Justice for Serbia

By Vojislav Kostunica


Kosovo Independence Imperils Our Democracy

Washington Post <http://www.washingtonpost.com/>  
July 12, 2006 

The demands for the independence of Kosovo present Southeast Europe and the 
rest of the world with a compelling question: Will absolute justice be made to 
yield to relative political interests -- and will authentic democratic values 
be sacrificed for a mere semblance of peace? 


The arguments given by Serbia against independence for its southern province 
are well known. From the point of view of international law, these arguments 
are simply irrefutable. They are based on the fundamental documents and pillars 
of international order: the U.N. Charter, the Helsinki Final Act and relevant 
resolutions of the U.N. Security Council. 


Depriving a democratic country of a part of its territory simply because one 
ethnic group that has aspirations for that territory threatens violence is 
impermissible, not only morally but also from the perspective of historical 
experience. Indeed, tragic occurrences have taught mankind that a policy of 
appeasement toward those who threaten force only opens the way to more and even 
greater violence. 


There is another, purely pragmatic argument that is equally indisputable: An 
independent Kosovo could not help becoming a hotbed of chronic tension in the 
region, both because of the probability of new territorial demands and because 
of its economic unviability and its widespread network of organized crime. 


Viewed strategically, and not just with regard to preserving stability in the 
Balkans, the arguments against an independent Kosovo are equally strong: 
Independence for Kosovo would surely be viewed as a precedent, setting off 
similar demands elsewhere. Those who argue otherwise are, quite simply, closing 
their eyes to the hard facts. Resolving the problems of national minorities 
through self-determination (especially in the case of nationalities that 
already have their own countries nearby) inevitably leads to border changes and 
all the dangerous complications that this entails. 


But even if it remained deaf to all of these arguments, the international 
community would have to take account of the impact that Kosovo's eventual 
independence would have on democratic Serbia. Let us recall that Serbia 
liberated itself from a communist regime on its own by investing enormous 
effort and taking huge risks. Can such a country, by any measure a democratic 
one, survive the forcible taking of 15 percent of its territory? What 
democratically elected government could explain to its voters after such an act 
that they should continue to believe in the principles of tolerance, liberalism 
and the sacrosanct will of the people -- the values of enlightened Western 
civilization, in the name of which they toppled an evil, authoritarian regime? 


To put it simply, a young democracy, which in a mere six years has achieved 
impressive results in developing its economy, building institutions, protecting 
human rights, battling corruption and crime, and fostering international 
relations, would stand little chance of survival under such circumstances. 


Democracy, in Serbia as anywhere else, is essentially based on the equality of 
all and, no less important, on trust. If people stop believing in the rules of 
democracy, if they start thinking that a set of rules is applicable to one 
nation but not to others, if they feel betrayed by powerful institutions, and 
if the standards and norms of behavior for relations among individuals and 
nations alike are trampled upon, then people will lose faith. And where faith 
is lost, there can be no democracy. 


In attempting to preserve the province of Kosovo within its borders, Serbia has 
acted in the most reasonable and constructive way possible. It is prepared to 
accept any form of compromise that does not entail independence, and it offers 
Albanians the greatest possible autonomy, including all legislative, executive 
and judicial powers, while expecting in return only the inviolability of 
borders and safety for the non-Albanian population of the province. 


In its struggle for Kosovo, Serbia is also struggling for fundamental 
principles of international justice and order. And, by defending an inalienable 
part of its territory, Serbia may even be defending the future of democracy as 
a way of life and a view of the world. 




  _____  

http://www.globalpolicy.org/nations/sovereign/sover/emerg/2006/0712serbia.htm


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