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List: AKI-NEWS[AKI] Statement - November 26, 2001AKI News aki at alb-net.comFri Nov 30 18:03:12 EST 2001
Advocates for Kosova's Independence November 26, 2001 ================================= ** AKI Newsletter, Issue 2 ** ================================= To no one's surprise, Ibrahim Rugova won the recently held elections in Kosova, though LDK will share parliamentary seats with PDK, AK, and the Serb party, which won eleven per-cent of the votes. Then, oddly, President Rugova sent out a statement saying that Kosova should now be recognized as independent by the international community. Internationals sputtered. Kostunica vowed to retain KosMet (this is not an abbreviation for the name of a life insurance company but an abbreviation for the Serbian term Kosovo Metohija). Does Kostunica know that he lost the NATO war? Does NATO know the FRY lost? If this all sounds contradictory and confusing, it is. If this sounds like once again, international powers are ignoring this high level of semi-institutionalized conflict regarding the final status of Kosova in the Balkans, they are. Somehow following the NATO war, which NATO "won", there was no peace agreement. The Serbs were allowed to retain their entire army as well as sovereignty over the province they had just been driven out of, thus creating an imbalance of power weighted towards Serbia that now cannot be addressed by any particular current organization. The Albanians, realizing that their only real advantage is not military but a population imbalance of 90 per-cent, seek the elusive referendum that was promised them in 1999. Now it seems that "the will of the people" has been reneged on at meetings they were not invited to. Isn't "the will of the people" the true meaning of sovereignty in the year 2001? Or are we now promoting a unilateral statehood based on hegemony and repression, similar to the states involved in the Cold War? Where do charters for the UN and NATO state this as a goal? Nowhere. What's missing behind this hodge-podge of mismanagement is, step one: Accountability. Actions should result in meaningful consequences. Under the Clinton/Holbrooke expediency method embodied in the Dayton Peace Accord of 1995 this never happened. Instead, short-term deals were substituted for just, principled, long-term strategies. Milosevic, now in The Hague, was treated as the Balkan "peacemaker." So he suffered some consequences. But nearly all others involved in these murderous acts still go free. The ICTY cannot and should not be a substitute for all levels of appropriate consequences. Certainly more than four Serb leaders were involved in killing and torturing Albanians. But only four have been indicted. Mladic and Karadzic go free. In the same vein, following ten years of armed conflict during the break-up of Yugoslavia, the Serbs were allowed to keep the Yugoslav Army - an army that had brutally killed its own countrymen in three separate wars in Croatia, Bosnia, and Kosova. There was no disarmament for the Serbs in 1999, only for the Albanian KLA. Thus the FRY, the most violent nation in the Balkans, has been allowed to remain heavily armed. Even when mass graves were being excavated in the Serb capital, Belgrade, there was no discussion of any consequences. Instead, a country that drove hundreds of thousands into the mountains, destabilized neighboring countries, deceived its own citizens, murdered Kosovar civilians and hid the evidence in its capital is allowed to retain sovereignty over the population it tried to drive from its jurisdiction. In this instance, sovereignty was not used to defend and protect a group of citizens within its borders, but the opposite. At the same time, sovereignty for Serbs has been used by the Milosevic regime and to an extent by the Kostunica government as a shield to hide behind, to perpetrate murder, social chaos, crime and an ongoing injustice from which ordinary people must feel that they will never escape. Internationals have clung to the principle of sovereignty of the FRY (a former country that is still a country) causing: an exhaustion of diplomacy, severe strains in the NATO alliance, failure to promote human rights by the UN Security Council, the economic destruction of an entire region resulting in smuggling, weapons trafficking, and drug running. This is not a protection of the principle of sovereignty. Sovereignty means that a nation will lawfully defend and protect all its citizens. It is, instead, half-hearted international intervention followed by a wish that the problems would simply go away. Well they won't. Not until an equitable sovereignty is redefined and redistributed among all citizens. That should have been done in a Kosova Peace Accord in June, 1999. ### Questions/Comments, email us at aki at alb-net.com
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