September 28, 2005

ERP KiM Newsletter 28-09-05

Securing Kosovo's Future

by Boris Tadic

The Wall Street Journal Home Page

For our part, we have already acknowledged that the future status of Kosovo will not resemble that of the 1990s. And in the near future, we intend to put forward concrete proposals on such issues as moving the process of decentralization forward and demilitarizing Kosovo; fighting ethnic- and religious-based terrorism; the sustainable return of the more than 200,000 cleansed Serbs, Roma, Turks and others to Kosovo; genuine promotion of democracy; protection of human rights; and safeguarding of religious freedom.

The Wall Street Journal Europe
September 27, 2005

Since my election more than 15 months ago, I have devoted considerable resources reforging a strategic partnership based on common democratic and market principles and interests among Serbia, the United States and Europe.

Yet the months ahead will test the strength of our combined efforts, as we enter talks on the future status of Serbia's southern province of Kosovo and Metohija, under U.N. administration since June 1999. Success will cement the region's democratic revolutions; failure could plunge southeastern Europe back into the violence and instability of the recent past.

As president, it is my duty to defend the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Serbia, which the international community unambiguously recognizes as encompassing Kosovo and Metohija. What is equally certain is that the process can move forward successfully only when states begin to coordinate among themselves to find ways of accommodating one another's interests.

The challenge of finding a negotiated, mutually acceptable solution must be seen in its proper context. Indeed, during the lost decade of the 1990s, the violent ultranationalism of opportunistic postcommunist strongmen brought great misery to millions of people.

Southeastern Europe today presents a different picture. There is widespread recognition that our joint future lies in full European and trans-Atlantic integration -- a guarantor of democratic prosperity to all who have reaped the benefits of membership. For the first time since the fall of the Berlin Wall, the region looks to a hopeful, reconciled, secure and prosperous future. Certainly, obstacles remain, but the road ahead lies clearly before us.

But all this tangible progress could be derailed if we do not properly handle the talks on the future status of Kosovo, slated to begin in the months ahead. It is imperative that stakeholders in its future come together to build a principled peace with justice by doing the things that a lasting settlement requires.

Regrettably, for some the temptation is either to resolve things by foreign fiat or to succumb to the blackmail of those who argue that violence will follow if their demands are not met.

Yet the unmistakable key to securing the region's liberty is to rid it of the nightmare nationalist ideologies of the past where ethnic cleansing, organized church burnings and drive-by shootings are accepted tools of politics. Instead we must embark on a journey that leads to a strategic solution, not an expedient one that takes up the cause of special interests.

Thus it would be unreasonable to allow the process to gallop toward a premature solution based on abstract promises, ignoring concrete results already achieved on the ground.

In this light, I see Serbia's proactive role in Kosovo's future status talks as an opportunity, not a liability, precisely because the stakes are so high: the future of our democracy, and the future of the region as a whole.

We must all act responsibly in this time of opportunity, and this means that all of us must together formulate the rules that define the approach to a solution. And should Serbia's strategic partners fail to take seriously my country's legitimate interests, such a path would in the end secure no one's liberty.

For our part, we have already acknowledged that the future status of Kosovo will not resemble that of the 1990s. And in the near future, we intend to put forward concrete proposals on such issues as moving the process of decentralization forward and demilitarizing Kosovo; fighting ethnic- and religious-based terrorism; the sustainable return of the more than 200,000 cleansed Serbs, Roma, Turks and others to Kosovo; genuine promotion of democracy; protection of human rights; and safeguarding of religious freedom.

The demands of diplomacy in regions with consolidating democracies such as my own require moving forward honestly. First and foremost, Serbs and Albanians must speak honestly among themselves and directly with each other.

Perhaps more importantly, the dictates of honesty make demands of Serbia's strategic partners as well. Double standards may work in dictatorships, but they are fundamentally inappropriate in democracies. Diplomacy must adapt to the democratic requirements and not the expedients to which one had become accustomed when tyrants prevailed in southeastern Europe.

The United States and Europe must come to terms with the fact the situation in Kosovo is much worse than any of us would like it to be. The worst sort of tyranny of the majority reigns over this land. Kosovo's Serbs, Roma, Turks and other non-Albanians live in conditions worse than those in which Kosovo's Albanians lived during the era of Slobodan Milosevic. In fact, they live in the most abysmal conditions of anyone in Europe.

To gloss over this tragic reality as we approach Kosovo's future status talks is to enter into the process recklessly. This would be of great detriment to the success of our common endeavor, and would blind us to the historic opportunity before us to bring prosperous, democratic stability to the entire region for good.

