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Serbs protesting Kosovo independence attack US embassy in
Belgrade
By Julie Hyland
22 February 2008
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Violence has flared once again in the former Yugoslavia, following
Kosovos unilateral declaration of independence from Serbia
on Sunday.
Around 200,000 demonstrated in central Belgrade Thursday night.
Schools were closed and free rail transport provided for the official
rally, which was addressed by Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica,
who stood beneath a banner reading, Kosovo is Serbia.
Following the peaceful protest, several hundred demonstrators
broke into the US embassy, starting a blaze in one of its rooms.
The embassy was closed at the time and no one was injured. The
Croatian and British embassies were also attacked, without casualties.
Riot police fired tear gas and beat protestors, leaving some bloodied
on the ground.
Earlier, Kostunica had told the demonstrators, Kosovo
belongs to the Serbian people, while the crowd roared back,
Well never give up Kosovo, never! Ultra-nationalist
leader Tomislav Nikolic said that the US and the European Union
were trying to steal Kosovo from Serbia.
A deep undercurrent of popular hostility toward Washington
has existed ever since the nearly three-month-long NATO air war
against Serbia that was launched in March of 1999. The US-led
campaign to split Kosovo from Serbia has raised anti-American
sentiment to a fever pitch.
In the 1999 assault, US and British warplanes and missiles
wreaked massive destruction in Belgrade, targeting basic infrastructure
in the city, including bridges and electrical grids. Also hit
were the Radio Television Serbia (RTS) station and the Chinese
Embassy, where three Chinese citizens were killed.
Also on Thursday, there were unconfirmed reports of casualties
after hundreds of protesters clashed with police at a separate
protest rally in the Bosnian Serb republic (Republika Srpska).
Earlier in the day, hundreds of Serbian army reservists in
uniform had pelted NATO-led troops with stones as they tried to
cross the border point at Merdare, 30 miles northeast of Kosovos
capital Pristina. The Serb reservists path was blocked by
the Kosovo police, with the support of Czech troops from the NATO-led
K-For force.
Serbia has condemned Kosovos declaration of independence
and its recognition by most of the Western powers as illegal and
illegitimate.
Since June 1999, following the bombing of Serbia by NATO forces,
the Serbian province of Kosovo had been administered by the United
Nations under Resolution 1244, which made no mention of independence
and upheld the territorial integrity of Yugoslavia.
But Washington has long made plain it would back Kosovan independence,
in defiance of Russian and Chinese opposition, as part of its
drive to secure its military and political hegemony in the geopolitically
strategic Balkan region and strengthen its position in territories
once part of the sphere of influence of the Soviet Union.
The European Unionwith the crucial support of the UK,
Germany and Francehas been employed as a means of bypassing
the UN Security Council and legitimizing Kosovos unilateral
declaration. The EU is, however, deeply split, with Spain, Greece,
Cyprus, Romania and Slovakia amongst those opposing the declaration.
Thursdays demonstration came less than 24 hours after
NATO forces reopened two border checkpoints that had been demolished
by Serbian demonstrators. A crowd estimated at anywhere between
several hundred and 1,000 people used bulldozers and explosives
to remove the border posts at Jarinje and Brnjak, just 20 kilometres
north of the ethnically divided city of Mitrovica.
The attacks were reported by some sources to have been carried
out by Serbian paramilitaries in civilian clothes, forcing Kosovo
police and UN customs officials to withdraw from the scene. The
crossing was eventually closed by NATOs K-For troops in
the area, led by the US and France.
Serb officials said the demonstrators were trying to prevent
ethnic Albanian officials from setting up their own customs offices
at the crossing points, as part of Kosovos new international
borders. A local Serbian mayor, Slavisa Ristic, said, We
cannot allow the institutions of a nonexistent state to be imposed
on us with us paying taxes to some independent Kosovo. That is
impossible.
Serbias minister for Kosovo, Slobodan Samardzic, said
the attack was in accordance with the general [Serbian]
government policies to protect Serbias territorial
integrity.
Belgrade has the intention to take over the customs in
northern Kosovo, he said. The customs points were
intended to become part of [Kosovos] state border and we
are not going to let that happen.
Some commentators have forecast a second Kosovo
in the provinces four northernmost Serb-dominated districts,
including the northern half of Mitrovica, which is policed by
Serbian security forces and dependent on Belgrade for social provisions
such as health care and pensions.
