EU to agree Kosovo talks over

By Paul Taylor, European Affairs Editor
Reuters
Sunday, December 9, 2007; 5:03 AM

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - EU leaders are expected to agree this week that efforts to 
reach a negotiated solution to the Kosovo problem are exhausted, and offer to 
take responsibility for security and justice in the breakaway Serbian province.

EU negotiator Wolfgang Ischinger will brief European Union foreign ministers on 
Monday on the results of four months of mediation efforts and urge them to help 
stabilize the Balkan territory by sending in police and justice officials soon.

Leaders of the 27-nation bloc are expected to declare in a statement at a 
summit on Friday that negotiations are over and that the future of both Serbia 
and Kosovo lies in the European Union, diplomats said.

They are also likely to confirm they are willing to dispatch police and justice 
missions and appoint a high representative to oversee Kosovo if asked by the 
Kosovo Albanian government and the United Nations Secretary-General.

"It is clear that the future of Serbia and Kosovo lies in the European Union. 
That's something that both sides agree on," EU foreign policy chief Javier 
Solana said in an interview with Germany's 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/germany.html?nav=el>  
Welt am Sonntag newspaper.

A troika of EU, U.S. and Russian mediators told U.N. Secretary-General Ban 
Ki-moon in a report on Friday that their mission failed because neither side 
was willing to give way on the fundamental question of sovereignty over Kosovo.

The troika had been given a December 10 deadline for completing its report.

"We were given 120 days but if we had been given 1,200 days the outcome would 
have been the same," an aide quoted Ischinger as telling Solana.

RISKS PLAYED DOWN

The next step is for the U.N. Security Council to debate the mediators' report 
on December 19 and try to agree on a resolution.

Agreement looks impossible since Russia 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/russia.html?nav=el>  
continues to back Belgrade's rejection of independence for Kosovo, which 
Western powers see as the only viable and durable solution. Moscow and Belgrade 
have called for more talks.

Four or five of the 27 EU states, notably Cyprus and Greece, have misgivings 
about recognizing a unilateral declaration of independence by the Kosovo 
Albanians, partly out of fear of a precedent for ethnic or national groups at 
home.

EU leaders are likely to duck the independence question for now and focus on 
what they can agree on, while stressing the importance of staying united after 
they sign a major treaty to reform their institutions on Thursday in Lisbon.

The four European powers involved in supervising Balkans diplomacy -- Britain 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/greatbritain.html?nav=el> 
, Germany, France 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/france.html?nav=el>  and 
Italy -- wrote to their EU partners on Friday, saying negotiations were 
exhausted and the Europeans would have to meet their responsibilities.

"(They) also suggested we should help Serbia by supporting its efforts to move 
more rapidly towards giving it candidate status (for EU membership)," a Western 
official familiar with the letter said.

Solana played down the risk of violence after the failure of mediation efforts, 
telling Welt am Sonntag: "I don't expect unrest after December 10. I expect the 
Serbs and Kosovo Albanians will be prudent and won't risk stability in the 
Balkans."

"I'm confident that Belgrade and Pristina will keep their word not to resort to 
violence and will do nothing that could threaten security in Kosovo or 
elsewhere," he said.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov was due to visit Cyprus on Sunday to 
confer with a fellow opponent of unilateral independence for Kosovo on the eve 
of the EU meeting.

Cyprus Foreign Minister Erato Kozakou-Markoullis told Reuters her government 
wanted a negotiated and agreed settlement backed by the U.N. Security Council.

"Otherwise we risk undermining the whole U.N. system and its institutions, and 
this could create a very dangerous precedent," she said in a reference to the 
fear that the self-proclaimed Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus could also 
gain recognition.

(additional reporting by Louis Charbonneau in Berlin and Michele Kambas in 
Cyprus, editing by Matthew Tostevin)

© 2007 Reuters

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/12/09/AR2007120900257_pf.html



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