So let us take up the challenge and do what needs to be done to conquer the past and build a better future for southeastern Europe: a future with no winners or losers, a future of cooperation and integration, a future free of fear, suspicion and mistrust.

Mr. Tadic is the president of Serbia


Serbian President Talks Kosovo in UK

"The biggest stability problem in southeast Europe is the unresolved status of Kosovo" said Tadic. "I expressed the view that every solution for Kosovo must take into account the democratic, European, and Euro-Atlantic future of Serbia, and must at the same time be acceptable to all the parties who are fighting for their interests in Kosovo today."


President of Serbia - Boris Tadic - with Tony Blair

SERBIANNA (USA)

 President Tadic
with Jack Straw

September 28, 2005. --Serbian President Boris Tadic is visiting Great Britain where he has met Britain's Foreign Secretary Jack Straw at the annual Labour Party conference in Brighton.

The talks are also to be held with the British Prime Minister Tony Blair who is also at the conference.

The discussions are to center around Serbia's European and Euro-Atlantic integration prospects, cooperation with the Hague tribunal and stability in southeast Europe especially the disputed Serbian province of Kosovo.

Kosovo is Muslim-dominated province where the Albanian majority demands independence. Ethnic Serb minority is under siege there and is routinely slain by the majority Albanians.

"The biggest stability problem in southeast Europe is the unresolved status of Kosovo" said Tadic. "I expressed the view that every solution for Kosovo must take into account the democratic, European, and Euro-Atlantic future of Serbia, and must at the same time be acceptable to all the parties who are fighting for their interests in Kosovo today."

During his visit to the United States, Serbian President Tadic characterized the Albanian-Muslim domination of that province as the "worst sort of tyranny of the majority" where Kosovo's minorities "and other non-Albanians live in conditions worse than those in which Kosovo's Albanians lived during the era of Slobodan Milosevic."

Referring to the UK talks, Tadic said that "We discussed the stability of the region. We discussed the necessity for special constitutional-legal solutions in Kosovo, such as those already present in Bosnia and Hercegovina, the state union of Serbia and Montenegro, and Macedonia, in other words everywhere in the region."

"As the President of Serbia, I am obliged to protect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of my country, and that I am doing so by respecting democratic and European values" underlined Tadic.

Talks on settling the future of the Kosovo province are set to begin sometimes at the end of 2005.

Kosovo has been under UN protection since the 1999 when the NATO led troops forced the troops of the Milosevic regime out of the province. Over 200,000 ethnic Serbs have been expelled out of the province since the arrival of the UN troops in the province.


Samardzic: A compromise solution must be found

Serbian Press Agency SRNA
28-09-2005 09:10:30

Belgrade - Slobodan Samardzic, the advisor to the Serbian prime minister on Kosovo and Metohija, said that Belgrade's plan for Kosovo presumes that Serbs in the southern Serbian province will be able to stay and indicates the general consensus of Serbia that the province should be given a high degree of autonomy, including atypical status within the borders of Serbia.

During a guest appearance on Radio Television Serbia's program "Question Mark" together with Nexhmedin Spahiu, director of the television station in Kosovska Mitrovica and former advisor to former Kosovo prime minister Ramush Haradinaj, Samardzic said that the Belgrade government is ready to talk and that it has sent an official invitation to the Kosovo prime minister.

He reminded that the answer from Pristina arrived in the form of a statement and an attempt to represent such a meeting as a talk between two neighboring countries, which is unacceptable to Belgrade.

Spahiu assessed that the position of Serbs in Kosovo is not the best but that in his opinion, Belgrade media are even more influential in causing Serbs to fear living in the province.

He described the murders and woundings of Serbs in Kosovo as incidents, while Samardzic emphasized that these were instances of organized crime.

Samardzic said that a compromise solution must be found for Kosovo and Metohija, which would represent the first compromise between Serbs and Albanians in history.]


Human Trafficking Growth Industry In Kosovo

Pristina, 27 Sep (B92) - Statistics related to human trafficking activity in Kosovo are alarming.

USAID Director in Kosovo, Ken Yamashita, said that the number of women from Kosovo how are victims of human trafficking has reached higher numbers than the number of women who have come to Kosovo from other nations.

A report by the International Migration Organization states that human trafficking victims in Kosovo are usually between the ages of 14 and 30, have low levels of education and come from families of low social status. Organization official Enrico Ponziani said that the political situation, economic stagnation, gender inequality and limited possibilities of migration in Kosovo are responsible for the larger number of women becoming victims of human trafficking in an effort to leave their current situations.

