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List: KCC-NEWS

[Kcc-News] KOSOVO: NO ENTHUSIASM FOR BELGRADE TALKS: Balkan Crisis Report 412 (fwd)

Mentor Cana mentor at alb-net.com
Wed Mar 12 16:29:51 EST 2003


http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/bcr3/bcr3_200303_412_1_eng.txt

KOSOVO: NO ENTHUSIASM FOR BELGRADE TALKS

Albanian politicians and commentators see little point to forthcoming
talks with senior Belgrade officials.

By Ridvan Berisha in Pristina

Michael Steiner, head of the United Nations Mission in Kosovo, UNMIK, has
identified seven "practical issues of mutual interests" which he wants
Serbs and Kosovars to discuss in talks which could take place in Pristina
as early as next week.

The Kosovar side is already expressing scepticism about the dialogue,
which will mark the first ministerial level meeting since the Rambouillet
negotiations, which preceded the NATO campaign of 1999.

On March 3, Steiner announced that a group of Serbian ministers would be
invited to attend talks on the issues with their Kosovar counterparts.  In
a letter addressed to Serbian prime minister Zoran Djindjic and his deputy
Nebojsa Covic, Steiner identified the issues for cooperation as the
recognition of car number plates, travel documents, identity cards and
driving licenses, social security responsibilities, energy, trade,
transport and the return of land registry records.

But many Kosovar politicians and commentators argue that since UN
Resolution 1244 gives UNMIK total authority for running Kosovo, the
Albanian side will enter the conference chamber empty-handed, since they
have no power to decide on any of the issues at stake.   Moreover, since
the future status of Kosovo will not be in the agenda, the Kosovars will
not be able to use the talks to push ahead any kind of negotiating
platform with Belgrade on that issue.

Ramush Haradinaj, leader of the Alliance for the Future of Kosovo party,
AAK, is one of several Kosovars to express such reservations.  "Steiner's
initiative is unlikely to succeed because the Albanian side will be weaker
than the Serbs in this dialogue," he said.

As the sole power to decide on all of the seven issues under discussion
resides with Steiner, the Albanian role in the dialogue will be largely
ceremonial, argued Vetton Surroi, editor of the largest circulation daily
Koha Ditore.  "The Albanian side can sit and make whatever demands they
like, but this won't mean anything to Belgrade, which doesn't have to
concede anything to a side which will not be making the final decisions,"
he wrote in a recent column.

Political analyst Blerim Shala argued that Belgrade also has little
incentive to attend the talks.  "For the current Serb regime and its
supporters in Kosovo, even the recognition of car number plates, IDs and
travel documents represents a move towards Kosovo's independence.  In the
current circumstances any such recognition would be unbearable for the
Serbs," he wrote in the daily newspaper Zeri.

Provocative statements from Zoran Djindjic last month, suggesting that
Belgrade favours a partition of Kosovo, have put many ordinary Albanians
on their guard.  The establishment of an association of Serb
municipalities in northern Kosovo on February 25 was seen as another step
towards federalisation of the province.

"There may have been a regime change in Serbia, but the same old thinking
about ethnic division colours their thinking on Kosovo.  Djindjic's
comments show that they lack the good will to be constructive about even
the most practical issues," said Mirjeta Ajeti, a history student at
Pristina University.

Kosovar hostility towards Belgrade is matched by a distrust of UNMIK's
ability to handle such sensitive dialogue.  It is also thought that the
lack of any clear negotiating platform for the Albanians will render the
dialogue with Belgrade irrelevant.

Whatever the word on the street and in the newspaper columns, however,
Kosovar leaders such as President Ibrahim Rugova, Prime Minister Bajram
Rexhepi, the parliamentary speaker Nexhat Daci and the leader of the
Democratic Party of Kosovo, Hashim Thaci, have all agreed to attend the
negotiations.  On February 28, they signed a declaration confirming that
they will join UNMIK in direct dialogue with all neighbouring countries, a
definition which apparently includes Serbia.

Ridvan Berisha is a journalist at Radio-Television of Kosovo, RTK



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