Showing posts with label Europe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Europe. Show all posts

Monday, April 02, 2007

The Eurovision

This is the Eurovision semifinal preview.

My opinion on all the songs competing:

Best song: Ukraine
Best song by non-crossdressing comic: Germany
Most hilarious song: Ukraine
Best Balkan song: they are all good.
Ranking of Balkan songs if I am forced at gunpoint: Croatia, Albania/Serbia/Bosnia, Macedonia, Slovenia, Montenegro etc.
Best song by a non-recognized-soon-to-be-independent country: Kosova
Best Mediterranean: Portugal/Turkey
Best Nordic: Sweden
Best East Europan: How many times I have to say it.
Best metal ballad: Iceland
Best rock ballad: Croatia
Best rock: Austria
Best rapping: Israel
Best love song: Hungary
Best gothic: Slovenia
Best message: Macedonia
Best song promoting the Balkans: Macedonia
Best song promoting a country: Georgia/Albania
Most political song: Israel
Hottest chick: Macedonia
Least charming chick: Serbia
Best looking SoB: Austria
Best dressed singer: Austria
Worst dressed singer: Albania
Coolest band: Israel
Most pathetic: Norway/UK/Switzerland

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Serbs Urged to Accept Kosovo Plan to Gain ‘European Future’

Capital Interview: Serbs Urged to Accept Kosovo Plan to Gain ‘European Future’

Interviewee:
Daniel Fried, Assistant Secretary of State, U.S. State Department
Interviewer:
Robert McMahon, Deputy Editor

February 6, 2007

Daniel Fried UN envoy Martti Ahtisaari has proposed a plan allowing for phased independence for the Serbian province of Kosovo, which a number of Western policymakers hope will settle the last remaining Balkan security problem. Leading Serbian officials have denounced the plan but were still undecided on negotiating tactics amid the formation of a new government.

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried, a top official responsible for American policy in the region, says despite the official protests, Serbian opinion is “radically shifted” on Kosovo’s independence. He urged Belgrade to take advantage of UN-brokered talks this month to shape how Kosovo will be governed before the matter advances to the UN Security Council. Without Belgrade’s engagement, Fried says, “Serbia exists in kind of an outer orbit in sullen isolation, and nobody wants that.”

The UN plan for Kosovo has created a fairly strong reaction in Serbia. They’re asking for more time to consider it as they get their government together. But with the current climate in Serbia, how can this succeed?

Well, I’m happy to tell you that your news is just slightly out of date. The Serbian press reaction is not uniformly hostile. And I refer you to a fascinating major piece that appeared in yesterday’s edition of Politika, [a column by Politika foreign correspondent Bosko Jaksic] which is not a marginal but mainstream daily. In fact it is the leading Serbian daily—has been since before World War I—which said basically “it is time for us to join Europe and get over Kosovo.” The reaction to that piece this morning was mixed; in other words, not uniformly hostile. My point is that Serbian opinion is radically shifted. It’s obviously very divided. But many people, including those who don’t follow this, assume that Serbian opinion is what the radicals—that is, the extremist nationalists—want it to be, and that’s not necessarily the case.

Although a lot of people are responding to outgoing Prime Minister [Vojislav] Kostunica’s comments about not having relations with countries that recognize an independent Kosovo.

Well, yes he said that. And he also last week was saying they would not sit down at all with [UN envoy Martti] Ahtisaari until there was a new government. However, today apparently they said other things and suggested that no, they have a slightly different approach and once it convenes, the parliament may give them a mandate to negotiate. So this is a very different position from the one that we were faced with a few days ago, and it’s a more hopeful one. Now, does this mean we know what the final Serbian position is either on procedures or ultimate outcomes? No, we don’t. But it is a mistake to take one set of Serbian positions and then expect them not to change. They’ve already changed. And they’ve changed significantly within a few days.

So is it a matter of, perhaps, ripe timing? The notion of conditional independence has been out there for quite some time.

