Not Serbia, but Tadic the traitor!
 





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Sent: Sun, August 29, 2010 10:59:49 PM
Subject: [srbija_medjusljivama] Serbia ‘ready’ for Kosovo compromise, up to a 
point

  
Serbia ‘ready’ for Kosovo compromise, up to a point 

AFP/Belgrade

Serbia is ready to discuss changes to a draft resolution it has submitted to 
the 
UN General Assembly on Kosovo, but will never recognise the breakaway state, 
President Boris Tadic said yesterday.
Tadic’s readiness to discuss the UN resolution with the European Union and 
other 
Western powers came days after German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle warned 
Belgrade that it could not join the bloc without a deal on Kosovo.
Serbian officials will travel to Brussels in the coming days to “talk about 
possible changes to the draft resolution that would be acceptable to both 
Serbia 
and big powers,” Tadic was quoted as saying by the Tanjug news agency. A 
possible compromise “that will remain in line with Serbia’s national interests 
but will also please big powers” will be discussed in Brussels and Washington 
soon, Tadic said.
Belgrade submitted the UN resolution after the International Court of Justice 
(ICJ) issued a non-binding opinion in July that Kosovo’s 2008 declaration of 
independence from Serbia did not violate international law.
The resolution, much-criticised in Europe and due to be debated at the UN 
General Assembly next month, calls for fresh talks on all outstanding issues 
but 
also condemns Kosovo’s unilateral declaration of independence.
Backed by the US, the EU has warned Belgrade that insisting on the resolution 
could harm relations with Brussels and eventually its aspirations to become an 
EU member.
But Tadic said that no compromise was possible on acknowledging Kosovo’s 
independence. “Serbia will never recognise Kosovo. That is a red line that we 
will not cross,” Tadic said.
“I told that to Westerwelle, (US Secretary of State Hilary) Clinton, (French 
President Nicolas) Sarkozy, (German Chancellor Angela) Merkel and I tell that 
to 
all” others, Tadic said.
In February 2008 Kosovo’s ethnic Albanian majority unilaterally proclaimed 
independence from Serbia, despite fierce opposition from Belgrade, which 
continued to consider it as its southern province.
So far 69 states, including the US and most EU members, have recognised Kosovo 
as an independent state.

http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=382647&version=1&template_id=39&parent_id=21







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