Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Well, things are about to get interesting again....

Stalemate in Kosovo talks after Serbia proposal rejected

by Aleksandra NiksicTue Nov 27, 9:03 AM ET

Internationally-sponsored talks over the future status of the Serbian province of Kosovo were deadlocked Tuesday, after Kosovo Albanian leaders rejected Serbia's proposal for self-governance.

Serbian President Boris Tadic listed a series of concessions the government in Belgrade was ready to make, including autonomy in legal, economic and daily affairs, during a meeting between the parties in Baden, outside Vienna.

"Kosovo would be officially self-governing, with the full consent of Belgrade," while Serbia maintains rights over the "province's foreign policy, defence, border control and the protection of Serbian heritage," Tadic told the delegates.

But Skender Hyseni, a spokesman for the Kosovo Albanian delegation, dismissed the proposal, saying Serbia "continued to offer vision and models which basically are a recipe for frozen conflicts... for half-solutions, which do not take neither Kosovo nor Serbia anywhere."

"I'm afraid that nothing spectacular will happen," he said, adding that no agreement would probably be reached during the closed-door gathering, seen as a last-ditch attempt to solve the Kosovo issue.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20071127/wl_afp/kosovoserbiadiplomacy_071127140303

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Out of order, but important info on where things stand....

Serbia rejects framework for "independent" Kosovo

Mon Nov 5, 12:36 PM ET

A framework drafted by mediators for the future of Kosovo defines the province's independence from Serbia and is "completely unacceptable," Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica said on Monday.

"The 14 points as they stand now mean a relationship between two independent states," Kostunica told a news conference after a fourth round of talks with leaders of the Kosovo Albanian majority in Vienna.

The mediating trio from the United States, Russia and the European Union insist the points do not prejudice the outcome of talks, but present potential areas of common ground.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20071105/wl_nm/serbia_kosovo_kostunica_dc_1

War crimes trial of Serb ultranationalist to start

1 hour, 51 minutes ago

The leader of Serbia's ultranationalist Radical Party faces charges including murder, torture and persecution of non-Serbs when his trial opens at the U.N. war crimes tribunal on Wednesday.

Vojislav Seselj gave himself up to the court in 2003 and pleaded not guilty. He remains leader of the Radicals, Serbia's strongest single party for almost a decade.

The trial is due to start at 3 a.m. EDT. It had been set to begin late last year but Seselj went on hunger strike for 28 days after being prevented from defending himself.

He eventually won back the right to self-defense.

Prosecutors accuse Seselj of making inflammatory speeches calling for the creation of a "Greater Serbia" and inciting hatred of Croat, Muslim and other non-Serb people during the wars that tore apart the former Yugoslavia in the early 1990s.

They say he recruited Serbian volunteers and indoctrinated them with his "extreme ethnic rhetoric" and was involved in plans to forcibly remove the non-Serb population from parts of Croatia and Bosnia with "particular violence and brutality."

Hundreds of non-Serbs were detained, beaten, tortured and killed by Serb forces Seselj recruited or influenced, prosecutors say. He is charged with murder, torture, persecution, cruel treatment, deportation, inhumane acts, wanton destruction and plunder.

In Serbia's capital Belgrade, Seselj's party put up posters of their leader reading "The trial begins -- end Hague tyranny."

The party has arranged for the trial to be shown live by a small, private television station after state television turned down their request to broadcast proceedings.

Party secretary Aleksandar Vucic said the Radicals did not expect a fair trial but were sure Seselj would prove Serbia was not guilty of war crimes.

Seselj, 53, has routinely disrupted pre-trial proceedings by insulting judges and refusing to cooperate with defense lawyers imposed on him by the court whom he called "spies."

He was close to the late Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic, who died in detention in The Hague in March 2006 a few months before a verdict was due in his war crimes trial.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20071106/wl_nm/serbia_seselj_dc_1;_ylt=Am_a0Z51qGGZ2zgaliD8QxIE1vAI

Friday, October 12, 2007

Sorry, dug this one out from back in August...blowing the cobwebs out of the old inbox. Better post it before the links rot and, like all virtual history these days, it ceases to exist....

No bargain with EU on Kosovo status: Serbia


By IANS
Tuesday August 7, 02:55 PM

Moscow, Aug 7 (RIA Novosti) Serbia will not recognize Kosovo's independence in exchange for its membership to the European Union (EU), the Serbian ambassador to Russia has said.

'I can assure you that there will be no bargaining (on Kosovo) and Serbia's accession to the EU will not be paid for by Kosovo's independence,' said Stanimir Vukicevic.

The diplomat said Belgrade had been conducting talks with the EU on Serbia's European integration but reiterated that the status of Kosovo must be determined 'on the basis of agreements and compromises within the UN Security Council'.