What [Ahtisaari] has done is come up with a very strong plan, which will, among other things, give strong, enforceable guarantees to the Serbian community, including the Serb majority communities both north of the Ibar [River in northern Kosovo], that’s the Mitrovica area, and south of the Ibar, that’s where two-thirds of the Kosovar Serbs actually live, strong guarantees to the Serbian monasteries and their lands, including protection zones to make sure that their lands are not encroached upon, and other guarantees which make a kind of mono-ethnic state or an extreme nationalistic state much more difficult if not impossible. Moreover, the international community, according to Ahtisaari’s plan, will remain in Kosovo for a considerable period of time after [final] status [is set]. Now, this is not a take-it-or-leave-it plan. Ahtisaari’s been very clear he wants input from the Kosovar Albanians, the Kosovar Serbs with whom he has met, and the Serbian government. And we have confidence in Ahtisaari. But it is also clear that the status quo is not sustainable, and we cannot go back to the situation of 1999. And Ahtisaariwith our full support and the full backing of our European allies and so far, actually, of Russia as well—is looking for a fair solution.

You mentioned the input from Kosovo Serbs and the Serbian community, but really, in terms of all the safeguards you’ve outlined, what more could they ask for that could be obliged? If they came up with a partition plan for the north, for example?

Well, we don’t support partition, and the Contact Group, which includes the United States, the European Union, German, Britain, France, Italy and Russia, has rejected partition. Partition is a bad idea. We understand that a lot of the Serbs who live north of the Ibar are attracted by this, but partition is a bad idea. We have certainly accepted the notion that a nationalist agenda for Kosovo, no matter whose nationalism you’re talking about, is also unacceptable. But there may be suggestions that the Serbs want to make about the municipalities, about security arrangements, and it’s up to them to engage in this process finally. Ahtisaari’s been trying to get engagement for a year. He hasn’t succeeded. And now at this very late stage it is not too late, I’m happy to say. And we hope Serbia and Kosovar Serbs sit down. I think it’s important that Serbia let the Kosovar Serbs sit down. That’s been a problem. And the Kosovar Albanians have already indicated their willingness, in fact their eagerness, to engage with Ahtisaari.

Now one of the plans outlined calls for an international official, appointed by the EU I believe, to have the power to replace troublesome officials and so forth, echoing the Bosnian international high representative. Is the Bosnian model generally seen as a successful one?

The Bosnian model is reasonably successful, though not complete. We’re not happy with some of the constitutional arrangements of Bosnia that have prevailed. And we’re encouraging the Bosnians themselves to make Bosnia a little more functional as a government, as a country. But Bosnia has worked out reasonably well. It is far more peaceful. The economy is somewhat more developed. There have been more returnees than people expected. And certain institutions like the military have really changed. It is true that Ahtisaari’s proposals envision a period of international supervision over a post-status Kosovo. The Kosovars have accepted this principle. It also envisions a continued presence of KFOR, the NATO-led security operation that has maintained the peace these many years, with one terrible outbreak of violence in March 2004, but it has been generally a successful operation. And this means that the extremist Kosovar position of unconditional, immediate independence and presumably a nationalist flavor to that independence will not be realized.

Getting back to the Contact Group, obviously Russia’s opinion is important.

Well, the Contact Group supported Ahtisaari’s mission. Russia has its own views and they should speak for themselves. I’m not going to speak for Russia, but we’re in close touch with our Russian colleagues about this.

Speaking for the U.S., though, are you troubled by a looming Russian blockade of this in the UN Security Council?

I think it is certainly in everybody’s interest, including Russia’s interest, that there be a peaceful, sustainable settlement in the Balkans. It is in no one’s interest to provoke instability. And I hope that Russia behaves in a way that allows a settlement to take shape that is respectful and protective of the Serbian population—that’s critically important, and we agree that there have to be strong guarantees put in place—but also respects the interests and ultimately the will of the 95 percent of the population that is ethnic Albanian. And I think we’re discussing this with the Russians. They have the ability to play a very constructive role, and their Balkan experts are very skillful and knowledgeable people.

Russia last year raised the point that independence for Kosovo may set a precedent for breakaway regions like those in Georgia, such as Abkhazia and so forth. Is there concern of creating this type of precedent?

