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<https://www.rferl.org/a/serbia-kosovo-dacic-partition-could-end-dispute/28676209.html>
  


Kosovo Rejects Serbian Partition Plan For Ending Territorial Dispute


RFE/RL's Balkan Service

3 minutes

  _____  

Kosovar Foreign Minister Enver Hoxhaj flatly rejected a compromise proposed by 
his Serbian counterpart on August 14 aimed at resolving their long-standing 
territorial dispute and furthering both countries' plans to join the European 
Union.

Serbian Foreign Minister Ivica Dacic, a strong ally of President Aleksandar 
Vucic, proposed the redrawing of boundaries between Serb and Albanian enclaves 
in Kosovo and providing autonomy for the Serbian enclave within Kosovo.

In return, Dacic wrote in an  
<http://%28http:/www.novosti.rs/vesti/naslovna/politika/aktuelno.289.html:680643-IVICA-DACIC-ZA-NOVOSTI-Razgranicenje-s-Albancima-je-trajno-resenje%29>
 opinion article published on August 14 in the daily newspaper Vecernje Novosti 
that Serbia would give up its claim to all of Kosovo. 

But Hoxhaj flatly rejected the idea, which would turn about one-fifth of its 
territory into an autonomous Serbian region that almost certainly would be 
hostile to Pristina. 

Hoxhaj wrote on Twitter 
<https://twitter.com/Enver_Hoxhaj/status/897079590493016064>  late on August 14 
that his country is "a multiethnic democracy with internationally recognized 
borders" and will stay that way.

“Serbia's renewed ideas 4 border change are dangerous & unacceptable," Hoxhaj 
said.

Kosovo, a country of 1.8 million people, declared independence from Serbia in 
2008 and is recognized by 115 countries but not by Belgrade. Currently there 
are around 120,000 Serbs in Kosovo and most of them, mainly in the north, 
oppose the Pristina authorities.

Kosovar Albanians, who are the ethnic majority in the small Balkan nation, 
oppose greater autonomy for Serb-dominated municipalities, saying that would 
give Belgrade more influence. 

Dacic, who is also first deputy prime minister of Serbia, had argued that 
"everyone needs a lasting solution of the Serbian-Albanian conflict, which can 
be reached only through an agreement...where everyone will win something and 
lose something."

He said that under his proposal, besides seeking autonomy for Serbian enclaves 
in Kosovo, Serbia would seek a protected status for Orthodox monasteries, and 
financial compensation for what Belgrade claims as its property, including 
industrial and energy facilities.

In the long-standing feud between the countries, Kosovo is supported by the 
West. Serbia is a traditional ally of Russia, but Vucic has attempted to 
balance relations between Moscow, the European Union, and the United States.

Kosovo and Serbia have both expressed hopes of joining the EU and have agreed 
to talks sponsored by the bloc on normalizing ties. However, many Serbian 
nationalists oppose EU membership and are pushing for closer ties to Russia and 
do not want to recognize Kosovo as independent.


With reporting by Reuters, AP, Bloomberg, and B92


 

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