30 March 2006

Serbia blasts nomination of ex-rebel leader for post of Kosovo premier

APMar 02, 2006 1:49 PM

 

BELGRADE, Serbia-Montenegro-Serbia slammed the nomination on Thursday of a former rebel commander as Kosovo's next prime minister, accusing him of war crimes and calling on the U.N. authorities running Kosovo to prevent his appointment.

 

Government spokesman Srdjan Djuric told the Associated Press that the nomination of Agim Ceku, the ex-commander of the Kosovo Liberation Army which fought Serb troops during 1998-99 war, was "entirely unacceptable."

 

Serb officials have accused Ceku of committing war crimes for his part in the Kosovo war and in Croatia's 1991-1995 war against the Serbs, in which he served on the Croatian side, and have issued an arrest warrant. He denies any wrongdoing.

 

Ceku "should be put on trial for war crimes ... and not elected to a political post," Djuric said. He urged Kosovo's U.N. authorities to prevent Ceku's formal election.

 

Tomislav Nikolic, an increasingly popular ultranationalist leader whose Serbian Radical Party is slated to win a next election here, agreed. He urged Serbia's pro-Western president, Boris Tadic, and Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica not to negotiate with Ceku.

 

"I would back them if they negotiated with Albanian soldiers and politicians, but not criminals," Nikolic said. "Ceku ... is a war criminal."

 

Ceku was nominated a day after the resignation of the province's former premier, Bajram Kosumi.

 

Ethnic Albanians and Serbs are currently holding talks on the future of Kosovo, a U.N. protectorate since the end of the war, although still officially part of Serbia. The ethnic Albanian majority wants full independence, while the Serb minority and Belgrade insist Serbia retains some control.

 

Some Belgrade leaders saw Ceku's appointment as a sign the ethnic Albanians were assuming hard-line positions in the talks.

 

Sanda Raskovic-Ivic, who heads the Serbian government body dealing with Kosovo, said the nomination was "a radicalization, and every form of radicalization is a threat."

 

Tadic said "Serbia does not choose the prime minister of Kosovo. But, I am not sure it is a good idea to appoint generals or former warriors to civilian posts." He expressed hope that Ceku's election "will not destabilize the region or jeopardize the Serb community in Kosovo."

 

A Kosovo Serb on the negotiating team, Bogdan Bogdanovic, also called described the nomination as a "provocation."

 

"It shows that the ethnic Albanians have turned away from a possible compromise and toward a radical stand in the Kosovo talks," he said.

Kosovo assembly president accuses US diplomats of orchestrating his sacking

AP, Mar 02, 2006 2:03 PM

 

PRISTINA, Serbia-Montenegro-The president of Kosovo's assembly accused U.S. diplomats on Thursday of orchestrating a political reshuffle in the province which led to his dismissal.

 

Nexhat Daci, who was also part of the team negotiating Kosovo's final status with Serbia, was replaced by his party, the governing Democratic League of Kosovo, on Wednesday. Parliament will have to choose a new leader for his dismissal to take effect.

 

Daci was dismissed as part of a broader reshuffle within the governing coalition, which also included the resignation of Kosovo's Prime Minister Bajram Kosumi. But the parliament president refused to step down voluntarily, and accused U.S. diplomats, whom he did not name, of pushing him out.

 

"I have become an obstacle to the personal interests of some American citizen," Daci said in an interview to be broadcast in Kosovo's public television, RTK, later Thursday. "The relations have been strained for private reasons," he said without elaborating.

 

Daci's attack is highly unusual for an ethnic Albanian politician. The United States is considered a savior by Kosovo's ethnic Albanians for its role in leading NATO's air war that pushed Serb forces out of the province in 1999.

 

Philip Goldberg, the top U.S. diplomat in Kosovo, denied interference.

 

The party's decision to replace Daci was "taken on the basis of democratic procedures and not on a basis of any outside interference," Goldberg said in a statement.

 

The changes come at a sensitive time for the province, with ethnic Albanians and Serbs conducting crucial U.N.-mediated talks on whether Kosovo will become independent, as its ethnic Albanian majority insists it must, or remain part of Serbia.

 

Kosovo has been administered by the United Nations since 1999, and talks aim to resolve its status by the end of the 2006.

Ex-guerrilla chief nominated as Kosovo PM

AFPWed Mar 1, 4:06 PM ET

 

A former Kosovo guerilla commander, Agim Ceku, was chosen as his party's candidate for prime minister after Bajram Kosumi resigned under pressure.

 

Ceku, the Kosovo Protection Corps general, "has shown his leadership qualities during the most difficult time in Kosovo, showing his deep dedication for executing duties," said the Alliance for the Future of Kosovo (AAK) party.

 

"The alliance is convinced that Ceku will lead the government of Kosovo with a great dedication towards reaching our joint goal, an independent and sovereign Kosovo," it said in a statement.

 

The Kosovo political turmoil is believed to be a scramble to fill the void left by late president Ibrahim Rugova, who died of lung cancer in January and whose strong leadership was seen as crucial in the United Nations-mediated talks on the future status of the southern Serbian province, run by the UN since 1999.

 

Kosumi announced his resignation earlier Wednesday, a little more than a week after historic status talks between Serbian government and its independence-seeking province had opened in Vienna on February 20.

 

"I resign in the interests of general progress," Kosumi told reporters in the provincial capital Pristina following reports he was under pressure to step down from within his AAK party.

 

"The government, during its one year of work, has achieved a lot of success, the biggest being the start of negotiations," he added, referring to the talks on the future status of Kosovo, whose ethnic Albanians are seeking independence from Serbia.

 

"As prime minister, I have been working on creating a democratic and independent Kosovo," Kosumi said, reading from a statement after an emergency government session.

 

The announcement came after a government source told AFP that the prime minister would be forced into relinquishing the role by the Alliance for the Future of Kosovo.

 

It is not known yet when Kosovo's parliament is to discuss the appointment of a new prime minister, but Ceku's nomination is likely to cause a stir in Belgrade.

 

He was indicted in 2002 for war crimes committed against minority Serbs when he served in the Croatian army during the war there in 1991-1995, as well as alleged atrocities in Kosovo's 1998-1999 conflict.

 

The Serbian indictments are unlikely to be brought before court however because he is only wanted by authorities in Belgrade, and not likely to travel there.

 

Sanda Raskovic Ivic, Belgrade's top official in charge of Kosovo, said the latest turmoil in Kosovo could be seen as a "radicalization of the political scene."

 

"The proposal for Ceku to take up such important political role is a sign that the Albanian side has become very nervous and began a process of a radicalization," Raskovic Ivic said in Belgrade.

 

But Kosovo Serb leader Goran Bogdanovic warned that Ceku's possible election could lead to a "conclusion that Kosovo Albanians are giving up any compromise in the negotiating process."