'We insist that Serbia's accession to the European Union and Kosovo's status are separate and independent issues,' Vukicevic said.

Determining the status of the province has been on the international agenda since NATO's 78-day bombing campaign against the former Yugoslavia ended a conflict between Serb forces and Muslim Albanian separatists in 1999. The region has remained a UN protectorate ever since.

According to a plan proposed by UN envoy Martti Ahtisaari for Kosovo's independence, the international body must pass supervision over the region to the EU.

But the Serbian diplomat said the EU cannot assume administrative control over the disputed province without a UN resolution that would give the European bloc legal authority to take over the UN protectorate.

A UN plan to grant sovereignty to Kosovo, regardless of Serbia's objections, has been removed from the UN Security Council agenda under pressure from veto-wielding Russia, Serbia's long-standing ally.

According to sources in the Russian foreign ministry, Belgrade and Pristina might hold another round of negotiations on the status of Kosovo later this week pending their readiness to host the Kosovo Contact Group's troika.

Established July 25 to mediate during new Kosovo talks between Serbia and Kosovo, the troika comprises Russia, the EU and the US as part of the Contact Group, which also involves France, Italy and Germany.

http://in.news.yahoo.com/070807/43/6j4ew.html
Interesting development....
Belgrade, 12 Oct. (AKI) – The Serbian government on Friday offered a million euros reward for the arrest of Bosnian Serb wartime commander Gen. Ratko Mladic, indicted for war crimes and genocide by the UN's Hague-based Yugoslav war crimes tribunal.

Rasim Ljajic, who is the president of the National Council for the cooperation with the Hague tribunal, said the decision was reached late on Thursday and the reward would be paid by the government.

Members of the Council are president Boris Tadic and prime minister Vojislav Kostunica, as well as ministers of defence and police, the chief of the general staff, and the chiefs of state security agencies.

Mladic, with war-time Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, tops the list of four individuals indicted by the tribunal who are still at large.

The Council also offered rewards of 250,000 euros for information leading to the arrest of former Bosnian Serb official Stojan Zupljanjin and Croatian Serb leader Goran Hadzic.

Ljajic said the offer didn’t officially include Karadzic, because he is not a Serbian citizen and there was no legal basis for the reward. But he said the government would nevertheless pay a million euros for information leading to his arrest.
http://www.adnkronos.com/AKI/English/Politics/?id=1.0.1419918766

We probably didn't need this information to get out....
BELGRADE, Serbia, Oct. 2 (UPI) -- Serbia has been exporting various military equipment and arms to Myanmar ever since the state was known as Burma in mid-1950s, Belgrade’s B92 radio said.

Serbia’s armament exports continued through the regime of the late Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic in the 1990s and after democratic changes early in the 2000s, the radio said.

Serbian military analyst Aleksandar Radic told B92 the country’s exports to Myanmar included rifles, big guns and howitzers, light war planes and river boats.

The Serbian Defense Ministry said the armament was sold only to the Myanmar armed forces and not to police, which could misuse arms in their repressive campaigns against monks and civilian dissidents, B92 reported.
http://www.upi.com/NewsTrack/Top_News/2007/10/02/serbia_exports_arms_to_myanmar/2909/

A bit of kitschy trivia.....

The yellow bulldozer which played its role in storming key government buildings during Serbia's 2000 popular uprising against former strongman Slobodan Milosevic has gone on sale.

Advertised as "the historical excavator that collapsed communism in Serbia," the bulldozer is being auctioned online with a starting price of EUR90,000 ($128,088), although it is "not in working condition."

The owner, known as Joe, drove the bulldozer during the Oct. 5 uprising against Milosevic's attempt to maintain his decade-long rule by preventing Serbia's pro-Western opposition from taking power after an election victory.

The bulldozer led columns of protesters in clearing the way to Belgrade's national assembly building where protesters broke in and clashed with Milosevic's special police.

The bulldozer also smashed through the glass walls of the offices of state-run television, allowing opposition supporters to stream in and occupy the building.

Hundreds of thousands stormed the government buildings during the uprising, forcing Milosevic to resign.

"The owner wanted to sell and we are helping him," Nenad Nikolic, who runs Limundo online auctioning told the Associated Press. "He determined the price."

The auction description for the bulldozer notes that "traces of these attacks are visible very clearly on the excavator itself, on the front, back and side" glass.

The bulldozer owner was not immediately available for comment. He has complained in past years of being forgotten by the post-Milosevic authorities and of living in poverty.

Milosevic was handed to a U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands, in 2001, to face a genocide trial. He died in detention in 2006.