In Mitrovica, where Serbian students have been organizing daily
protests, three cars were damaged in a grenade attack near the
office of the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe
on Tuesday.
There is already talk of partitioning Mitrovica along the Ibar
river, which divides the citys Albanians and Serbs. The
Christian Science Monitor cited former US diplomat James
Hooper, of the International Law and Public Policy Group, as stating
The reality is that the north is lost to Kosovo, just as
Kosovo is lost to Serbia.
He added, US and European peace facilitators have treated
northern Mitrovica and the area north of the Ibar River as a de
facto part of Serbia since the NATO war ended in 1999, all the
while piously proclaiming the need to maintain Kosovos territorial
integrity.
According to Balkan expert R. Bruce Hitchner of Tufts University
in Medford, Mass., also cited by the Christian Science Monitor,
Unless NATO forces decide to cross the Ibar in force
on behalf of the new Kosovo government, a de facto partition will
result.
Earlier in the week, the Serbian parliament passed a resolution
condemning Kosovos declaration of independence and formally
annulling the acts of the Pristina government as illegal under
international law. Serbias interior ministry has also filed
criminal charges against Kosovo Albanian leaders, accusing them
of proclaiming a false state on Serbian territory.
Serbia has withdrawn its ambassadors from the US, France, Turkey
and Austria and has threatened to withdraw envoys from other countries
backing the territorys secession. Speaking at the Council
of Europe in Strasbourg on Monday, Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk
Jeremic said his country would fight tooth and nail
to have the independence declaration overturned, warning that
those countries that had recognized Kosovo had set a dangerous
precedent. By the actions of some European member states,
every would-be ethnic or religious separatist across Europe and
around the world has been provided with a tool kit on how to achieve
recognition, he said.
He continued, Does anyone in this room think that the
Kosovo Albanians are the only group in the world with a grievance
against their capital?
Serbias stance has been echoed by Russia, which warned
that EU recognition of Kosovo would damage relations between itself
and the 27-nation bloc. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
said the EUs appointment of a task force to administer Kosovos
police, customs and justice system was illegal.
The EU, unilaterally, without any approval from the UN
Security Council, is sending a mission to Kosovo to provide for
the rule of law, he said. There is bitter irony ...
in this, because the mission is ... being sent in violation of
the highest lawin violation of international law.
In an effort to legally square its provocative actions, the
EU has argued that Kosovo is a unique case and that Serbia lost
its right to govern the province because of its earlier repression
of the Albanian majority.
But such justifications for independence can equally be employed
regarding who should control the Serb-dominated areas in northern
Kosovo. And they are already being utilized by separatist and
nationalist movements in Europe and internationally.
Kosovo is a lesson in how to resolve conflicts of identity
and membership, peacefully and democratically, said Miren
Askarate, spokeswoman for the Basque regional government in northern
Spain, while Mehmet Ali Talat, leader of the Turkish Cypriots,
said, I salute the independence of Kosovo. No people can
be forced to live under the rule of another.
On Wednesday, senior Palestinian official Yasser Abdel Rabbo
suggested the Palestinians should follow Kosovos example
and declare statehood if current peace talks with Israel failed.
Kosovo is not better than Palestine, Rabbo said. If
the whole world has embraced Kosovos independence why
shouldnt this happen with Palestine as well?
While rejected by Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas, such
statements have caused grave unease in Israel, which has thus
far refused to take a position on Kosovan independence. An unnamed
Israeli official has said Israel would take its time in formulating
its attitude. We believe such issues should not be determined
by unilateral steps but through negotiation, he said, warning
of what he called possible repercussions in this area.
Meanwhile, the BBC reported that some Kosovan Albanians are
opposed to any involvement by the UN, EU and the major powers
in Kosovos affairs though they remain a small minority.
For now.
Albin Kurti, a former student activist who now leads the Vetevendosje
(Self-determination) movement, has condemned EU-administered independence
as a betrayal of full sovereignty and has called for Kosovos
future to be determined in a referendum, without any reference
to the UN or the EU.
See also:
The case of Kosovo: Self-determination
as an instrument of imperialist policy
[20 February 2008]
Deep divisions in Europe over Kosovo
independence
[19 February 2008]
Kosovos declaration of independence
destabilises Europe
[18 February 2008]
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