 

The chief UN mediator in the Kosovo status talks, former Finnish president Martti Ahtisaari -- in Pristina for two days of meetings with local officials -- ruled out any negative impact on the negotiations.

 

"It is up to the government how they organize themselves. It's none of my business," Ahtisaari said referring to Kosumi's resignation.

 

"I don't see that it will have a negative effect on the negotiating process," the veteran UN troubleshooter told journalists after meeting the Kosovo Albanian negotiating team for the talks.

 

Kosumi's resignations was followed by the decision of the ruling Kosovo Democratic League party (LDK) to dismiss parliamentary speaker Nexhat Daci, said senior party official Eqerem Kryezi.

 

A report in the local daily, Express, said earlier that the changes would be affected because of the government's failure to show "the necessary efficiency in carrying out duties".

 

Kosumi took up the post of prime minister after his predecessor, former guerrilla leader Ramush Haradinaj, was indicted by the UN war crimes tribunal in March last year.

 

A former Albanian language professor and journalist, Kosumi was one of the organisers of the first Albanian students' protests in Kosovo in 1981 and was later arrested by the then communist regime and sent to prison for 10 years.

 

Kosovo has been administered by the United Nations and NATO since mid-1999, when the alliance's bombing campaign ended a crackdown by Serbian forces against separatist Albanian rebels.

Ethnic Albanian guerrillas warn UN to leave Kosovo

RELIEF WEB (SWITZERLAND)

 

Source: Agence France-Presse (AFP)

Date: 01 Mar 2006

 

PRISTINA, Serbia-Montenegro, March 1, 2006 (AFP) - A guerrilla group on Wednesday warned the UN mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) to leave the province, saying it was ready to fight for a "Greater Albania".

 

The group calling itself the Albanian National Army (ANA), which is active in Kosovo, southern Serbia and Macedonia, "demands from the UN, if they are really a peace organisation, to leave Kosovo gradually," it said in a statement received by AFP.

 

"This organisation has no democracy within itself and still governs with (the power of) veto as in the Middle Ages. It cannot build democracy anywhere," the ANA said.

 

"We will fight ... against whatever enemy and traitor until full victory -- the unification of the Albanian nation under the motto 'one nation, one state'," added the group.

 

The ANA, which the UN mission in Kosovo regards as a terrorist organisation, has in recent years claimed responsibility for several deadly attacks in Kosovo, southern Serbia and Macedonia.

 

The statement was issued ahead of a scheduled visit to the province on Wednesday by the chief UN mediator in talks on Kosovo's future status, Martti Ahtisaari.

 

The ANA also vowed to overturn all peace plans brokered by the West in the region.

 

"Albanians cannot be treated as terrorists and warmongers because they fight for national unification. ... It is their legitimate right, as it was for all nations in the world," the group said.

 

"The region will not find peace if the Albanian question is not finally resolved."

 

Kosovo has been administered by the United Nations and NATO since mid-1999, when the alliance's bombing campaign ended a crackdown by Serbian forces against separatist Albanian rebels.

Kosovo prime minister steps down

BBC, Wednesday, 1 March 2006, 15:17 GMT

 

Kosovo's Prime Minister Bajram Kosumi has resigned, citing the need to preserve the government coalition.

 

Mr Kosumi has been accused of being ineffective by some coalition members. He is a key member of the delegation in talks on the future status of Kosovo.

 

Former Kosovo Liberation Army commander Agim Ceku has reportedly been nominated to succeed Mr Kosumi.

 

Officially part of Serbia, Kosovo has been under UN administration since 1999 and seeks independence.

 

"I consider the resignation as a right and a moral act," Mr Kosumi - who was in office less than a year - told reporters in Kosovo's capital, Pristina.

 

The move comes amid criticism by members of Mr Kosumi's own party - the Alliance for the Future of Kosovo - that he has not lived up to his predecessor, Ramush Haradinaj, correspondents say.

 

Mr Haradinaj stepped down last year after being indicted for war crimes by the international court in The Hague.

 

However, Mr Kosumi has also fallen victim to infighting in the main governing party, the Democratic League of Kosovo, correspondents say.

 

The party voted on Wednesday to oust one of its own members, Nexhat Daci, from the post of parliamentary speaker.

 

Status talks

 

Kosovo's ethnic Albanians and Serbs held two days of talks in Vienna last month, which diplomats hope may lead to a deal on Kosovo's status this year.

 

Kosovo Albanians, who make up the majority, want independence.

 

Serbia is concerned about the Serb minority.

 

Kosovo Serbs want wide-ranging self-government for the Serb-inhabited enclaves, which make up 5% of the population.

 

There are about 1.5m ethnic Albanians in Kosovo, while about 100,000 Serbs remain following a post-war exodus of non-Albanians.

Kosovo Albanian heroin gang sentenced in Germany

SERBIANNA (USA) February 21, 2006 07:10 AM (11:10 GMT)

 

February 21, 2006 -- Two chiefs of a seven-member drug gang ran by Kosovo Albanians and their counterparts in the Czech Republic were given 10 years in prison by the Plzen Regional Court, West Bohemia, for smuggling heroin into Germany.

 

The gang organized the import of 10 kilos of the drug from Kosovo to the Czech Republic and its sale to Germany.

 

Additional two members of the group got six and four years in prison, respectively.

 

The cases of the rest of the gang, two Albanians and one Czech, will be treated in a separate trial.

 

All the members were between 33 to 48 years old and participated in an organization and distribution of heroin during 2002 and 2003.

 

Kosovo Albanian gang hired Czech couriers to transport heroin into Germany and one of them was arrested when handing over three kilos of heroin in Munich in January 2003. He is serving a service in Germany.

 

Another courier was detained by customs officers carrying five kilos of the drug at the border crossing of Breclav, south Moravia, also in 2003. He is now tried together with the Kosovo Albanians.

For many, UN's grip worse than civil war (Part 2/5)

THE GLOBE AND MAIL (CANADA), Tuesday, February 28, 2006 BY DOUG SAUNDERS

 

PRISTINA, KOSOVO - The skinny young man with the black-framed glasses and the explosion of frizzy hair comes across as a bookish, somewhat bohemian, undergraduate. From his tired demeanour, you might guess that he was studying late in the library the previous night.

 

In fact, 30-year-old Albin Kurti was out late deflating the tires of United Nations vehicles on the streets of Kosovo's capital, Pristina. He was accompanied by a crowd of fellow young Kosovo Albanians who have eagerly joined his crusade to make life difficult for the international peacekeepers.

 

Those UN vehicles are part of the effort that has for six years provided effective independence from Serbia for ethnic Albanians in Kosovo such as Mr. Kurti. But he is far from grateful. In fact, he has covered the region with huge spray-painted stencils calling for the UN to leave.