URL: http://english.pravda.ru/world/98065-bulldozer_revolution-0

They are at least at the same table, not that it's doing any good....

Fri Sep 28, 1:37 PM ET

Leaders of Serbia and the Kosovo Albanians held their first face-to-face talks on the future of the breakaway Serbian province with international mediators on Friday but made no breakthrough.

Major powers have set a December 10 deadline for an agreement on the final status of Kosovo, which has been in legal limbo under U.N. administration since 1999, when NATO waged an air war to drive out Serbian forces and halt ethnic cleansing.

Serbia, backed by Russia with its U.N. veto power, rejects independence for Kosovo. But the territory's 2 million ethnic Albanians -- 90 percent of the population -- will settle for nothing less and have warned of violence if they are thwarted.

A joint New York Declaration issued after the meeting said: "The parties reiterated their commitment to engage seriously in these talks. The troika (of mediators) reminded the parties of the (U.N.) Secretary-General's statement of August 1 that the status quo is not sustainable."

European Union mediator Wolfgang Ischinger told reporters the two sides had agreed to hold more direct talks, with the next meeting set for Brussels on October 14.

"Both sides ... indicated to us through this meeting and through their conduct and through the conclusion that they wish this process to continue ... . This is a good sign," he said.

But there appeared to be no meeting of minds on substance.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070928/wl_nm/serbia_kosovo_dc_7

And, of course, nobody in the West wants to admit how serious the situation is--hence, no "real" news coverage (from the major papers)...but the neighbors know the place is a powder keg....

By Douglas HamiltonFri Sep 28, 9:40 AM ET

Balkan states bordering Serbia saw scant hope of a breakthrough in New York talks between Serbs and Kosovo Albanians on Friday and were bracing for a rough ride whatever the next move on the breakaway province.

Those who heed diplomatic smoke signals from Washington and Brussels are braced for a unilateral declaration of independence by Kosovo in mid-December, with U.S. and majority European Union recognition but in the teeth of Serbian and Russian opposition.

Whether independence is recognized or blocked, the risks are so serious either way that no neighboring government wants to speculate openly on how severe, long-lasting or widespread the repercussions might be.

None wants to aggravate ties with Serbia, which is warning them not to recognize Kosovo. But those with significant ethnic Albanian minorities -- such as Macedonia -- have more reason to fear the risks of delaying the decision.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070928/wl_nm/serbia_kosovo_neighbours_dc_2

And isn't this nice of them--maybe a few kids won't lose limbs or eyes, after all....

BRUSSELS, Sept 19 (Reuters) - NATO said on Wednesday it would give Serbia information on the cluster bombs that were a controversial part of the alliance's 1999 air strikes to eject Serb forces from the breakaway province of Kosovo. The move is part of efforts to determine whether the bombs, some of which may not have exploded, remain a danger to the public. The data will be used in a survey on munitions to be carried out by a Norwegian non-governmental organisation. "We expect that next week NATO will be in a position to hand over a consolidated list of the cluster munitions dropped at that time. This list will include the number of units and their coordinates," NATO spokesman James Appathurai told reporters. He said the step followed a request for information made by Belgrade in February. NATO used cluster bombs, which typically eject clusters of smaller "bomblets" to spread their effect, for attacking such targets as army convoys or troop concentrations in Kosovo. However, the alliance admitted during the campaign that some bombs went off course. NATO cluster bombs killed 15 people in the southern city of Nis, which put paid to the idea that modern high-tech bombing is faultless.
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L19921092.htm

And last, but not least, the "persecuted" speak....

Sat Sep 15, 10:15 AM ET

Top war crimes fugitive Radovan Karadzic's son Sasa has been ordered to leave Serbia and banned from returning for a year, an official reportedly said Saturday.

Sasa Karadzic, who was detained in Belgrade on Friday "for an identity check," should leave Serbia within three days, said Rasim Ljajic, Serbia's minister in charge of cooperation with the Hague-based UN war crimes tribunal.

"It was established that his identity card was not in accordance with Serbia's law and it was taken away from him," Ljajic told the Beta news agency.

Sasa Karadzic was visiting his five-year-old son who had undergone hip surgery at a Belgrade hospital when he was detained by "special police," his sister Sonja Jovicevic Karadzic told AFP on Friday.

"This is only about the continuation of pressure on our family. The arrest over alleged checking of identity is only an excuse for further harassment," she said, adding that her brother had been under police surveillance since he arrived in Belgrade at the end of August.

Karadzic's two children live in Pale, the Bosnian Serb wartime stronghold near Sarajevo.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070915/wl_afp/warcrimesserbiabosniakaradzic_070915141526
God, it's been too long....
Sorry, things have been hectic, as is all life, these days.
Al Gore won the Nobel Peace Prize...the man who was part of the administration that bombed Serbia in 1999. The irony is not lost on me.

