Independent Kosovo? Why Not Vermont?

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By WILLIAM J. KOLE, Associated Press Writer 
2:51 PM PST, February 15, 2008 

 

Sean Connery thinks a Scottish nation is a bonnie notion. How about Spain's 
Basque country becoming a REAL country? And what's wrong with a People's 
Republic of Vermont?

Kosovo's looming independence raises all those questions and more. For 
starters: Why is statehood OK for some people but frowned on for others? After 
all, isn't the right to self-determination the essence of democracy itself?

There are at least two dozen secessionist movements active in Europe alone, and 
scores of others agitating for sovereignty around the globe. All of them, 
experts warn, will be emboldened by Sunday's expected proclamation of the 
Republic of Kosovo.

"We live in a world which is based around states," said Florian Bieber, a 
professor of politics and international relations at England's University of 
Kent.

"The United Nations is based on states. The European Union is based on states," 
he said. "It's going to continue to happen. New states will emerge, and states 
will disappear, like East Germany."

Not all independence movements are created equal.

Some are quirky, such as Second Vermont Republic -- Thomas Naylor's small but 
spirited campaign to break off his corner of northern New England and make it a 
nation.

With his spectacles, bald spot and long white hair, the retired Duke University 
economics professor looks like Benjamin Franklin and quotes Thomas Jefferson. 
He believes that if Kosovo can become a country, so can Vermont, which was 
independent until it joined the Union in 1791 as the 14th state.

Yet Naylor concedes: "It's a tough sell. This is not kid stuff. Secession is a 
radical act of rebellion driven by anger and fear."

Thousands have died in long-running quests for statehood mounted by the 
Palestinians, and by rebels fighting to gain Kashmir's independence from India 
and Pakistan.

The Basques have achieved sweeping autonomy from Spain, but militants continue 
to fight for full independence. On the Mediterranean island of Corsica, 
birthplace of Napoleon, nationalists still set off bombs to press for 
independence from France.

There are also many strictly nonviolent movements willing to settle for 
autonomy rather than secession. And sometimes new states are born by mutual 
consent, such as Slovakia and the Czech Republic -- Czechoslovakia until they 
split in 1993.

Kosovo formally remains part of Serbia, but it's been run by the U.N. since 
1999, when NATO intervened to stop Slobodan Milosevic's brutal crackdown on 
ethnic Albanian separatists.

Although the U.S. and key allies -- including Britain, France and Germany -- 
support its bid, Serbia and Russia fiercely oppose it.

Russian President Vladimir Putin insists that if Kosovo gains independence 
without U.N. approval, it will set a dangerous precedent for secessionists in 
Chechnya, Georgia, Azerbaijan and further afield.

Trouble is, there's no internationally accepted standard for independence, said 
Marc Plattner, coeditor of the Washington-based Journal of Democracy, which 
analyzes movements worldwide.

You can let the people decide, he says, but first you have to decide: Who are 
the people?

"This is the great hole in democratic theory," Plattner said. "There isn't a 
sound theoretical or moral answer. One simply looks at the individual case."

Skeptics say the increasing flow of cash, goods and information across national 
boundaries has taken the shine off statehood.

Others wonder if the already unwieldy EU and U.N. can handle much more. The 
27-nation EU already has 23 official languages, and many doubt it could cope if 
it had to add Albanian and Welsh to the mix.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wire/sns-ap-kosovo-independence-movements,1,3769375.story?ctrack=1&cset=true

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