 

To many members of the new generation in Kosovo, who came of age under the UN's guardianship, the international peacekeepers are not seen as liberators. Rather, they are viewed as colonial occupiers.

 

"I have spent months in prison for this, but more and more they're refusing to arrest us because it gives us more publicity," Mr. Kurti says in the lobby of the communist-era Grand Hotel, a long-time hangout for Kosovo Albanian guerrillas.

 

"This is a fake peace we're enduring, and we'd prefer to return to war than lose our freedom this way."

 

Kosovo, a southern province of Serbia, had been the final victim of the Serb ethnic-cleansing campaigns in the 1990s, during which Slobodan Milosevic had viciously oppressed members of the Albanian-speaking majority in a campaign that outlawed their language and eventually led to the killing of thousands of ethnic Albanians and the expulsion of almost a million.

 

Ever since NATO bombs in 1999 put a stop to Mr. Milosevic, Kosovo has existed as a semi-independent entity, with its own parliament, under expensive international supervision.

 

Mr. Kurti, a gifted orator in several languages who first led student protests in 1997, has become the leader of this surprising new youth movement opposed to the UN status quo. Its existence causes much consternation among international leaders who are in the midst of talks in Vienna that will finally determine Kosovo's status, and most likely put it on a path to full national autonomy by the end of this year.

 

The Kosovo talks, along with a Montenegrin independence referendum and efforts to remove European Union oversight for the government of Bosnia-Herzegovina, make this a crucial year for the countries of the former Yugoslavia. These developments also represent a chance to prove that international military and diplomatic efforts can result in successful nation building at a time when such efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan look increasingly ineffective.

 

Rather than welcoming those talks, though, Mr. Kurti wants them stopped -- and he seems to have a large following. He doesn't want an internationally negotiated road map to independence, he wants a mass popular uprising -- bloody if necessary -- that will instantly free Kosovo not just from Serbia but from the UN's clutches.

 

Dressed fashionably and surrounded by rapt followers, Mr. Kurti calmly denounced the United Nations Mission In Kosovo.

 

"UNMIK made sense for the first two years, the postwar recovery stage, but when it came to the development stage, they failed us," he says. "And now UNMIK's role here is as a neo-colonial institution. They are preventing us from becoming a nation, from developing."

 

On the dusty streets of Pristina, you can see why young Kosovo Albanians, struggling on developing-world incomes and rationed electricity might be losing patience with the "internationals." The 100,000 foreign aid and military workers in Kosovo drive around in spotless new SUVs, govern the region from within walled compounds and often earn six-figure salaries during their brief work terms. Their spending in Pristina's shops and restaurants, according to the chamber of commerce, provides the lion's share of the city's revenues. It also makes the Kosovo Albanians feel like second-class citizens.

 

But if the ethnic Albanians are second-class citizens, then the 120,000 ethnic Serbs of Kosovo (with a population of 2.4 million) are a third class. Many of them live in hiding, or in refugee camps, after Kosovo Albanians went on rampages that have killed at least a thousand Serbs and forced many more out of their homes; first in waves of revenge after the war in 1999, and then in March of 2004 after false radio reports of Serb murders sent angry mobs into Serb villages, destroying the homes of 4,100 people.

 

The 2004 event has led UN and EU officials to worry that, should Kosovo become independent, the Kosovo Albanians will be as oppressive as Mr. Milosevic was in his time. Therefore, the safety and status of Kosovo's Serbs has become the central issue in the status talks. NATO and UN leaders worry they might have fought a war in the name of ethnic co-operation, only to create a series of artificial countries that are uni-ethnic strongholds.

 

There are some Kosovo Albanians who share this worry. They glance at Mr. Kurti, and worry that he represents the future of Kosovo.

 

"Our people seem to have inherited a 19th-century sort of nationalism -- it's this idea that if you can run your flag up the pole, then you've got a nation," says Dukagjin Gorani, a veteran Kosovo journalist who now runs the Human Rights Centre at Pristina University.

 

"We Kosovo Albanians have an image of ourselves as an a priori justifiable population -- our victimization over the centuries cannot be easily consumed; our suffering must be continuous. So everything the Serbs do has to be bad; everything we do is by definition forgivable and justifiable."

 

Mr. Kurti, on the other hand, argues that a sudden declaration of independence will be the best thing for the Serbs. "I think the conflict in Kosovo is not ethnic," he says. "And that will become apparent when we get our freedom. The best conditions for Kosovo Serbs will occur after autonomy, because we will no longer be in an adversarial position. After that, Serbs will never again be seen by Albanians here as a threat. I think that integration comes with development."

 

In Vienna this week, negotiators from both Serbia and Kosovo are presenting Mr. Kurti as a threat. For the Kosovo negotiators, he represents the ethnic extremism that could erupt if independence doesn't happen fast enough. Veton Surroi, the leader of the Kosovo opposition Hour party and a member of the negotiating team, warned in an interview that Mr. Kurti's view could end up winning the day.

 

"This is the year when independence will have to stop being a four-letter word. The world will have to bite the bullet and accept that," he says. "I don't think that this place can afford another transition to a transition to a transition. The people are getting very impatient."

 

And negotiators from Serbia warn that Mr. Kurti's actions could inflame Serbian citizens, causing them to elect an extremist government. Trapped in between are the Kosovo Serbs, equally afraid of both possibilities.

 

"I am not just afraid of the Albanian radicals taking power in Pristina; I am equally afraid of Serbian radicals taking power in Belgrade," says Oliver Ivanovic, a leader of the Kosovo Serbs. "We don't need Serbia on our side, we need the Kosovo Albanians on our side -- only with their co-operation will we get our homes and our lives back."

 

Mr. Kurti swears that his movement would be good for Serbs and Albanians alike. But after he gets up from his seat in the hotel, he receives a series of warm embraces from aging figures from the rebel Kosovo Liberation Army, whose members killed numerous Serbs after the 1999 war.

 

Mr. Kurti says he has nothing to do with this approach. But he warns, ominously and vaguely, that if things don't move fast enough, there might be actions that will be a lot more frightening than a deflated tire.

 

Road to independence

 

After centuries of on-again, off-again self rule, talks under way are expected to yield plans for an independent Kosovo controlled by the ethnic-Albanian majority.

 

* The origins of both ethnic Albanians and ethnic Serbs may be traced to what is now Kosovo. It was the centre of the Serb Empire until the mid-14th century, when it fell to the Ottoman Empire.

 

* Many Serbs then left and were replaced by a growing Albanian population.

 

* The Serbs regained control of Kosovo in 1912 during the first Balkan War, but through the following decades, Serbs and Albanians vied for control and undertook mutual expulsions.

