2008年2月18日星期一

Kosovo seeks recognition from the international community

根據國際法,行駛national self determination的國家需要得到足夠的recognition.目前歐洲主要大國如英,法,德等三國都表明支持獨立,意大利也應該會跟隨。17個EU國家表明會recognise,但Spain,Slovakia,Rominia,Cyprus和Russia都表明反對。這次事件會再政治和外交層面牽起怎樣的風波呢? 無論在international law或international relations兩方面,這件事都引起各界的關注。廣一點來看,可以看成是英美等大國和俄羅斯的外交對抗。這件事會否在巴爾幹半島這個歐洲的火藥庫引起新一輪的不穩定,很值得留意。令外事件也可能成為一些其他謀求獨立的地方的一個先例,對Scotland, Taiwan 和 Tibet等問題有深遠的影響。

Recognition for new Kosovo grows
Kosovo Serbs rally on their side of the main bridge in Mitrovica

Recognition of Kosovo's independence has gained momentum with the US, France, the UK, Germany and Italy all pledging their support.

EU states meeting in Brussels agreed that Kosovo should not set a precedent for other states, with Spain and others concerned about separatism.

Serbia has recalled its ambassador to the US in protest at recognition.

Its president is preparing to ask the UN Security Council to condemn the declaration of independence as illegal.

Boris Tadic has gone to New York to ask the Security Council to annul the independence declaration and Belgrade is counting on Russia to veto Kosovo joining the UN as a new nation.

In Belgrade, about 10,000 students marched in protest, and Serb enclaves inside Kosovo also saw anti-independence rallies.

Serbian security forces were driven out of Kosovo in 1999 after a Nato bombing campaign aimed at halting the violent repression of ethnic Albanian separatists.

The province has been under UN administration and Nato protection since then.

Pledges of support

Monday saw Washington formally recognise Kosovo as a "sovereign and independent state".

STANCE ON RECOGNITION
For: Germany, Italy, France, UK, Austria, US, Turkey, Albania, Afghanistan
Against: Russia, Spain, Romania, Slovakia, Cyprus

In Brussels, pledges of recognition came after Monday's meeting of foreign ministers of EU states.

UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband said a desire to establish a unified position after "the disunity of the 1990s" had dominated the meeting in Brussels.

As for the UK's formal recognition, he added:

"The plan is to do it this evening and diplomatic relations will then be established... and in the course of the next days and weeks all the items of full diplomatic representation will be put into place."

KOSOVO PROFILE
Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci with the new Kosovo flag
Population about two million
Majority ethnic Albanian; 10% Serb
Under UN control since Nato drove out Serb forces in 1999
2,000-strong EU staff to take over from UN after independence
Nato to stay to provide security

After a lot of soul-searching, the EU forged a semblance of unity, BBC European Affairs correspondent Oana Lungescu writes.

It adopted a compromise proposal from Spain, one of several countries which argue that Kosovo's independence is a breach of international law and will boost separatists everywhere.

To ease those concerns, the EU's statement says that Kosovo does not set a precedent and leaves it up to each member state to decide on their future relations.

Most EU countries led by the biggest among them will take this as a green light for recognition, our correspondent notes.

Some of the EU states which did not recognise independence have experienced separatist unrest of their own, such as Spain with its Basque region and Cyprus with its Greek-Turkish division.

The EU earlier agreed to send about 2,000 police, justice and civil administration officials to oversee Kosovo and help develop the province's institutions.

'False state'

Russia's parliament passed a motion on Monday condemning the declaration of independence.

HAVE YOUR SAY
This is an ugly victory for demographic warfare
SEQ, London

As a permanent member of the UN Security Council, Russia can block Kosovo's entry into the organisation as a sovereign state, and it said on Sunday that Kosovo's declaration should be null and void.

Serbia's interior ministry filed criminal charges on Monday against Kosovo Albanian leaders instrumental in proclaiming independence.

It accused Prime Minister Hashim Thaci and two others of proclaiming a "false state" on Serbian territory.

Chanting and playing music, students marched in Belgrade under a huge banner reading "Kosovo is a part of Serbia and Serbia is a part of the world".

The scenes were in stark contrast to riots that took place in the capital a few hours earlier when a few hundred people, mainly football hooligans, went on the rampage clashing with police and stoning embassies, the BBC's Nick Hawton reports.

Some acts of violence were reported in Kosovo itself after Sunday's declaration.

A hand grenade was thrown at a UN court building in the divided town of Mitrovica, and a UN car was reported to have been destroyed in the nearby village of Zubin Potok.

Map showing distribution of ethnic Albanians and Serbs

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