Apr 02, 2013

Kosova: Talks With Serbia Reach ‘Decisive Stage’


EU-mediated negotiations between Kosova and Serbia address the status of northern Kosova behind closed doors.

Below is an article published by The Miami Herald:

The leaders of Serbia and Kosovo are negotiating Tuesday on one of the most important issues dividing them, as Serbia strains to meet conditions for eventual membership in the European Union.

Talks between the prime ministers of the two countries have reached a "decisive stage" as the two focus on the thorny issue of the status of Serb-dominated northern Kosovo, an EU official said. The official spoke on condition of anonymity in order to discuss closed-door talks.

The talks - the eighth face-to-face session between Serbian Prime Minister Ivica Dacic and Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci - are being held under the mediation of EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton.

"Today is a historical day," said Thaci as he entered Ashton's office building Tuesday [2 April 2013] morning to begin the talks. "It is a decisive moment for Kosovo and for the region."

Kosovo, a former Serbian province, declared independence in 2008. While many countries have recognized it as an independent country, Serbia has not.

The ethnic Serbs living in northern Kosovo - up to 50,000 people - have rejected the authority of the government in Pristina, the Kosovo capital. They have created so-called parallel institutions, including hospitals and schools, all financed and supported from the Serbian capital, Belgrade.

However, in order for Serbia to join the EU - something it dearly wants to do - it must normalize relations with Kosovo. That includes not only resolving such ordinary issues as trade and border control, but also resolving the status of northern Kosovo - and whether it does or does not fall under the authority of the government in Pristina.

A spokesman for the Kosovo government said the negotiations could run on into Wednesday.

In a sign of underlying tensions, Kosovo police said unknown assailants threw a fire bomb into the offices of moderate Serb leader Oliver Ivanovic in the Serb-run part of the country. No one was in the office when the attack was launched, minutes before midnight Monday. Ivanovic backs Serbia's claim over Kosovo, but many radical Serbs think that he might work with the ethnic Albanian authorities in Pristina.