 

* Yugoslav leader Josip (Marshall) Tito kept the province on a tight leash in the years after the Second World War, but in 1974, he granted it autonomy and its own vote in the Yugoslav federal council. Albanians, however, continued to demand the status of a full republic for Kosovo.

 

* By the latter part of the 20th century, Serb emigration and a high Albanian birth rate had drastically reduced the proportion of Serbs. Playing on Serb minority fears, Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic stripped Kosovo of its autonomy in 1989 and instituted military rule.

 

* In 1991, ethnic-Albanian leaders declared unilateral independence and waged a passive-resistance movement. Their failure to secure independence or restore autonomy peacefully gave rise to a guerrilla movement in the mid-1990s. The Serbian forces' brutal crackdown and campaign of ethnic cleansing forced hundreds of thousands of ethnic Albanians to flee the province.

 

* After the failure of internationally brokered peace talks, NATO conducted air strikes against Serbian targets in March, 1999. Serbian forces were driven out that summer and the United Nations took over administration of the province.

 

MARJAN FARAHBAKSH, DEAN TWEED / THE GLOBE AND MAIL

New borders, old tensions key to volatile area's future (Part 1/5)

THE GLOBE AND MAIL (CANADA), Monday, February 27, 2006 BY DOUG SAUNDERS

 

MITROVICA -- Lifelong farmers Bozidar and Gordana Ahtic live illegally in an abandoned, half-finished apartment complex in a refugee-crammed city on the northern edge of a place that is not part of any recognized country.

 

They have no nation, no passport and no ability to visit their valley farm without weeks of planning and considerable danger. Fleeing is impossible, because their United Nations ID cards are not recognized at any national border.

 

The soft-spoken couple in their late sixties are quintessential citizens of the current Balkans. Their lives are tenuous, their borders uncertain, their status ambiguous.

 

But all that is about to change. This region was known as Yugoslavia before Slobodan Milosevic's ethnic cleansing campaign of the 1990s turned it into a cartographer's nightmare and an expensive ward of international organizations. This year it is about to undergo some dramatic upheavals.

 

Canada has poured more than a billion dollars and thousands of peacekeepers into this corner of Europe during the past 15 years, and in many ways this year's decisions will determine whether it was all worth it. The former Yugoslavia is, after all, the first post-Cold War experiment in international nation-building. With the brokered end of the Bosnian war in 1995 and the 2000 surrender of Mr. Milosevic after a NATO bombing campaign (which cost Canada $500-million), more than 100,000 international soldiers, aid workers and overseers moved into the five countries of the former Yugoslavia in hopes of turning them into peaceful democracies. But it is still not clear whether these can achieve a lasting peace.

 

And the Ahtics, members of the small and persecuted Serb minority in poor, Albanian-dominated Kosovo, are now pawns. Their small population is the most fought-after group in this region of Serbia, and their response to the coming changes could determine whether this year will see a move toward peaceful, European-style co-operation or a step back into the horrifying ethnic showdowns of the past.

 

But, as far as they are concerned, their interests are much simpler. "I just want to be able to go to my farm, and live in it, without someone burning it down or stealing all its cows," Mr. Ahtic says as he wrestles his pickup truck out of a parking garage.

 

But, in a sign of the tensions that will make this year's international negotiations extremely tense, his simple request is not so easy to grant. Despite billions of dollars spent by the UN, NATO and the European Union, some seemingly simple things are still impossible here.

 

The other day, Mr. Ahtic did what the United Nations officials who run Kosovo describe this way: "A group of K-Serb IDPs were assisted on a pre-return GSV across the Mitrovica boundary."

 

That is, he and some other Kosovo Serbs, who became Internally Displaced Persons after their farms were destroyed by angry Albanians in 1999 in revenge against Serbs for Mr. Milosevic's mass slaughter of Albanians, were driven for a heavily guarded "Go-to-See-Visit" to their half-wrecked farmhouses in a city completely divided between its ethnically Albanian south and Serb north.

 

Now the UN, the EU, NATO and most of the governments in this region want such delicate and expensive international hand-holding to come to an end. In the years since NATO bombs put a stop to Mr. Milosevic in 1999, the region has been technically at peace. But its cities are clogged with more than 500,000 refugees like the Ahtics, its key regions are either isolated rogue states (Serbia-Montenegro) or wards of the UN and the EU (Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo), its ambiguous status has turned it into the international centre for human trafficking, drug smuggling, slavery, organized crime and Islamist terrorist cells. The stakes of this year's decisions are extremely high. This is, after all, a region that has historically sent waves of violence and extremism across Europe. It's also a chance to prove that nation-building can work at a time when support for such efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan is waning.

 

So three crucial decisions will be made this year, under the close watch of international monitors, that will change the future of the region and redraw the map of Europe:

 

This spring, the people of Montenegro, a tiny, mountainous slice that, since 2003 has been called a "distinct society" in the nation now known as Serbia-Montenegro, will hold a referendum on independence. If they vote Yes, as is expected, then Europe will gain a new country, and Serbians will feel their territory shrink.

 

By the end of the year, Bosnia-Herzegovina will likely stop being a colony of the international community and become a single, united nation. Since its horrendous war ended in 1995 with the Dayton accord, it has been divided into dysfunctional ethnic enclaves: The Serb-controlled Republika Srpska; and the Bosnian Muslim and Croatian Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, both overseen by a European Union representative. And that representative, Christian Schwarz-Schilling, said in an interview at his Sarajevo office last week that he plans to be the last person to hold that job, and to transform Bosnia-Herzegovina by the end of this year.

 

Most crucially, the future of Kosovo, the disputed Albanian-dominated southern province of Serbia that became a UN protectorate after Mr. Milosevic's forces were driven out in 1999, will have its status resolved in international talks that resumed last week. The result will almost certainly turn it into an independent nation.

 

All three decisions run the risk of turning what remains of Serbia back into the angry, nationalistic, expansionist power that it became in the 1990s. Or Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina and their neighbours could follow the former Yugoslav countries of Slovenia and Croatia, which have become prosperous, tourist-friendly European countries in recent years. Much depends on the reaction of Serbs in Serbia, and even more on those Serbs who live in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo.

 

Officials from Serbia's government, and the UN and EU officials who are overseeing the Kosovo negotiations, say they are terrified that hundreds of thousands of displaced, angry Serbs from Kosovo, like Mr. Ahtic, will flee northward, or that the Serb population, who see Kosovo as their religious and historical heartland, will be radicalized and elect another violent ethnic-nationalist strongman like Mr. Milosevic.

 

For his part, Mr. Ahtic finds little comfort in his political influence. On a rare visit the other day to the ghost town that was his farming village, he stepped through the burned-out wreckage of his once-productive farm. He surveyed the decaying frame of the new house built by the UN, which he was forced to abandon in March of 2004 during a second wave of Albanian riots and killings. The village lost 600 cows and 16 tractors, and all its residents fled.