In other news--this will be catch up day, if I can find the stories.....

Friday, May 11, 2007

By DUSAN STOJANOVIC, Associated Press WriterFri May 11, 11:39 AM ET

Serbia's pro-democracy parties have reached a power-sharing deal to form a new government, the hardline parliament speaker said Friday, an agreement that averts the possibility of his radical ultranationalists regaining power.

Western governments and Serbia's neighbors were alarmed this week by the election of an admirer of Serbia's late nationalist President Slobodan Milosevic as the parliament speaker — the No. 2 post in the country.

Earlier Friday, U.S. Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns warned that if Tomislav Nikolic's Radical Party came to power in Serbia, it would "seriously harm" the country's relations with the West.

The Radicals are staunchly anti-Western and used to back Milosevic's warmongering policies in the Balkans, while their own boss, Vojislav Seselj, is awaiting trial at the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands. The Radicals also oppose the Western-backed U.N. plan for the Serbian province of Kosovo, which envisages internationally supervised self-rule.

Nikolic told The Associated Press on Friday that a power-sharing deal had been reached between pro-Western President Boris Tadic and caretaker Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica, whose talks on a new Cabinet had been deadlocked for nearly four months.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070511/ap_on_re_eu/serbia_government_1

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Serbia chairs Europe rights body
By Nick Hawton
BBC News, Belgrade

Serbia is to take over the chairmanship of the Council of Europe despite concerns that the country is abandoning attempts at political reform.

The council is Europe's leading body monitoring human rights and justice.

Serbia takes over the council's chairmanship as part of the normal rotation among its member nations.

On Wednesday, a hardline nationalist was elected to the powerful position of speaker of the Serbian parliament.

Serbia will chair the Committee of Ministers and issue a programme of priorities for its six month chairmanship.

But serious concerns have been raised about Serbia's suitability to take on the role.

As Serbia takes over the chairmanship, Montenegro will join the body as its 47th member at a special ceremony at the council's headquarters in Strasbourg.

No government

Tomaslav Nikolic, who has made no made no secret of his suspicions of European institutions, is the Serbian parliament's new speaker.

He is from the Serbian Radical party, whose leader is currently in the Hague facing war crimes charges.

The president of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe said Mr Nikolic's election was a burden on Serbia's ability to carry out its role as chair of the council.

Serbia itself is in the midst of a political crisis.

There is no government three months after a general election and tensions are likely to rise in coming weeks as a final decision on the future status of Kosovo nears.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/europe/6645237.stm

Published: 2007/05/11 01:50:51 GMT

© BBC MMVII

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Gotta LOVE this one....

Superman "S" stands for Serbia?

Wed Apr 25, 9:31 AM ET

Serb media responded on Wednesday with a sense of pride and patriotism that a new mineral had been found in Serbia closely resembling the makeup of fictional "kryptonite," which rendered Superman helpless.

Reacting to the discovery of the real new mineral in western Serbia, they pointed out that "kryptonite" was created from the remains of Superman's home planet Krypton, destroyed in a fireball.

"Superman is a Serb!" was the conclusion drawn in headlines favored by several newspapers. The daily Kurir said: "Finally we have scientific proof that we are God's own people!"

Even the staid pro-government daily Politika joined in the fun, speculating that the 'S' on the Man of Steel's blue costume really stood for 'Serbia'.

In the comics, Superman would do anything to avoid kryptonite, whose glowing green crystals sapped his powers.

The actual mineral found at a mine near Jadar does not glow, is not radioactive, has very tiny crystals and is white rather than green. It is to be named Jadarite.

While concluding an extensive examination of its unique chemistry, mineralogist Chris Stanley of London's Natural History Museum stumbled on a close match with 'kryptonite', as described in the movie 'Superman Returns'.

The museum quoted Stanley as saying he searched the Internet for the mineral's formula -- sodium lithium boron silicate hydroxide -- and found the same scientific name written on a case containing kryptonite stolen by Lex Luthor in the movie.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070425/od_nm/serbia_superman_odd_dc_1

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Death squad sentences: A turning point for Serbia?
Four Serb paramilitaries who were filmed shooting dead six young Bosnian Muslims have been jailed by Serbia's war crimes court.The leader of the Scorpions unit and an accomplice were given 20 years, while the other two received 13 and five years.The trial was the first in Serbia to deal with the massacre of nearly 8,000 Muslim men and boys in the Srebrenica massacre in July 1995. It was also the biggest war crimes trial to date of Serbs by Serbs. What is your reaction to the sentences? How significant are they? Can Serbia, and Bosnia, now move on? Send us your comments.
Published: Tuesday, 10 April