Well, separatists may claim this as a precedent, but separatists have existed for a long time. The fact is Kosovo is not a precedent for other conflicts at all. It just isn’t. Kosovo is a unique situation, because NATO was forced to intervene to stop and then reverse ethnic cleansing. The Security Council authorized effective Kosovo to be ruled effectively by the United Nations, not by Serbia. UN Council Resolution 1244 also stated that Kosovo’s final status would be the subject of negotiation. Those conditions do not pertain to any of the conflicts that are usually brought up in this context. It’s not applicable to Abkhazia, or South Ossetia, or Transdniester. Nor is it applicable to Chechnya or to any separatist conflicts in Europe.

Why is it important to get this settled now?

Well, we found out, and we found out the hard way, that war in the Balkans was nothing we could simply draw a red line around and ignore. That’s where we started in 1991 and 1992 as Yugoslavia broke up. We found that security in Europe required us to go in and stabilize the situation in the former Yugoslavia, first to help end the war in Bosnia, and of course, [Richard] Holbrooke [former U.S. special envoy] played a major and laudable role in bringing about the solution at Dayton. In 1999, Madeleine Albright led NATO, and NATO allies contributed to a campaign which forced [former Yugoslav President Slobodan] Milosevic’s predatory armies out of Kosovo. And the fact is that security to Europe is important to American security. That isn’t theory. We found that to be true in practice.

So the Balkans can still be the ‘soft underbelly’?

Well, metaphors. Take your pick. If Kosovo can be resolved, the last major unsolved issue of European security will be done. And then the Balkans can become sort of the new Central Europe; that is, an area rapidly converging with Europe. Serbia needs a European future. Otherwise, Serbia exists in kind of an outer orbit in sullen isolation, and nobody wants that. The Serbian people deserve a European future. And to get there, Kosovo has to be resolved. So if we can resolve Kosovo this year, all of the Balkans can start moving into Europe, and we will have fixed a major problem in wars throughout the twentieth century and the threat of war in the twenty first. This is important. And Europe and the United States are determined to see this through in a way which is respectful both of our security interests and our values, and we have an opportunity to do so.

To come back to your original point, you’re heartened by seeing some signs that [Serbs] see it in their own interest to now embrace this, or if not embrace it to accept it and accept what it ultimately means for Euro-Atlantic ties?

Well, I don’t want to exaggerate Serbian willingness to engage seriously. My point was that they are now debating what their stance should be. After basically a long time, a year or more, of simply denial and refusal to engage, they’re now debating this. And I think wise Serbs understand that nationalism has brought nothing but ruin and misery to Serbia. And they’re looking down this pit again and listening to the same tired voices of nationalism make the same tired arguments. And some Serbs, at least, reject this. I have said before that nationalism is like cheap alcohol. First, it makes you drunk, then it makes you blind, and then it kills you. And I think the Serbs have woken up to that, or at least some of them. And they deserve a better future. I lived in Serbia for three years. I like Serbs. I want them to find a European future. They deserve a European future. It’s up to them, though. It’s not up to us.

Capital Interview: Serbs Urged to Accept Kosovo Plan to Gain ‘European Future’ - Council on Foreign Relations

Friday, January 26, 2007

Kosovo Wins Support For Split From Serbia

U.S., European Allies Agree to Secession With Ongoing International Supervision

Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, January 26, 2007; Page A10

Nearly eight years after NATO warplanes intervened in a bitter ethnic conflict between Serbs and rebellious Kosovo Albanians in the former Yugoslavia, the United States and its European allies have agreed to support Kosovo's permanent secession from Serbia under continuing international supervision, according to senior U.S. and European officials.

The decision is likely to lead, possibly as early as this summer, to the formal creation of a new Connecticut-size country in southeastern Europe with membership in the United Nations and, eventually, its own army, the officials said. But a foreign diplomat posted in the capital would retain authority to fire officials and rescind legislation deemed divisive, while leaving routine matters of government to local control.

Under the plan, NATO troops would continue to patrol the new state to ensure peace and help protect minorities, but would gradually withdraw as Kosovo neared membership in NATO and the European Union.

Putting Kosovo on a path toward eventual full independence is meant to close a chapter of Balkan history marked by war, political upheaval, widespread loss of life and the destruction of billions of dollars' worth of property.

