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Kosovo vows
to move to independence
VIENNA—Kosovo sees no way forward in talks with Serbia and will move
towards independence by the end of the year, the prime minister of the
breakaway province said after another inconclusive round of negotiations
in Vienna.
Mediators from the United States, Russia and the European Union have
until December 10 to try to bridge the chasm between Serbia’s offer of
autonomy for Kosovo and the 90-percent Albanian majority’s demand for
independence.
“We are really looking for a way forward, but after this meeting we must
conclude that we haven’t found it,” Agim Ceku told Austrian daily Der
Standard for its Tuesday edition. “All Serbia is talking about is the
past,” he said.
On the table are 14 principles of common ground drafted by the envoys to
“open a path to a solution” before they report back to the United
Nations. Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica said on Monday that
the proposals “as they were first presented, mean practically a
relationship between two independent states.”
“That, for Serbia, is completely unacceptable,” he told a news
conference. Serbia instead proposed Hong Kong as a possible model to
resolve the question of Kosovo’s status, an idea the Kosovo Albanian
delegation dismissed as “totally inappropriate.”
Kostunica’s spokesman said later that Belgrade was prepared to continue
discussing the 14 points. The next meeting is due on November 20 in
Brussels. Russian envoy Alexander Botsan-Kharchenko admitted on Monday
that chances of a deal were “very slim.” Kosovo Albanians say they will
declare independence without a new U.N. resolution, and seek recognition
from their Western backers.
Ceku said Kosovo wanted “a sustainable solution, very soon after
December 10 ... but we want it peacefully and in partnership with the
international community.” “Our goal is independence in coordination with
our allies by the end of the year,” he told Der Standard. “I told the
Serbs today: ‘Let’s agree to disagree about status’.”
Kosovo has been run by the United Nations since 1999, when NATO bombed
for 11 weeks to drive out Serb forces and halt the killing and ethnic
cleansing of Albanian civilians in a two-year counter-insurgency war.
Serb ally Russia has blocked the adoption at the United Nations of a
Western plan for independence under EU supervision, forcing the latest
bid for compromise that began in August.
Diplomats say Western powers are working on a way around current U.N.
Resolution 1244, to allow the EU to deploy a 1,800-strong police mission
and for individual countries - led by the U.S., Britain and France - to
recognize the new state.—Agencies
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