An
international group has declared Kosovo a sovereign state. The former Serbian
province will soon run its own government, but peacekeepers will stay to
diffuse tensions between ethnic Serbs and ethnic Albanians.
Kosovo is
to receive full status as a sovereign state beginning in September, according
to an announcement made on Monday by an international committee in Vienna.
The
International Steering Group (ISG)-made up of 23 European nations, the United
States, and Turkey-has been overseeing Kosovo since it unilaterally declared
independence from Serbia in 2008.
"This
is a clear sign of the confidence that is being placed in Kosovo,"
Austrian Foreign Minister Michael Spindelegger told the dpa news agency. “It is
now mature enough to stand on its own feet and to take over full responsibility
for the future of all its citizens," he said.
Kosovo Prime
Minister Hashim Thaci called the decision “historic” for the former Serbian
province.
‘Much
remains to be done,' says ISG
The ISG's
decision came after four years of supervising Kosovo's implementation of United
Nations guidelines for autonomy. Monday's announcement noted the country's
great strides toward building a democratic state that guarantees the rights of
all of its ethnic communities.
Despite the
new status, international peacekeepers are to remain in the country beyond
September. Tensions persist in the north between Serbs, who form the majority
in that region and the ethnic Albanian authorities. The announcement did not
indicate how long the NATO-led peacekeeping force KFOR or EU police would stay
in Kosovo.
A final end
to foreign rule
The new
status will mark the culmination of a process which began when NATO forces
launched a 1999 bombing campaign to end inter-ethinic fighting in Kosovo which
effectively ended Serbia's rule over the territory. Subsequently, Kosovo was
placed under UN administration until its 2008 declaration of independence.
Kosovo's
minority Serb population does not recognize the government in Pristina. It also
worries that the majority Albanian population abuse its power once the
international community leaves.
Belgrade
said the ISG's decision was bad news for the Kosovo's Serb minority.
"When
any international mission in Kosovo leaves, it can mean a greater danger for
both Serbs and Serbia," Serbia's state secretary for Kosovo, Oliver
Ivanovic, told Belgrade's B92 television.
kms/pfd (dpa, AFP)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.