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[Facts] Precedent?

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  • [Facts] Precedent?

    Al-Arabiya, United Arab Emirates
    Feb 21 2008



    [Facts] Precedent?

    The West supports independence for the Albanian-majority territory,
    but insists it would not set a precedent. Other breakaway regions
    around the world disagree. Following are a few that might look with
    interest at the Kosovo case:

    WEST BANK / GAZA

    ** Following Kosovo's declaration of independence, senior Palestinian
    negotiator Yasser Abed Rabbo said Palestinians had the "right to
    proclaim independence as the people of Kosovo did" as talks with
    Israel "have made no progress" since they were re-launched in
    November. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas ruled out any
    unilateral declaration of statehood in the near future, and fellow
    negotiator Saeb Erekat said Palestinians needed "real independence,
    not a declaration." U.S. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack
    called Kosovo a "unique" case which is "not a precedent for any other
    situation around the world."


    THE KURDS - Turkey/Iraq/Syria/Iran

    ** Around 20 million Kurds are scattered between northern Iraq,
    Syria, Iran and Turkey, describing themselves as the world's largest
    stateless minority. Most live in southeastern Turkey, where Kurdistan
    Workers' Party (PKK) guerrillas have fought an insurgency since 1984
    in which more than 30,000 people have died. A ceasefire was called in
    1999, but fighting resumed in 2004. Turkey fears that Kurds in
    northern Iraq plan to set up their own state, stirring tensions among
    Turkish Kurds.

    WESTERN SAHARA - Morocco

    ** The Polisario movement of Western Sahara fought a low-level war
    for independence after Morocco annexed the desert territory with the
    pullout of colonial power Spain in 1975. U.N. troops have monitored
    an uneasy peace since 1991. It is Africa's oldest territorial
    dispute, over land the size of Britain, inhabited by 260,000 people.
    A U.N. ceasefire agreement in 1991 promised a referendum on the fate
    of the territory, but it never took place and Morocco now rules it
    out, saying autonomy is the most it will offer.

    NAGORNO-KARABAKH - Azerbaijan

    ** Sporadic clashes in Nagorno-Karabakh between Azeri and local
    ethnic Armenian irregulars began in 1988, escalating by 1992 into
    full-scale hostilities between Azeri forces and troops from Armenia.
    About 35,000 people died and hundreds of thousands fled before a
    ceasefire was signed in 1994. The territory remains part of
    Azerbaijan but is controlled by Armenian forces. A major BP-led
    pipeline linking Azerbaijan's Caspian Sea oil fields to world markets
    passes a few kilometres from the conflict zone.

    PAPUA - Indonesia

    ** In the remote eastern province of Papua, activists have led a
    campaign for more than 30 years to break away from Indonesia, while a
    low-level armed rebellion has been rumbling for decades. Critics say
    military abuses and dissatisfaction over Jakarta's distribution of
    wealth generated by the mineral- and gas-rich province has fuelled
    grievances. A 30-year insurgency in Aceh province, killing 15,000
    people, ended in a European Union-monitored peace accord in 2005.

    BASQUE COUNTRY - Spain

    ** Basque separatist movement ETA has spent the past four decades
    fighting for an independent Basque state in northern Spain and
    southwestern France, killing more than 800 people. The
    semi-autonomous Basque region in northern Spain is home to 2.1
    million people. More than 750 suspected members have been detained
    since 2000. ETA declared a ceasefire last year, but the Spanish
    government scrapped peace talks in December 2006 after ETA bombed
    Madrid airport, killing two people.

    ABKHAZIA AND SOUTH OSSETIA - Georgia

    ** Home to 200,000 people, Abkhazia is sandwiched between the Black
    Sea and the Caucasus mountains and was once a renowned tourist
    destination. It fought a 1992-3 war against Georgia and effectively
    rules itself. It was isolated for years after the war but has since
    forged closer ties with Russia, which has given Abkhaz residents
    passports and pensions. South Ossetia fought to throw off Georgian
    rule in the early 1990s. A ceasefire was signed but the violence has
    threatened to reignite. Russia has peacekeepers in both regions.

    TRANSDNIESTRIA - Moldova

    ** A tiny sliver of land on the Dniestr river, Transdniestria broke
    away from Moldova in September 1990. A brief war killed hundreds
    before Russian troops intervened. The region of 550,000 people is
    dominated by Russian-speaking Slavs, who pressed for independence
    fearing Moldova's Romanian-speaking majority would one day join
    Romania to the south. Around 1,200 Russian troops remain.
    Transdniestria covers one eighth of Moldovan territory but is home to
    the bulk of Moldova's industrial base.

    http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2008/02/21/4594 8.html
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