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Neighbors’
Kosovo recognition deals blow to Serbia
BELGRADE—Serbia’s neighbors in Croatia, Hungary and Bulgaria dealt a
blow to the Serb campaign to overturn Kosovo’s month-old independence on
Wednesday by announcing they would recognize the new republic.
In a joint statement issued in Zagreb, Budapest and Sofia, they said the
decision was based on “thorough consideration.” They also underlined the
importance of protecting the Serb minority in Kosovo’s 90 percent ethnic
Albanian republic. “The government has made a decision to recognize
Kosovo,” Croatian Prime Minister Ivo Sanader told reporters.
“I do understand this is a difficult one for Serbia to swallow. That’s
one of the reasons we have waited until now. But I don’t expect a
worsening of political and economic relations because there is no
alternative to good neighborly relations.” The Croatia mission in
Belgrade, near the U.S. embassy which was attacked and burned by Serb
protesters last month, was closed for the day behind new steel shutters.
Some Bulgarian families worried about security left Serbia, diplomatic
sources said. Police protection at the embassies was at normal levels
when the news was broadcast in Serbia. A Hungarian diplomatic source
told Reuters there was concern in Budapest about potential attacks on
the ethnic Hungarian minority of some 300,000 in the northern province
of Vojvodina.
“Unfortunately, it can happen (but) independent Kosovo is a reality and
recognition cannot be avoided,” he said. Serbia’s pro-Western foreign
minister Vuk Jeremic acknowledged the neighbors’ decision “with
sadness.” “Countries that take this decision cannot have good ties with
Serbia,” he said in Greece, a traditional ally which has not recognized
Kosovo.
Canada announced recognition on Tuesday, reiterating the Western case
that forcing its 2 million Albanians to rejoin Serbia after nine years
under United Nations rule is not a viable option. Over 30 countries have
now recognized Kosovo. Serbia’s pro-Western President Boris Tadic said
this week that ties with Croatia would suffer further. Serbs and Croats
fought a war from 1991 to 1995 over the breakup of Yugoslavia.
“We want to have the best possible relations with this country,” Tadic
said. “But recognition of Kosovo is certainly not an act of goodwill
between neighbors.” In the Kosovo Serb stronghold Mitrovica, United
Nations police returned to the base they were forced to abandon on
Monday in the worst riots yet over Kosovo’s independence.
NATO says the violence was orchestrated by the hardline faction in the
Serbian government. The Belgrade daily Blic on Wednesday cited sources
as saying hardliner Slobodan Samardzic, the minister for Kosovo, had
advocated keeping tensions high.
Diplomats say Samardzic had proposed what amounted to the partition of
Kosovo but the U.N. administration turned down the idea of allowing
Serbia to govern scattered Serb enclaves. Diplomats said recognition by
the neighbors was a wake-up call to Serbia that European recognition of
an independent Kosovo was not going away. Kosovo’s deputy prime
minister, Hajredin Kuci, told Reuters it was good news for Kosovo
“because we need to have good bilateral relations with them.” “But at
the same time it’s very good for the Serbian perception and the people
of Serbia that everybody who is in the neighborhood is recognizing the
new reality and they are for regional cooperation and EU integration,”
Kuci added.—Agencies
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