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To: Cicero; Gael
More haste, less speed for Kosovo resolution | December 30, 2002.

The European Union’s foreign policy chief, Javier Solana said last week that the final status of Kosovo will be determined under Security Council Resolution 1244, and that Belgrade and Pristina would take the main responsibility for the process.

The head of Belgrade’s Kosovo Coordination Centre, Nebojsa Covic, echoed his sentiments at a round table on Kosovo minorities, saying that to hasty a resolution of the issue could lead to political instability.

“Calls for the fastest possible resolution of the issue are classic politicking,” said Covic.

“What is Resolution 1244? Something which defines status. And what comprises status? Standards. Have we reached the standards prescribed by Resolution 12444?

“My personal opinion is that if we are talking about a particular outlook, particular positions, then we should speak about that when we have a new government,” said Covic.

Flying in the face of the facts Dusan Janjic, the director of the Forum for Ethnic Relations, observed that the final status of Kosovo could not be resolved until a serious strategy for negotiation is established.

Insisting on the fastest possible resolution of the issue would be flying in the face of the facts and the interests of the international community, he said.

“If the resolution of the status is pushed through next year, I think that it will involve a very dangerous zone of security risk, and escalation of tension, extremism and the division of Kosovo.

“This is something which those who want to speed the process up must have in mind.

He added that there was a further question of whether the damaging effects for Kosovo would be felt only within the province.

The president of the Committee of Lawyers for Human Rights, Biljana Kovacevic-Vuco, emphasised that the final status of Kosovo would be the result of negotiations from which no one would emerge satisfied.

“In the meantime, people in Serbia are not sufficiently aware that the majority at the central level is not the same majority as in local communities,” said Kovacevic-Vuco.

“We have still not got one fact through our heads and that is that Serbs are a minority in Kosovo. Now the only way to deal with the minority status of Serbs in Kosovo is to demand that the majority take responsibility for the status of minorities.

“2003 the year for meeting aspirations”

Kosovo Prime Minister Bajram Redzep said last week that in 2003, Kosovo Albanians’ aspirations for independence could be fulfilled.

“In 2003, with greater community commitment of the Kosovo institutions and media, we could see our nation’s ambitions fulfilled,” Redzep told journalists in Pristina.

[B92]

5 posted on 01/13/2003 1:41:42 PM PST by Dragonfly
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To: Dragonfly
We got ourselves a tar-baby alright.
8 posted on 01/13/2003 5:51:16 PM PST by wonders (Tar-Baby ain’t sayin’ nuthin’, en Brer Fox he lay low.)
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