Summit to discuss EU involvement in Kosovo
By BabelParis on Wednesday, December 26 2007, 18:47 - Kosovo - Permalink
As a result of a summit held on 14th December that brought together the 27 heads of state or government that form the European Union, the EU has “underlined the need to move towards a legislative agreement with regards the issue of Kosovo, an agreement which is vital for the stability of the region”, indicating that Kosovo “as a result of this agreement, ought to be democratic and multiethnic, in agreement with the legally constituted state and the protection of minority groups and cultural and religious heritage”.

The EU has decided
to send a peace-keeping mission (made up of Police men and women and other
police officials), who will be charged with speeding up the arrangements for a
deployment of 1800 police men and women who will take-over from the United Nations Mission in Kosovo
(UNMIK). The Portuguese Prime Minister, José Socrates, (Prime Minister of the
country currently presiding over the EU), confirmed that “it is very clear that
the EU intends to play a leading role in the future of Kosovo and its statute”.
The question of independence of the Serbian province mainly populated by
Albanians has not been commented upon. Nonetheless, a quicker integration of
On this point, however, the EU remains divided.
According to the Guardian on 12th December, the four
main players (France,
On the other hand,
Confusion exists between formal recognition by
the European Union (however improbable) and individual recognition by Member
States. In reality, though, what possible legal value will recognition by
individual States have, without the support of the wider European organization?
Consequently,
Snejana Jovanovic www.kosovo.over-blog.net



Comments
It is amazing how willing the western media and their public opinion are to accept a (semi)independent Kosovo without thinking of the implication of such a move in international affairs?
Sure the majority of the region's population should have the right to demermine its future; sure historical backgrounds are not so important that the present day realities; ok, the Serbians have been unjustly suppressing Albanians in the past but... BUT:
- Is it ok to give independent status to an Kosovan entity that supresses its own minorities, tens of thousands of Roma and Serbians, bombs their cultural monuments (in 2004 ongoing, not in the bloody 1990's!)???
- What more rights do the Albanians in Kosovo have than the Kurds in Turkey (three million Kurds are IDPs in their own land- supressed for decades)???
- Why everyone takes a future Kosovan declaration of independence as an inevitable fact, but at the same time reject any such move for the Palestinians of the West Bank (that is not even integral part of Israel)?
- If minority region populations have rights above the UN charter (that recignizes the sovereignity of member states) and UN Sec. Council Resolutions (that recognize Kosovo as part of Sebia), what should happen in Corsica, nothern Cyprus, nothern Ireland, Basqueland, Scotland, Abkhasia, Transdiestria, Lappland etc... the list is ENDLESS!
I wonder...