 

Given this experience, he was surprisingly eager to see Kosovo's status resolved this year, even if it becomes an independent nation with an Albanian majority.

 

"I want to stay here, in Kosovo, tending to my farm, and I'll do it if only there can be enough security that I know my family won't be attacked. If there isn't security, I may have to go to Serbia, but I'm not wanted there, either."

 

There are other signs of optimism throughout the region. To visit Bosnia's capital, Sarajevo, or Belgrade in Serbia today is to find lively, comparatively prosperous cities with a cosmopolitan bent: Serbs now are vast consumers of Croatian and Slovenian TV, pop music and food, and Belgrade has become a party destination for Croats and Bosnians. Sarajevo, the shell-cratered Bosnian capital where thousands died in a three-year siege, has regained the spirit of multiethnic jouissance that it enjoyed before the massacres, and has become a leading European centre for theatre and filmmaking.

 

There are those who feel that Serbia is returning to moderation, and will propel the whole region into European normalcy.

 

"I strongly believe the country is on the right track. It's just a question of the speed," said Marko Blagojevic, a pollster with the Center for Free Elections and Democracy in Belgrade. "There are really two Serbias. There's the one Serbia that supports the values of the democratic reformers. Those are pro-European values. And on the other hand there are those who share the values of the socialists and the radicals; Milosevic's values."

 

But this optimism quickly fades if you step outside the major cities. And, as Mr. Blagojevic's polls indicate, Serbia's political balance is extremely unstable. The country is in many ways still a pariah state, isolated from European and world affairs. The EU has made it clear that Serbia will continue to be shunned until it allows Kosovo to go its own way and finds Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic, the military and political leaders responsible for the most horrific mass murders of the 1990s wars, handing them over to the international court in The Hague. Serbian officials have indicated that they are in negotiations with Mr. Mladic's people, hold Mr. Karadzic in their sights, and are willing to compromise on Kosovo.

 

But in the countryside of Serbia, in the Serb-minority districts of Kosovo, and in Bosnia's Serb-dominated district of Republika Srpska, many Serbs are not interested in turning their backs on the ethnic-nationalist past. In fact, they are becoming less, not more, European-oriented.

 

This becomes painfully clear on a visit to Novi Sad, a city in northern Serbia that was until recently a model example of multiethnic Balkan harmony. Even during Mr. Milosevic's worst years, Novi Sad saw Serbs living happily beside the region's many minorities.

 

But something has changed. And the change arrived on the outskirts of town, where as many as 100,000 Serb refugees from Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina moved in and built makeshift villages that are quickly becoming permanent settlements. These new Serbs do not share the tolerant, cosmopolitan views of their established neighbours. And they have begun to leave their mark.

 

"They harass my children for not having a Serb name, and wait outside my apartment to threaten me," says Marina Fratucan, a producer with the local TV station. She is Serb, but has an unusual name and, more importantly, has friends who are Croatian, Bosnian and Hungarian. "The problem is that the Serb children are not becoming more tolerant, in fact they're becoming more radical and nationalistic than their parents."

 

Sonja Biserko offers a tour of the streets. As the director of the local branch of the Helsinki Committee for Human Rights, she watched the Balkans move toward democracy and harmony after the defeat of Mr. Milosevic in 1999 and is now watching that harmony fall apart.

 

"Here we have a secondary school, which has become filled with Serb refugees, across the road from a bakery whose owners are Albanian," she says. "And that bakery across the road was demolished this year by students who were from the refugee population. And local people are not revolting against this. The refugees have actually radicalized many of the locals against minorities. When Kosovo gets its independence, it will be a big problem here."

 

So instead of becoming a united country, Serbia is in danger of splitting apart or radicalizing. Just north of Novi Sad, the ethnic-Hungarian minority are now talking of forming their own Hungario-Serbian breakaway state, modelled after Kosovo, if things become even more intolerant.

 

Most Serbs are extremely poor, and many cling to the national and Orthodox Christian myths that propelled the Milosevic crusades. Should Montenegro declare independence, Kosovo become autonomous and the Republika Srpska subsumed into a multiethnic Bosnia-Herzegovina, the Serbs could become angry and defensive.

 

This is the worry of Serbia's negotiators in the Kosovo talks, who seem to have a genuine fear of a return to radical ethnic nationalism.

 

"If someone suddenly says, this is an independent Kosovo, the very next day we will have 150,000 refugees coming across the border," Radomir Diklic, a chief negotiator, said in an interview. "So generally, we have to take an approach where nobody can call themselves a total winner or a total loser. . . . Still, either you are independent or you are not. And if you are, then the door is open for radical, nationalistic, fascistic forces in Serbia to take control. Then this government can say, 'Bye bye.' "

 

And for the millions of people of the Balkans who have seen their countries slowly move toward becoming normal nations, rather than bizarre scribbles on the map, the prospect of a radicalized Serbia is truly terrifying.

 

This year's momentous decisions will see this whole convoluted corner of Europe become either a more normal place, or return to its former status as Europe's worst nightmare. "By the time 2006 is over, much will be resolved," said Milan Antonijevic, an activist lawyer in Belgrade. "For the people of Serbia, it will be much clearer, and if we can handle it well, our lives will be much better."

 

But it could all go terribly wrong as it has before in the Balkans. But there is a sense of hope among many in this region. Most want to be part of Europe, polls show, and know that this is the last chance in a lifetime.

 

"We have to have optimism to make this work," says Mr. Schwarz-Schilling, the EU's representative in Bosnia-Herzegovina. "This is a huge window of history for all parties, and it is a window that could close fast, so therefore this must be done at a higher speed than it would in other countries. To introduce democracy, to introduce rule of law, to introduce a market economy, normally, this needs much more time. But the global pressures on this region mean that it has to be done very fast here."

First Kosovo status talks end without agreement

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND SECURITY NETWORK (SWITZERLAND)

 

ISN SECURITY WATCH (Wednesday, 22 February: 12.28 CET) - UN-mediated talks in Vienna between Serbian and ethnic-Albanian negotiators on the status of Kosovo have ended without any agreements.

 

Delegations from the two sides presented their positions on issues of how much power should be devolved locally in the areas of health care, education, and police to municipalities.

 

The first round of talks, which ended late on Tuesday, focused on the 100,000-strong Kosovo Serb minority, most of whom live in UN-protected enclaves in the Serbian province.

 

The Serbian negotiating team told reporters at a press conference following the first round of status talks that no formal agreement had been reached, but that there had been progress on certain issues.

 

UN deputy envoy at the talks Albert Rohan told the press conference that talks were held in a "cooperative spirit".

 

"An agreement was not to be expected and it was not the purpose to achieve concrete agreements in a specific field," Rohan told reporters.

 

Rohan said a final agreement was expected to be reached at the end of the year.

