SERBIA PROPOSED KOSOVO DIVISION
PanARMENIAN.Net
24.03.2008 16:27 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Nine years after NATO began bombing Serbia to stop
a bloody crackdown in Kosovo, Belgrade has proposed partitioning the
newly independent nation along ethnic lines.
The proposal to divide Kosovo between its ethnic Albanian majority
and minority Serbs was published in Belgrade newspapers Monday,
the anniversary of NATO's 78-day air war to end a bloody 1999 Serb
crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatists.
The document submitted to UN headquarters says the Serbian government
recognizes UN jurisdiction in Kosovo - but says only Serbs, not
Kosovo Albanians, can control the police, judiciary and border customs
services in parts of Kosovo where Serbs comprise the majority.
Kosovo, where 90 percent of the 2 million residents are ethnic
Albanian, declared independence from Serbia last month. Serbia,
which considers Kosovo the historic cradle of its nation, denounced
the declaration invalid under international law.
"The Serb police officers are answering to the local Serb authorities
and work under the command" of the UN police in Kosovo, Belgrade's
document says. Until last month, the UN police force was comprised
of both Serb and ethnic Albanian officers.
Analysts say Belgrade is trying to take political and administrative
control of the mostly northern parts of Kosovo where Serbs represent
a majority.
Earlier this month, Kosovo's Serbs clashed with U.N. and NATO troops
in the northern, Serb-held town of Mitrovica, leaving a UN policeman
dead and dozens injured. The UN accused Belgrade of orchestrating
the violence with the goal of trying to maintain control over
Serb-populated areas of Kosovo,
Feedback of the international community and Kosovo's government is
not known yet, the AP reports.
PanARMENIAN.Net
24.03.2008 16:27 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Nine years after NATO began bombing Serbia to stop
a bloody crackdown in Kosovo, Belgrade has proposed partitioning the
newly independent nation along ethnic lines.
The proposal to divide Kosovo between its ethnic Albanian majority
and minority Serbs was published in Belgrade newspapers Monday,
the anniversary of NATO's 78-day air war to end a bloody 1999 Serb
crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatists.
The document submitted to UN headquarters says the Serbian government
recognizes UN jurisdiction in Kosovo - but says only Serbs, not
Kosovo Albanians, can control the police, judiciary and border customs
services in parts of Kosovo where Serbs comprise the majority.
Kosovo, where 90 percent of the 2 million residents are ethnic
Albanian, declared independence from Serbia last month. Serbia,
which considers Kosovo the historic cradle of its nation, denounced
the declaration invalid under international law.
"The Serb police officers are answering to the local Serb authorities
and work under the command" of the UN police in Kosovo, Belgrade's
document says. Until last month, the UN police force was comprised
of both Serb and ethnic Albanian officers.
Analysts say Belgrade is trying to take political and administrative
control of the mostly northern parts of Kosovo where Serbs represent
a majority.
Earlier this month, Kosovo's Serbs clashed with U.N. and NATO troops
in the northern, Serb-held town of Mitrovica, leaving a UN policeman
dead and dozens injured. The UN accused Belgrade of orchestrating
the violence with the goal of trying to maintain control over
Serb-populated areas of Kosovo,
Feedback of the international community and Kosovo's government is
not known yet, the AP reports.