Here is a link to the debate that followed--very interesting the comments are, as Yoda would say....
http://newsforums.bbc.co.uk/nol/thread.jspa?threadID=6012&&&edition=2&ttl=20070412001532

Saturday, March 10, 2007

By MISHA SAVIC, Associated Press WriterSat Mar 10, 7:36 AM ET
Admirers of late president Slobodan Milosevic marked the first anniversary of his death with wreaths and speeches on Saturday, even as Serbia continues to grapple with consequences of his ruinous rule.
Officials of the formerly Milosevic-led Socialist Party gathered at his grave in the eastern town of Pozarevac, praising the man who led Serbia through several wars and ended up facing the U.N. war crimes court for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague.
"Milosevic was an honorable man who worked for the benefit of Serbia and its people," said supporter Bogoljub Bjelica. Well, I wouldn't say THAT, exactly....
Milosevic's lifeless body was found the morning of March 11 in his jail cell and the exact time of death was never determined.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070310/ap_on_re_eu/serbia_milosevic_anniversary_1
By Matt RobinsonSat Mar 10, 9:38 AM ET
Serbia called on the United Nations on Saturday to reject a Western-backed proposal for the independence of Kosovo as Serbs and Albanians ended a year of talks on the fate of the breakaway province.
President Boris Tadic made the appeal in Vienna at a final meeting between leaders of Serbia and Kosovo's 90-percent Albanian majority before the plan drafted by U.N. envoy Martti Ahtisaari goes to the Security Council.
In a copy of his speech distributed to media, Tadic said he expected "serious debate" at the U.N. Security Council.
"If Ahtisaari's proposal was to be accepted, it would be the first time in contemporary history that territory would be taken away from a democratic, peaceful country in order to satisfy the aspirations of a particular ethnic group that already has its nation-state," he said.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070310/wl_nm/serbia_kosovo1_dc_2

Monday, February 26, 2007

Well, here's one little problem averted, at least for now....

The highest U.N. court cleared the Serbian state on Monday of direct responsibility for genocide in Bosnia during the 1992-95 war, but said it had violated its responsibility to prevent genocide.
Bosnia had asked the International Court of Justice (ICJ) to rule on whether Serbia committed genocide through the killing, rape and ethnic cleansing that ravaged Bosnia during the war, in one of the court's biggest cases in its 60-year history.
It was the first time a state had been tried for genocide, outlawed in a U.N. convention in 1948 after the Nazi Holocaust of the Jews. A judgment in Bosnia's favor could have allowed it to seek billions of dollars of compensation from Serbia.
ICJ President Judge Rosalyn Higgins said the court concluded that the Srebrenica massacre did constitute genocide, but that other mass killings of Bosnian Muslims did not.
But she said the court ruled that the Serbian state could not be held directly responsible for genocide, so paying reparations to Bosnia would be inappropriate even though Serbia had failed to prevent genocide and punish the perpetrators.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070226/wl_nm/bosnia_serbia_srebrenica_dc_5

Sunday, February 25, 2007

It promises to be a banner week, depending upon how this decision goes....

World Court to deliver genocide ruling
By ARTHUR MAX, Associated Press Writer Sun Feb 25, 11:54 AM ET
THE HAGUE, Netherlands

Can a state commit genocide? Should an entire nation — not just its presidents, generals, and soldiers — be held responsible for humanity's worst crime?
In one of the most momentous cases in its 60 years, the U.N.'s highest court will deliver its judgment Monday on Bosnia's demand to make Serbia accountable for the slaughter, terrorizing, rape and displacement of Bosnian Muslims in the early 1990s.
If it rules for Bosnia, the International Court of Justice could open the way for compensation amounting to billions of dollars from Serbia, the successor state of Slobodan Milosevic's Yugoslavia, although specific claims would be addressed only later.
It also would be a permanent stain on Serbia in the eyes of history, regardless of any effort by Belgrade to distance itself from the brutality of those years.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070225/ap_on_re_eu/world_court_genocide_ruling_1

So, what does this mean, exactly? The official stamp on a general POV that already pervades the media, politics and public opinion (in those places where anybody either knows or cares about Serbia)? What exactly will such a decision accomplish? There is no money for reparations, so it resembles, IMO, France's "war guilt" claim and reparations against Germany after WWI. And we all know how THAT turned out.....