Kosovo Prime Minister Bajram Kosumi said that the Kosovo institutions are committed to fighting the problem of human trafficking and that they will work on offering support and protection for victims and arresting and convicting those participating in the human trafficking rings.

Habit Hajredini Chief of the Kosovo Office for Good Government, Human Rights, Equal Opportunity and Gender Issues, said that human trafficking cases have increasing in the past year, and added that the group which the Kosovo Government will target in educating about human trafficking is the clients and potential clients who pay for the services of human trafficking victims, in an effort to make more people aware of the illegality of these criminal and violent actions against the victims.


SNC Asks Eide to Produce an Objective Report

Serbian Press Agency SRNA, Bijeljina
26-09-2005 14:25:32

Belgrade - The president of the Serb National Council of North Kosovo Milan Ivanovic said today that the Council sent a message to Kai Eide, the UN secretary-general's special envoy for standards assessment, asking him to persist in an objective realistic assessment of the situation despite the fact that he is being pressured to show that standards have been fulfilled in Kosovo and Metohija.

"We have asked that Eide urge UN organizations to ensure that the problem of Kosovo and Metohija be resolved in a proper manner, that comprehensive decentralization of government is implemented, that everyone can have basic human rights," said Ivanovic.

He emphasized that yesterday in Silovo at a joint meeting of the Serb National Councils of Kosovo and Metohija and of North Kosovo a decentralization plan was introduced which would be an essential, comprehensive and simultaneous everywhere in Kosovo where Serbs, Muslims and Goranis live.

"We have proposed the forming of 18 new municipalities where Serbs, Muslims and Goranis would comprise at least a 65 percent majority of the population," said Ivanovic, emphasizing that these municipalities would be interconnected and would at the same time form a region.

According to Ivanovic, the decentralization plan was harmonized completely with the Serbian government's plan for decentralization.

He said that at the same meeting the so-called Albanian pilot project on decentralization put forward by UNMIK and certain individual Serbs was rejected.


Talks on Kosovo status due to begin despite standards fail

PRAVDA (RUSSIAN FEDERATION)
10:36 2005-09-26

The United Nations and its member countries understand that Kosovo cannot stay under U.N. management forever and this is why the beginning of talks on its final status would probably be approved, as expected, UNMIK chief Soren Jessen-Petersen told.

In his address of the U.N. General Assembly in the evening of Sept. 22, he said sufficient progress has been made in Kosovo for the talks on its final status to begin.

"I am certain that the talks on the final status of Kosovo will be under way by the end of this year. I believe it is becoming more clear that this is a process, that progress has been made and that there are still shortcomings,"

Jessen-Petersen said.

The U.N. special envoy for the assessment of standards in Kosovo, Kai Eide, is expected to give a recommendation to Secretary General Kofi Annan by the end of this or the beginning of next month, on whether the talks on the final status of the province should begin, Beta reports.

In the meantime the Council of Aca Marovic Primary School from Kosovo Polje and Coordinating Center for Kosovo and Metohija municipal administrator Sladjana Denic asked the previous week for an answer from the appropriate institutions in Serbia to the question whether on Monday, September 26, classes in Serbian are to begin for 138 students in the St. Sava Educational Center in the village of Bresje near Kosovo Polje.

In a letter to Serbian education minister Slobodan Vuksanovic, prime minister Vojislav Kostunica, president Boris Tadic and Coordinating Center for Kosovo and Metohija president Sanda Raskovic-Ivic, they also asked whether classes would be organized in basements and private houses in accordance with the position of representatives of the Ministry of Education at a meeting in Gracanica a few days ago.

At a gathering of parents and students of the two primary and one secondary school housed in the St. Sava building, representatives of the Serbian Ministry of Education promised to inform the school directors and respective school boards by today where and how classes would be organized if the decree of the civil administrator of Kosovo proclaiming the educational center a multiethnic institution remains in effect.

Because of "the undefined policy and position of the Ministry of Education with respect to the beginning of Serbian language classes in Aca Marovic and Vuk Karadzic schools in the St. Sava building, most parents have already asked for transfer papers in order to enroll their children in other primary schools in central Kosovo," she added.

Today is the 22nd day of the 2005/06 school year but no child of Serbian nationality has yet entered the classroom even though instructors, professors, teachers and directors are at work every day.

The parents have made their decision because they do not want their children attending classes in the same building with Albanian students who are being instructed, they emphasize, by former members of the Kosovo Liberation Army, KIM Info-Service reports.


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