 

Kosovo has been administered by the UN since the end of the war in 1999, when NATO forces intervened. Kosovo's majority ethnic Albanians are demanding total independence, while Serbia is offering wide autonomy.

 

The leader of the Kosovo delegation, local Administration Minister Lutfi Haziri, told a press conference that his delegation would not sign any agreements on local administration with Belgrade until after the province received independence.

 

At a separate press conference, the Serbian delegation, reiterated Belgrade's offer of autonomy.

 

The next round of talks is planned for 17 March in Vienna.

Kosovo Bishop Warns Not to Hand Jihadists a Victory

CYBERCAST NEWS SERVICE (USA), February 23, 2006 By Sherrie Gossett CNSNews.com Staff Writer

 

(CNSNews.com) - A leading Serbian Orthodox bishop, visiting the U.S. on a mission of "peace and understanding," has warned the international community against granting independence to Kosovo, saying such a move would hand a victory to radical Muslims and their jihadist supporters.

 

Kosovo's independence from Serbia would also mean "a virtual sentence of extinction" for minority Serbs in the province, according to Dr. Artemije Radosavljevic, the bishop of the Serbian cities of Raska and Prizren.

 

He met with Cybercast News Service during a recent 20-day tour of the U.S. to discuss the fate of the troubled province, which is formally known as Kosovo and Metohija. This month, international talks are set to begin regarding Kosovo's final status.

 

Kosovo, which is part of the sovereign country of Serbia and Montenegro, has been a U.N. protectorate since North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) forces bombed Yugoslavia between March and May of 1999 to compel the Serb-dominated government of Slobodan Milosovic to withdraw its forces from Kosovo.

 

The NATO bombings were launched in response to an alleged genocide being conducted against Kosovar Albanians by the Serbs. But when the bombing campaign ended, ethnic cleansing allegedly took place with Albanians, who are predominantly Muslim, targeting Christian Serbs and other minorities such as Turks, Roma (gypsies), Ashkali and Muslim Slavs.

 

The violence, including rape, murder, torture and the burning of villages, was witnessed and documented in hundreds of pages of United Nations (U.N.), NATO Kosovo Force (KFOR) and Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) documents.

 

"Detaching Kosovo from democratic Serbia would mean a virtual sentence of extinction for my people in the province -- the larger part of my diocese -- who continue to face unremitting violence from jihad terrorist and criminal elements that dominate the Albanian Muslim leadership," Dr. Artemije said.

 

The ethnic cleansing that followed the NATO campaign has prompted an exodus of approximately 240,000 Serbs and minorities from the region.

 

Arguing that a "pure mono-ethnic and mono-religious Kosovo" could result from independence, the bishop said the move would "definitely be used to strengthen what we call the 'white al Qaeda,'" a reference to the recruitment of terrorists with European features.

 

"This [al Qaeda] would definitely be in grave contest and even more dangerous that the one we know so far from bin Laden ... because they could very [easily] melt within other populations ... ." Granting independence would be a "tragedy," he said.

 

Dr. Artemije also referred to allegations made by Thomas Gambill, a former OSCE security chief, who previously told Cybercast News Service that Kosovo is a lawless region "owned" by the Albanian mafia, characterized by continuing ethnic cleansing and subject to increasing infiltration by al Qaeda-linked Muslim jihadists.

 

Gambill's remarks were confirmed in official documents and by a United Nations official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

 

"In our past visits here, we did indicate and tried to provide information sufficient to show there's a lot of evidence about the terror and the mafia taking stronghold in Kosovo," Dr. Artemije said. "We are worried this truth has not been accepted or did not go any further ... We have faith that in the future this truth will be known, unfortunately, we are afraid it might be too late for the Christians in Kosovo."

 

The Serbian bishop described the life of Serbs and other minorities in Kosovo as "extremely difficult."

 

"Basic civil rights are completely non-existent. Their security of their own life doesn't exist. Any assistance regarding schools or health care, etcetera, is very meager ... ," he said.

 

Before NATO's bombing campaign, then-President Bill Clinton estimated publicly that 100,000 ethnic Albanians had been killed. Within weeks of NATO's bombing campaign, however, the estimate was greatly revised downward. A subsequent five-month U.N. investigation found 2,108 bodies and, several months after the NATO mission, USA Today reported that the figures appeared to have been "greatly exaggerated." See Video at http://www.cnsnews.com/cns/video/2006/060223sgDrArtemijeRadosavljevic.wvx

 

Andrew Bacevich, professor of International Relations at Boston University, told USA Today that in order to justify the NATO bombings, "they needed to tap that memory of the Holocaust."

 

Recent reports reviewed by Cybercast News Service indicate that in 1999, slightly more than 4,000 Albanians were killed and approximately 1,700 non-Albanians were killed. Some 2,500 are still missing, according to data from the Commission for Abducted and Missing Persons.

 

Cybercast News Service asked Bishop Artemije whether he believed allegations that President Clinton had exaggerated the figures in order to generate support for the war.

 

"I couldn't say that he was the one who was lying, but definitely he was getting or using false information," the bishop stated. "... It seems to us it was important to fabricate these figures in order to justify and prepare the intervention of NATO in Kosovo."

 

Diplomats and analysts critical of the situation in Kosovo have told Cybercast News Service that the religious persecution is part of a political strategy of violence, which if successful in winning the independence of Kosovo, could trigger similar violent secessionist movements throughout neighboring states and countries.

 

Those same officials also express concern about radical Islamic elements existing on Europe's doorstep, in a province already plagued with illegal arms and narcotics trafficking.

 

Bishop Artemije's remarks to Cybercast News Service were translated by his Washington, D.C., representative.

28 March 2006

Marek Antoni Nowicki: Kosovo pro memoria (Part 2/2)

 

by Marek Antoni Nowicki

International Ombudsperson in Kosovo (2000 – 2005)

 

/CONTINUED/

 

Organized crime

 

Credible reports have indicated that Kosovo has been a well known and important transit point or hub of multiple and large scale organized criminal activities . Taking stock of the last two decades tainted by wars, sanctions, general unrest, etc. in Kosovo it is easy to see how organized crime elements took root or expanded their existing operations in the region and to distant lands abroad. The presence of international peace keepers in the region has also, even if indirectly, added to the rooted existence of organized crime by diverting attention away from more practical local initiatives reliant on the longstanding codes of interaction between Albanian family structures as a means of gathering intelligence. These international organizations set up shop in a land devoid of the rule of law and in a society which has struggled to survive for decades solely on limited resources, accepting lawlessness and corruption as a means of survival.