Saturday, February 17, 2007

Serbia blasts U.N. Kosovo statehood plan
By JOVANA GEC, Associated Press WriterSat Feb 17, 7:35 AM ET
Serbia is convinced that a U.N. plan granting supervised statehood for the contested Kosovo province stands no chance of approval at the U.N. Security Council where Serb ally Russia holds a veto, a government minister said Saturday.
Zoran Loncar also blasted the key architect of the plan, chief U.N. envoy Martti Ahtisaari, as "biased and working in the interest of the (Kosovo) ethnic Albanians" who have sought to split the troubled region from Serbia.
"Not only Russia and China, but a great number of other countries are against taking away 15 percent of territory from a sovereign state and a member state of the United Nations," Loncar said. "It is unthinkable that the Security Council would violate basic principles of the U.N. Charter."
Loncar's comments come only days ahead of Serb-Albanian talks in Vienna, Austria, about Ahtisaari's Kosovo plan. The U.N. envoy has invited the two sides to put forward their complaints about the draft before it is submitted to the U.N. Security Council for a final vote.
The plan envisages internationally supervised self-rule for Kosovo and the trappings of statehood — such as a flag, anthem, army and constitution — while giving the minority Serbs more control over their day-to-day affairs.
The ethnic Albanians in Kosovo have hailed the plan, but also have warned that they want full independence.
Ahtisaari this week has acknowledged that chances of an agreement at the Vienna talks were slim, with the two sides firmly in their positions.
Russia has said it was against any solution that falls short of a compromise. On Friday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov was quoted as warning that Kosovo independence would have "the most negative consequences," and that Moscow could block the plan.
Although formally part of Serbia, Kosovo became an international protectorate in 1999, after a NATO bombing forced Belgrade to halt a crackdown against the ethnic Albanian separatists and relinquish control.

Thursday, February 01, 2007

US Slams Serbia Diplomatic Threat On Kosovo Independence
BELGRADE (AP)--The U.S. Thursday criticized the Serbian ruling party's threats to cut diplomatic ties with countries that recognize any future independent Kosovo.
"We are very disappointed by this approach," the U.S. embassy in Belgrade said in a statement. "The United States would like to continue its dialogue with the Serbian people and their responsible leadership on the issues of interest to both our countries."
As its condition for joining Serbia's next government, the conservative Popular Coalition has demanded that the future Cabinet must reject Kosovo's independence and cut all ties with countries that recognize it as a separate country.
The hardline demand by outgoing Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica's party came on the eve of Friday's formal presentation of a U.N. plan for Kosovo that is likely to grant the southern Serbian province some sort of internationally supervised independence.
"We hope that Serbia's leaders will form a democratic government soon and fulfill the wishes of the majority of the Serbian people to follow a constructive path toward Europe and toward Euro-Atlantic partnership," the U.S. embassy statement said.
http://www.nasdaq.com/aspxcontent/NewsStory.aspx?cpath=20070201%5cACQDJON200702010910DOWJONESDJONLINE000659.htm&
This is just ridiculous....
Come to Serbia - home to few people and Kazakh music
2 hours, 35 minutes ago
A commercial promoting Serbia as a tourist destination appears to be jinxed after CNN used the soundtrack for a Kazakh tourism ad as backing music by mistake.
The "Serbia - Moments to Remember" commercial was widely pilloried at home as being boring and misleading for showing Serbia as a land of rolling hills, churches and nature reserves full of wildlife, but apparently devoid of people.
Serb viewers also spotted that one mediaeval church featured prominently in the ad was not in fact Serbian but Romanian, on the wrong side of the Danube river on Serbia's eastern border.
The campaign is the first major effort to change the world's view of Serbia since the end of the Yugoslav wars of the 1990s.
Officials said they will edit the commercial to highlight the fun side of Serbia, including the vibrant cafe culture and nightlife of the capital Belgrade.
They said CNN had agreed to extend the life of the ad to make up for their mistake with the Kazakh folk music.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070201/od_uk_nm/oukoe_uk_serbia_tourism_1

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Sorry--forgot to post an election results update--not good news, as one can see....
Serbia: Election Deals Blow to Main Centrist Parties
Poor showing by two main democratic parties likely to slow formation of new government.
By Dragana Nikolic Solomon in Belgrade (Balkan Insight, 22 Jan 07)Centrist parties did worse than they expected in Serbia’s first general election and most diplomats and observers predicted difficulties ahead in forming a new government.
But although the hard-line nationalist Serbian Radical Party, SRS, won most votes with 28.5 per cent of ballots on January 21, it will again be denied the chance to form a government as it lacks potential coalition partners.
This means that the so-called democratic bloc will form the new administration. However, analysts say this would not be easy, firstly because of rivalries within the democratic bloc and secondly because no party among them has emerged as the clear leader.
This makes squabbles more likely over ministerial posts, delaying the new government’s formation.
“The new government will [only] be formed on the last day that the law allows,” predicted Dejan Anastasijevic, a political journalist.
A new parliament must be announced within 30 days of the election result being announced or fresh elections may be called. The official results will probably be declared on January 25.
http://www.iwpr.net/?p=brn&s=f&o=328895&apc_state=henh
THANK GOD!!!! Maybe now there will be a more equitable voice in charge.

