of their historic province of
Kosovo was a reality, but in a televised address he vowed the nation would
never accept it.

Kostunica's statement was his most open acknowledgment yet that Serbia
cannot prevent Kosovo's Albanian majority from proclaiming independence on
Sunday, with the promise of Western recognition but without United Nations
approval.

He said his coalition had adopted a document to pre-emptively annul "an
event which will become reality in a few days, about illegal violence and an
act of declaring independence of Kosovo".

"This decision confirms full national unity," Kostunica said, adding that
what was about to happen was "a gross violation of international law".

At the United Nations in New York, Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic told
the U.N. Security Council on Thursday that Belgrade will use all its
economic, political and diplomatic means to stop Kosovo seceding but will
not resort to violence.

"We shall undertake all diplomatic, political, and economic measures
designed to impede and reverse this direct and unprovoked attack on our
sovereignty," Jeremic said in a text of his speech made available to media.
He gave no details.

Serbia's state news agency Tanjug, in the first concrete report of
diplomatic reprisals, said Serbia's ambassadors to France, Germany and
Britain would leave in protest after they recognize Kosovo on Monday.

"Serbia has the right ... and Serbia will continue, through a series of
concrete steps, to ... prove that Kosovo is part of Serbia," Kostunica told
a news conference.

Radical Party deputy leader Tomislav Nikolic called on Kostunica and
President Boris Tadic to organize a major protest rally against Kosovo's
independence in the capital next week.

"If Sunday is a day of declaration of Kosovo's independence, the rally has
to be held next week," Nikolic said.

He expected 1 million Serbs to turn out.

CALL TO EMBARGO TRADE

Kostunica said Serbia had demanded an emergency U.N. Security Council
session on Thursday, and would ask Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to "take
all steps and prevent the violation of the U.N. Charter, the Helsinki Act
and Resolution 1244".

But Serbia's ally Russia has discounted the chances of the Council
preventing Kosovo's proclamation of independence.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, however, said Moscow also had a plan ready
in case the West recognized Kosovo's independence and would act to safeguard
Russia's security.

Resolution 1244 was adopted in 1999 when NATO troops deployed into Kosovo
after the Western alliance bombed Serbia to compel it to withdraw forces to
end the killing and ethnic cleansing of Albanians in a counter-insurgency
war.

Ninety percent of Kosovo's 2 million people are ethnic Albanians, but around
120,000 Serbs remain. An EU mission of some 2,000 police and judges will aim
to ensure that promises of an equitable, multi-ethnic state under the rule
of law are kept.

For Serbia, however, the mission will "not exist".

Kostunica, however, made clear that Serbia's cooperation with the NATO-led
KFOR peacekeeping mission in Kosovo, which has a U.N. mandate, will
continue.

BOSNIAN SERBS

Rumblings of potentially far more serious repercussions came from the Serb
Republic, which makes up half of the state forged after the disastrous
1992-95 war, and now shares Bosnia with a Muslim-Croat Federation.

Serb nationalists stepped up their threats to secede from Bosnia, saying
such a move could be launched even without a referendum "if the European
Union recognizes independent Kosovo unilaterally and against international
law".

Bosnian Serb Prime Minister Milorad Dodik, who avoids direct threats of
secession, said: "In case of a unilateral declaration of Kosovo
independence, others can also develop such ideas".

A Western diplomat said: "It is difficult to discern the difference between
the rhetoric and the probability", but he noted that Bosnia's Serbs were
copying a legislative pattern Montenegro used in the run-up its independence
two years ago.

 

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