 

Thanks to their successful efforts forging close links with political players, crime groups have been able to operate with apparent impunity. These networks do not have to worry about vigilant law enforcement as they can rely on the weakness of the public institutions to sanction their operations. Well-meaning efforts by the international community at establishing what has become a locally controlled police force, the Kosovo Police Service (KPS) has not in fact deterred the growth of corruption in the province in large part because the KPS exists in a parallel/tandem universe with organized crime. According to certain analysts, elements of organized crime have penetrated and indeed influence the KPS structures with the end result being a lack of will to initiate comprehensive investigations in areas in which the larger criminal enterprises are at work. This is no doubt due to the fact that the international community has not effectively been able to address the interconnected elements of family and culture that have always existed with the Albanian community in Kosovo, and that cannot be discounted when trying to organize a police force where the people they train and hire are also part of this larger cultural milieu.

 

Corruption

 

Corruption issues are not limited to higher political and business circles or mafia networks, but exist within Kosovo’s institutions, educational and legal sector, health care facilities, et al.

 

Despite the pervasive scale of such abusive practices, corruption is very difficult to prove when there is little to no evidence indicating the offense.

 

In an atmosphere in which corruption is so closely tied to everyday life and basic problems, of course people become slaves to this seemingly symbiotic relationship. Rules of keeping silent and revenge are significant contributing factors to its acceptance.

 

Corruption is, in fact, a process that makes it possible for others to decide the fate of people or of different aspects of their lives, one can say, in an arbitrary manner. The rules of how to function in a society are indelibly altered when law is rendered as irrelevant and the role of institutions made obsolete or abused. It goes without saying that these practices regrettably seem to be deeply ingrained in today’s Kosovo.

 

Legal chaos

 

Where legal issues are concerned, in many instances, those who tend to suffer are the people who try to follow the law in Kosovo. I do not exclude others who disregard the law without repercussion or those who do not even think about the law. It is a part of the larger issue of the seemingly regular practice of selective or arbitrary application of the law transforming the rule of law into the rule of convenience.

 

Some seven years have passed, there are written laws in place; there are homegrown and internationally trained law enforcement agencies and officers; there are elected political leaders. The problem is however that too frequently they are unable or unwilling to use their power to defend the law in the common people’s interest. If the public authority does not have the power or will to implement the law one should then resign from any serious “rule of law” discussion. Law exists only if executed by competent authorities, including imposing sanctions when necessary and against any violation- not just against selective, usually poor, members of society. The tight knit communities, strong family network or other circles play a significant role here, understandably creating serious obstacles to anybody thinking sincerely about the law or even more about equality.

 

Rule of law cannot be equalized to rule of people abusing the law for their own particular self-serving interests. Serious oversight mechanisms already in place, like the courts, prosecutor offices or the ombudsperson must therefore be considerably strengthened and utilized if rule of law is actually to be a reality. Still, even if such local mechanisms exist, oversight by international structures and their reactions to at least flagrant abuses of rule of law must be much stronger, determined and based on principles rather than political convenience.

 

Justice

 

The justice system still has a rather bad rap in Kosovo, despite considerable local and international efforts to build a committed, independent judiciary in a post-conflict landscape. Kosovo society, as I have mentioned, is dominated by a tight knit network of big Albanian families which run the region in a somewhat political clan-like fashion which understandably creates obstacles to anybody thinking sincerely about the law or even more about equality before the law. The deeply entrenched social relations that exist in Kosovo society also very much extends to the judiciary. The obvious understanding should be that this profession will be undertaken in an unbiased manner. However, the social allegiances of families and political circles are so deeply drawn in the sand that they could supersede official legal codes and even ethics. As a result, there is a palpable sense of distrust of the “system”, frequently perceived by the population as being in the hands of certain interests.

 

The presence, however limited, of the international judiciary is very much preferred by the local populace as a response to the conditions in which local judges and prosecutors perform their job. Sometimes one simply prefers to deliver justice into the hands of outsiders, rather than people who could be implicated in different ways here.

 

An international judiciary is a temporary solution and will not remain in Kosovo forever. One day Kosovo judges must take on all, even the most difficult, tasks their international counterparts are currently performing and to succumb to the very real pressures, threats, corruption and the strength of organized criminal elements.

 

In Kosovo, particularly in some segments of society, there is an atmosphere in which the “official” justice is not necessarily preferred every time, especially when there is a long tradition of utilizing alternative remedies even if based on the customary law of the land. Justice however must not be in the hands of others. But to generally accept the judges’ rulings, enough trust within the society must exist in the judiciary. Kosovo must not allow itself to drown in the waters of self-proclaimed or opportunistic justice, crime and corruption. However, without a judiciary supported by the people there is no perspective in such matters. For its part, the international community has made more solid attempts at creating this infrastructure, but in this delicate time of transition from international protectorate to some form of defined status, pressure cannot be let up in this area.

 

Kosovo children

 

It has been almost seven years since all out armed conflict marred the landscape, but even before then, repression was evident and war was in the air as reports of the conflict in Bosnia and Croatia dominated the Balkans. When one considers this timeline, then you can see that all school aged children in Kosovo are products of war and a post-conflict environment.

 

These experiences of the children of war influence the mental development of children. Of course many of these children were too young to remember first hand, or were born after the conflict.

 

There are significant issues related to these children of war: many unknowingly suffer from post-traumatic disorders, they have fewer role models, and in too many instances lack guardians or parents. Children are growing up during these post-conflict years in an already difficult environment rife with high unemployment and further complicated by an uncertain political future. Many children are forced to find their own way in a strongly polarized atmosphere, learning to hate or are being taught that “others” are a threat.

 

The consequences of such an upbringing are manifold and understandably confusing for young minds. One needs little reminder that the parents and families of this latest generation of children are also products of war and conflict. The problem is that these fathers and families, unfortunately and totally understandably, have been very negatively influenced by these experiences. It is the obligation of the family to teach their children a value system without hate. In today’s Kosovo, children from different ethnic backgrounds almost never come into contact with their peers who, say, live in the enclaves or in psychologically very distant cities. This distinct separation and isolated environment ultimately leave children to learn from their families how to interact with these “neighbors”. This distance between the communities makes the situation worse and worse by permitting a negative impression to color an entire population.

 

Kosovo’s government would do well by firmly establishing programs whereby school children from the polarized communities are given opportunities to live and attend school outside of their insulated environs or at least to have, much more than today, opportunities to meet and to discover other young people in ethnically distinct settings. Only in this manner will Kosovo’s children be able to develop certain invigorated ideas about the world and its people without being influenced so much by dark thoughts of their parents or uncles tainted by the painful past experiences and resulting in the attitudes toward “others” as “antagonists.” Soon, these children must lead Kosovo towards a more democratic, tolerant and modern future. Nobody deciding Kosovo’s future can overstep this concrete fact.