Tue Jan 30, 10:20 AM ET
Carla del Ponte, chief prosecutor for the U.N. tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, will not extend her mandate that ends in September but hand over to somebody else to complete the work of the court by 2010.
"After eight years I will not stay any longer," Del Ponte, a Swiss lawyer who turns 60 next month, told foreign journalists on Tuesday. "I think it is the right time to leave."...Del Ponte said she had not seen any real remorse from those she had tried and few signs of reconciliation on the ground.
"It takes time, generations before we arrive at a real reconciliation," she said. Just can't give it up, can you????
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070130/ts_nm/warcrimes_delponte_dc_1

Thursday, January 25, 2007

Not bad enough that they are constantly taking hits for Mladic, now these guys are weighing in--and isn't it interesting that they mention that Serbs were also victims, but give that no credence? Of course, this is a website that allows advertisments for "preventing and curing homosexuality...."
Nazi-Hunter: Serbia Fails to Bring Justice 19:08 Jan 25, '07 / 6 Shevat 5767
(IsraelNN.com) Efraim Zuroff, head of the Israel office of the Simon Weisenthal Center, criticized Serbia for its failure to bring justice to three men accused of war crimes during the Nazi occupation of Serbia in WWII. Jews, Gypsies, and Serbs are amongst the victims of the alleged criminals. Serbia, despite promises to the contrary, has not attempted to extradite the men to stand trial.The men, currently living in Hungary, Austria, and Argentina, are all in their 90s. The mission of the Simon Weisenthal Center is to bring Nazis and other perpetrators of crimes against humanity during World War II to justice.
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/news.php3?id=120280

Sunday, January 21, 2007

Boy, they will let anyone vote....
Milosevic gets vote call - again
January 20 2007 at 04:56PM
Belgrade - Former Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic was invited to vote in legislative elections on Sunday, despite having died more than 10 months ago, the daily newspaper Press reported on Saturday."From a legal point of view, Milosevic is still alive as his death has not been officially registered" in the Belgrade district where he lived, the paper said.The former Serbian president died in March of natural causes in a cell of the UN war crimes court in The Hague, where he was being tried for crimes committed during the wars that tore up Yugoslavia in the 1990s.Milosevic was facing charges for war crimes and crimes against humanity over his role in the wars in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo, as well as genocide for his involvement in Bosnia's 1992-1995 conflict.He had also been asked to vote in Serbia's constitutional referendum in October, with electoral officials claiming that "so far, no one has officially informed us of his death," the daily said.Under Serbian law, either the family or the Serbian embassy in the Netherlands must file a document to confirm his death to the district authorities in Belgrade."As long as this document is not submitted, Milosevic will still be getting vote invitations," the daily quoted a local official as saying.
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?from=rss_A%20Step%20Beyond&set_id=1&click_id=&art_id=iol1169302143721R131

Saturday, January 20, 2007

I guess I have no faith that, even if the democratic parties were to win, and even if Mladic were found tomorrow, and even if a resolution on Kosovo could be reached that satisfied all parties, that things would change for Serbia. The West seems intent on making it a permanent whipping boy in the region, always taking the blame for anything that goes wrong.
And then, there's these guys....

HRW: Serbia won’t face past seriously
15 January 2007 17:43 Source: B92
NEW YORK -- Human Rights Watch 2006 report criticizes Serbian government for its unwillingness to confront the past seriously.The report also states there were delays in undertaking legal and other reforms contributed to a still unsatisfactory human rights situation in 2006, adding that the authorities’ failure to locate Bosnian Serb wartime general Ratko Mladić undermined relations with the European Union and United States, and destabilized the governing coalition, in turn setting back its reform agenda.The report expresses concern over state interference in the administration of justice, economic and social conditions for the Roma, and hostile criticism from the media and some political parties for the human rights organizations in Serbia. The report, however, notes that several important trials were ongoing in the War Crimes Chamber of the Belgrade District Court during 2006, although the overall number of cases dealt with by the chamber since its establishment in 2003 remains small. Negotiations over Kosovo’s final status overshadowed its pressing human rights problems during 2006, HRW report states, adding that minorities live in marginal and sometimes dangerous circumstances, while the return of refugees and displaced persons to their homes has all but come to a halt, and the justice system continues to fail victims.
http://www.b92.net/eng/news/society-article.php?yyyy=2007&mm=01&dd=15&nav_category=102&nav_id=39080
Tomorrow should be a very interesting day....especially if the NYT takes time out of its busy schedule to actually write something about Serbia....

