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Serbia back on Kosovo offensive, with Russian help

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  • Serbia back on Kosovo offensive, with Russian help

    Serbia back on Kosovo offensive, with Russian help
    24 Feb 2008 17:09:25 GMT
    Source: Reuters
    By Douglas Hamilton

    BELGRADE, Feb 24 (Reuters) - Serbia was back on the offensive over
    Kosovo's independence on Sunday, blaming the United States for crisis
    in the Balkans while its ally Russia accused the Americans of
    destroying "world order".

    Three days after young rioters in Belgrade embarrassed the country by
    attacking Western embassies and looting shops, Serbian Prime Minister
    Vojislav Kostunica said it is Washington that is threatening peace and
    stability.

    In a strongly worded statement from Moscow, Russia also accused
    Washington of trampling on international law.

    "The United States must annul the decision to recognize a false state
    on the territory of Serbia," Kostunica said. "It must reaffirm U.N.
    Security Council resolution 1244, which guarantees Serbia's sovereignty
    and territorial integrity."

    "Continuation of the policy of force will deepen the crisis that
    undermines the foundations of world order and threatens peace and
    stability in the Balkans," he said. Serbia has expressed official
    regret for riots last Thursday during which the U.S. embassy was
    attacked and set on fire. The mission sent dependents and support staff
    to Croatia for safety.

    This week, Serbia is getting high-level support from Moscow. Kostunica
    is due to host Russian President Vladimir Putin's likely successor,
    Dmitry Medvedev, on Monday.

    The Russian foreign ministry, in a statement, again demanded a
    "compromise" on Kosovo, which diplomats believe is headed for
    partition, although Serbia has never formally proposed it.

    "Do support for the Kosovo Albanian side alone, contempt for law for
    the sake of so-called 'political expediency', and indifference to the
    fate of a hundred thousand Serbs who... are effectively being driven
    into a ghetto not amount to flagrant cynicism?" it said.

    "Is it not cynical that the Serb people is being openly humiliated
    while Belgrade is being promised a Euro-Atlantic future if it agrees to
    the carve-up of Serbia?"

    The foreign ministry statement recalled that Russia had a peacekeeping
    contingent in Kosovo from 1999 to 2004, under the aegis of the NATO-led
    KFOR force which has 17,000 troops there.

    "It was withdrawn due to our fundamental disagreement with bias
    favouring one side in Kosovo matters..." the ministry said.

    Instead of supporting Kosovo Albanian independence and other actions
    "destroying world order", there must be a "a decision based on law and
    compromise between Belgrade and Pristina", the ministry statement said.

    It did not say what compromise Russia has in mind. But on the ground in
    Kosovo, ethnic Serbs in the north are making steady efforts to resist
    the authority of the new state and its Western backers, with the
    support of Serbia and Russia.

    Russia has not yet openly proposed a return of Russian troops to
    Kosovo. But is U.N. ambassador Vitaly Churkin has warned that it will
    not stand by and allow Kosovo Serbs to be forced to accept the rule of
    the new republic.
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