 

Human rights protection

 

The people of Kosovo are among the very few in Europe who are uniquely excluded from basic legal human rights protection through the jurisdiction of the Strasbourg based Human Rights Court. The vast majority of people in Europe have the ability to sue their own authorities on equal footing in an international judicial forum dedicated to defend their basic rights, but the people of Kosovo are currently denied this course of action, even though the international administration portends to defend the right of Kosovo’s inhabitants to assume these basic rights.

 

The protection of human rights is expressly written in the Constitutional Framework of Kosovo and in international instruments which is considered a part of law of the land. Yet, some seven years later, there are still too few mechanisms in place to ensure that such protections are in practice.

 

The presence of the UN in Kosovo was very much initiated on humanitarian and human rights grounds. However, owing to this presence, Kosovo remains, with a few exceptions, exempt from any international systems of human rights protection. Also, the UN and entities that are in Kosovo to help preserve human rights and the rule of law, at the same time, are themselves, in many respects, not answerable to the very persons they are obliged to protect, existing in a unique legal “otherness” that allows for the international community to impose its views on Kosovo’s inhabitants and structures while operating itself with impunity – “above the law.”

 

In cases where Kosovans become the victims of human rights violations committed by UNMIK as such or its staff members, there is thus no independent body with judicial character that could intervene or allow these persons to obtain some sort of redress for damages or injuries.

 

In Kosovo, the international Ombudsperson had been the only existing and real legal instrument of human rights protection. Unfortunately, after the institution was turned over to local hands , in the still chaotic, inadequate legal and institutional environment of Kosovo and for the very reason of the existence of objective circumstances tainted by the persisting interethnic conflict, the Ombudsperson Institution cannot insure in any respect the protection required. Much more needs to be done. One must improve existing institutions and their performance as well as to build new judicial or other similar independent bodies, some of which will remain long after UNMIK has closed its doors. One such aspiration is the constitutional chamber in the Supreme Court which has been discussed for some years now as a part of the Kosovo legal system and originally envisioned in its Constitutional Framework. Another option could be a separate constitutional tribunal.

 

All aspects of the action or inaction of public, international and local authorities, including Kosovo judges, should be under independent scrutiny for human rights practices as in the rest of Europe, by the European Convention on Human Rights mechanism. At the top is the Human Rights Court in Strasbourg, which could be replaced in the Kosovo context, temporarily – until the final status - by a similar court or other body of a comparable character.

 

Notwithstanding of recent positive developments and UNMIK reports to the Council of Europe or the UN human rights covenants’ bodies, the existing level of protection of basic rights and freedoms is still far from acceptable. The respect of human rights and rule of law is the duty of any government. It should be expected that international institutions, which have taken general responsibility for Kosovo as well as KFOR contributing countries but also very much Kosovo authorities and its political leaders, better understand these critical human rights concepts and give to them the serious, due attention required.

 

Ending Remarks

 

It is clear for everyone in and outside of Kosovo that this year should be and is of the utmost importance for Kosovo. There are however many problems and unanswered questions. The road toward status resolution is very complex.

 

One of the central questions is whether realistically people in Kosovo can live together and the ability to reconcile the process leading to a final status and the creation of true conditions for everyone notwithstanding ethnicity to somehow have a peaceful, undisturbed life there. If there is a sincere will to make a change, to see the reintegration of returnees and to prepare solid ground for Serbs or Roma and others so they can see a place for themselves in Kosovo, then more visible efforts on behalf of the government, political leaders and municipal structures must be seen on the ground.

 

Notwithstanding the political solutions adopted, the future of Kosovo is in Europe, and should follow European standards of democracy, the rule of law, human rights and, especially in the context of Kosovo, the protection of the rights of minorities. Today, however, although the human rights situation has, to a degree, improved in sectors, the general level of protection of these rights is still below minimum international standards. A great deal must be done to strengthen the mechanisms for such protection. Apart from the need to cover many other important gaps Kosovo needs desperately to shape the legal system and to build a strong judiciary as indispensable parts of the rule of law and justice.

 

Every solution must in addition take into consideration the international law and the interests of the neighboring Balkan states guaranteeing basic conditions for regional stability and security. This terribly experienced province must sure-footedly step, together with other people of the region, on the path leading toward European Union integration.

 

It is indisputable that the concrete political and legal international status must be granted to Kosovo without any further delay. It does not mean however – in my view – that this status should be the “final” status. In order to reach the end game with final status, Kosovo should still be subject to carefully politically controlled processes and not held hostage only by the independence aspirations of the majority population.

 

FOOTNOTES:

 

1. Adam Thomson, the British envoy to the UN: "Any settlement should conclude during 2006…And it clearly cannot disregard the aspirations of 90% of the population of Kosovo, so independence is a realistic option." (Feb 15, 2006)

 

2. On March 16, 2005 the Working Group on Missing Persons meeting in Belgrade, Pristina and Belgrade representatives adopted the International Committee of the Red Cross list as the official list of missing persons of those people who went missing from January 1998 to December 2000

 

3. Excerpt from United Nations Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) Special Representative of the Secretary General, Sorren Jessen-Petersen’s speech to the UN SC on February 14, 2006: "The Secretary General's recent report and my own Technical Assessment of 6 January, covering the period up to 15 December, have both made it clear that there was, in the latter part of last year, a noticeable slow-down in the pace of implementation of standards in Kosovo. The most worrying of the slow-downs noted in my Technical Assessment was in the field of minority rights. This is an area where, with the status process now underway, and with the PISG's stance on its outcome being well-known, Kosovo's leaders cannot afford to show anything less than complete commitment, sincerity and action."

 

4.UN Security Council Speech, UNMIK SRSG - February 14, 2006: "Standards, as a political priority, cannot be subsumed by status. Symbolic gestures – genuinely important though they are – are not sufficient."

 

5.UNHCR relocated over 500 Roma IDP’s in three camps after the destruction of the Mahalla – Cesmin Luge, Kablare (North Mitrovica) and Zitkovac (Zvecan)

 

6.UNMIK press release 1491. PDSRSG Larry Rossin said: "It is a moral and a political commitment, it should be of Kosovo and it is of the international community, to eventually allow those people to return to their permanent homes."

 

7. Mr. Friedrich Schwindt, Director of the Directorate of Organized Crime within UNMIK Police Of course, 02/10/06: "Especially in Kosovo, sometimes organized crime is intertwined with politics, but is also intertwined with terrorism and with extremism."

 

8. Center for International Private Enterprise, Riinvest, etc.

 

9. February 16, 2006: Principal Deputy Special Representative of the UN Secretary General in Kosovo (PDSRSG) Larry Rossin promulgated, on behalf of the SRSG, UNMIK Regulation 2006/6 on the Ombudsperson Institution in Kosovo. The purpose of this Regulation is to transfer responsibility for the continuing operation of the Ombudsperson Institution to the Assembly of Kosovo.

 

/END/