January 20, 2007
Election Could Decide Serbia’s Role in Europe
By NICHOLAS WOOD
BELGRADE, Serbia, Jan. 19 — While six years of democracy in Serbia have given its people ample opportunities to vote — in four presidential elections, two parliamentary elections and a nationwide referendum — many complain that the country has seen little change.
Serbia remains isolated from the European Union while most of its former Eastern bloc neighbors — Hungary to the north and most recently Romania and Bulgaria to the east — have become members.
Western governments are hoping, though, that parliamentary elections to be held Sunday will make a difference by uniting Serbia’s notoriously divided democratic bloc and by preventing the ultranationalist Serbian Radical Party from consolidating its position as the largest group in Parliament.
The election’s timing is particularly crucial. The parties that form the next government will be faced with the possible loss of Kosovo, the province that has been controlled by the United Nations since 1999 and whose Albanian majority is seeking independence.
Martti Ahtisaari, a former president of Finland who is overseeing talks on the future of Kosovo, is expected to unveil his proposals for a settlement soon after the election.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/20/world/europe/20serb.html

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Somehow, I have a problem with considering a mental hospital a "time capsule"....

Yugoslavia lives on in Kosovo time capsuleFri Jan 12, 2007 7:07 PM GMT
By Matt Robinson
STIMLJE, Serbia (Reuters) - More than a decade after Yugoslavia shattered into separate countries along ethnic lines its multiculturalism survives.
In a mental institute.
The dialects and languages of the old federal state can all be heard behind the iron gates of Stimlje mental health institute in Kosovo. Some patients rant about the icons of the old days, whose legacies blight the landscape.
"The patients came here when Yugoslavia was still alive," says the director, Kujtim Xhelili. "So we have Serbs from Kosovo, from Serbia, from Vojvodina, Croats from Croatia. We have Albanians, Macedonians, Roma, Muslims from Bosnia."
The 50-year-old facility in central Kosovo bears all the hallmarks of an underfunded, Socialist-era mental hospital. But the political reference points for patients who arrived before the break-up of Yugoslavia now exist only in their minds.
http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/articlenews.aspx?type=worldNews&storyid=2007-01-12T190541Z_01_L12571668_RTRUKOC_0_UK-KOSOVO-ASYLUM.xml

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

Serbia criticises UN envoy for Kosovo

Belgrade has criticised the UN special envoy for Kosovo over reports he is going to propose what is being described as "supervised independence" for the province. Martti Ahtisaari is due to release a report on the future of the territory after elections there on January 21.

"No one in Belgrade has seen Ahtisaari in the past six months," said Serbia's Prime Minister, "and he's now talking about completed negotiations, on the basis of which he will make his proposal." Vojislav Kostunica added: "It's not clear how and with whom he's negotiated, and how he arrived at his proposal." Ethnic Albanians outnumber Serbs by 17 to one in Kosovo, which has been under UN control since 1999. Press reports indicate that Ahtisaari will make his proposals to the six-nation contact group for Kosovo on January 26.
http://www.euronews.net/create_html.php?article=399576&lng=1

Wednesday, January 03, 2007

A still-unsettled issue for the new year....
Serbia's PM Wants UN To Prevent Possible Kosovo Secession
BELGRADE (AP)--Serbia's prime minister sought support Wednesday from the United Nation's new secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, against granting independence to Kosovo, the separatist province whose future is being discussed in international talks...
Belgrade has proposed a broad autonomy for Kosovo, but the province's majority population demands complete secession.
"It is simply unacceptable and impossible that Serbia's borders be redrawn against its will," Kostunica said in his letter, a copy of which was obtained by the Associated Press.
He also said that if Kosovo - which accounts for 15% of Serbia's territory - becomes independent, it would effectively "create another Albanian state" in the Balkans, in addition to neighboring Albania. (END) Dow Jones Newswires
01-03-071328ET
Copyright (c) 2007 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
http://www.nasdaq.com/aspxcontent/NewsStory.aspx?cpath=20070103%5cACQDJON200701031328DOWJONESDJONLINE000613.htm&
Just an interesting factoid for you to digest....
Serbia opens military academy to women
BELGRADE, Serbia, Jan. 3 (UPI) -- About 20 women have enrolled in Serbia's military academy, the first time females joined the academy, army Col. Joze Sivacek said.
Women will study under the same curriculum and training program as men but will be accommodated in separate facilities, local Belgrade media reported.
Sivacek said women can enroll as cadets in military-police affairs, logistics and as pilots in the air force.
http://www.upi.com/NewsTrack/view.php?StoryID=20070103-114357-3821r