Kosovo partition likely: Russia
Saturday, September 1, 2007
RUSSIA will accept a partition of Serbia's Kosovo province if that is the solution agreed by Belgrade and Kosovo's ethnic Albanian majority, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said yesterday.
Asked if Russia would agree to partition, Lavrov said: "Negotiations are continuing with the mediation of the troika of Russia, the European Union and the United States. The aim is to help the sides reach an agreement, and we will support whatever it is on which they reach agreement."
The province, part of Serbia but with a majority ethnic Albanian population, has been run by the United Nations and Nato for the past eight years. Kosovo Albanians want full independence, but Belgrade has refused to give them that.
Russia, a Serbian ally, opposes a Western-backed plan to grant Kosovo independence from Belgrade. The troika format was created after Moscow had blocked the independence plan in the United Nations.
"The aim of the (troika) mediators is to help the sides to reach agreement .... and not to force a particular solution on them," Lavrov told reporters at a news briefing in Moscow.
Partition of Kosovo would most likely involve splitting off a northern slice of the province where a large part of the ethnic Serbian minority live.
Wolfgang Ischinger, the EU's mediator to the troika, speaking at the opening of a fresh round of talks in Vienna, said partition has never been on the troika's agenda.
Earlier, Ischinger had said a partition could be contemplated if both sides agreed to it.
Kosovo Albanians have said if there is no deal agreed on the province's future status, they will declare independence unilaterally.Reuters
Asked if Russia would agree to partition, Lavrov said: "Negotiations are continuing with the mediation of the troika of Russia, the European Union and the United States. The aim is to help the sides reach an agreement, and we will support whatever it is on which they reach agreement."
The province, part of Serbia but with a majority ethnic Albanian population, has been run by the United Nations and Nato for the past eight years. Kosovo Albanians want full independence, but Belgrade has refused to give them that.
Russia, a Serbian ally, opposes a Western-backed plan to grant Kosovo independence from Belgrade. The troika format was created after Moscow had blocked the independence plan in the United Nations.
"The aim of the (troika) mediators is to help the sides to reach agreement .... and not to force a particular solution on them," Lavrov told reporters at a news briefing in Moscow.
Partition of Kosovo would most likely involve splitting off a northern slice of the province where a large part of the ethnic Serbian minority live.
Wolfgang Ischinger, the EU's mediator to the troika, speaking at the opening of a fresh round of talks in Vienna, said partition has never been on the troika's agenda.
Earlier, Ischinger had said a partition could be contemplated if both sides agreed to it.
Kosovo Albanians have said if there is no deal agreed on the province's future status, they will declare independence unilaterally.Reuters


