Kosovo Talks
February 9, 2007
"We will start the negotiations on the 21st of this month," UN deputy envoy in the talks Albert Rohan told journalists in the Kosovo capital Pristina on Friday.
Serbian President Boris Tadic on Thursday asked the United Nations office dealing with Kosovo's status, UNOSEK, to postpone the talks originally planned for Feb. 13 so that Belgrade could have time to form a new parliament and Kosovo negotiating team following elections last month.
Asked if the new date was final, Rohan, the deputy to the special UN envoy to the Kosovo talks, Martti Ahtisaari, said, "It is the word of the president (Tadic), and we have no reason to doubt that."
"We will finish them (the talks) as planned before the end of March," Rohan added after meeting with Kosovo's ethnic Albanian president Fatmir Sejdiu.
Sejdiu, for his part, said that Pristina accepted UNOSEK's decision even though it had reservations about any further delays to resolving Kosovo's status.
"We said that the delay won't have positive effects and this delay is a sign of understanding from UNOSEK," Sejdiu told reporters. "We insist on fast dynamics. Delaying the process will not help."
Final settlement coming soon
UN mediator Ahtisaari said Thursday that he expects the final status of the Albanian-majority Serbian province to be settled well before the German presidency of the European Union ends in late June.
Asked if he expected the contentious issue to be settled by the end of June, when the six-month German presidency is due to end, Ahtisaari said, "I hope it is solved much earlier than that."
He stressed that once he finalizes his package and turns it over to the UN Security Council by the end of March, "it is out my hand. ... I expect them (the council members) to do their job."
Constructive amendments
Last week, Ahtisaari unveiled a settlement plan offering self-governance to the disputed province. Although it does not specifically mention independence, the plan is opposed by Serbian leaders.
"I am prepared to consider constructive amendments and I am willing to integrate compromise solutions that parties might reach," he said. "I want to give both parties the chance once again to make their points. I will then finalize my settlement proposal for submission to the Security Council."
Asked whether his plan amounted to independence in all but name for Kosovo, Ahtisaari replied that "both parties have drawn the conclusion on the basis of this package that ... independence (for Kosovo) will be supervised by the international community."
Though formally still part of Serbia, Kosovo has been run by a UN mission since 1999, after a NATO bombing campaign drove out Serbian forces over a crackdown against ethnic Albanian civilians.
A NATO-led force has overseen peace in the province ever since.