Historically a province of Serbia, Kosovo has been run by the United Nations since 1999. That year, a 78-day air campaign by NATO forced out the Serb-dominated Yugoslav army, ending its brutal war against guerrillas fighting for self-rule for the province's ethnic Albanian majority. Many members of Kosovo's Serb minority have since fled Albanian retribution.

The new plan, a culmination of lengthy diplomatic consultations between nervous continental Europeans and more enthusiastic Americans and British, is meant in part to alleviate continuing intense pressure from the Albanians for independence. Western officials fear that without official action on the issue, new violence might break out this summer.

Officials say that finally allowing Kosovo to stand mostly on its own also has a major economic impetus: They anticipate it would open the door to private investment, new Western lending and aid, supplanting more than $2.5 billion already poured into the province by foreigners since 1999 with only a slight impact on a faltering and highly corrupt economy.

Kosovo has Europe's largest deposits of lignite coal. Economic planners hope that the new state might build power plants and emerge as a primary supplier of electricity to its Balkan neighbors.

Some diplomats caution that achievement of consensus by the Western powers might not be the end of the tale: Serbia's leaders have persistently and heatedly campaigned against any forced separation of one of their country's provinces. Many Serbs now look toward Moscow to protect their interests with a veto when the matter is presented to the U.N. Security Council for a vote, likely this spring.

Moscow has privately hinted, however, that it is prepared to support the plan in exchange for U.S. and European acquiescence to the formal secession of two Russian-backed regions of Georgia. Washington and its allies oppose that Russian bid, and officials said this week they are uncertain how quickly this diplomatic dance will play out.

The eventual formal redrawing of Serbia's border by foreign powers has been widely expected since 1999. Nonetheless, the prospect of Kosovo's independence has sown anxiety among some of Kosovo's ethnically divided Balkan neighbors and even caused hesitation in Spain, where unresolved secessionist pressures persist in the Basque region.

Moreover, diplomats say no Western nation is eager to see Serbia so alienated by an imposed Western solution that it is driven more deeply into Russia's arms and excluded from eventual embrace by NATO and the European Union.

But senior Western officials affirmed at a meeting in New York in September that Kosovo's status is ripe for settlement, and diplomats are slated to gather today in Vienna to put final touches on the plan, for presentation to Serbian and Kosovo Albanian delegations Feb. 2.

Senior U.S. officials, who asked not to be named because they were not authorized to discuss details of the sensitive plan, conceded the moment is politically awkward: Serbian parties are struggling to form a new government after elections Sunday in which nationalists won the largest number of votes. At the same time, many Kosovo Albanians are angry that their most influential politician -- former rebel commander Ramush Haradinaj -- is slated to leave shortly for The Hague, for trial on war crimes charges.

But U.S. and European diplomats say former Finnish president Martti Ahtisaari, a special envoy of the U.N. secretary general, is ready after 14 months of discussions to make the plunge. He will recommend that Kosovo no longer be governed by the United Nations under a 1999 Security Council resolution that pledged to uphold the "principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity" of Yugoslavia, a nation that no longer exists.

The diplomats said withdrawal of that U.N. resolution would allow Kosovo's estimated 1.7 million Albanians, 90 percent of the population, to declare independence from Serbia. The United States, Britain and Albania would quickly recognize that step but with the continuing international controls.

Although officials in Serbia are expected to protest loudly, their government "lost control of Kosovo in the 1990s. It was theirs to keep or lose, and they lost it. We're dealing now with the aftermath of actions by Slobodan Milosevic," a senior U.S. official said this week, referring to the late Yugoslav president. Likewise, diplomats believe Albanian leaders will publicly clamor for full independence but accept this package as the best they will get for now.

Germany, which holds the rotating E.U. presidency through June, has insisted that no decision be taken without Russian approval. But its diplomats also oppose striking a deal with Moscow to support the secessions from Georgia and permanent separation of the Transnistria region from Moldova.

The sources said Ahtisaari is likely to recommend establishment of a new U.N. mission in Kosovo under the direction of a longtime friend, Dutch diplomat Peter Feith. He previously headed a U.N. monitoring mission in the Indonesian province of Aceh and worked on ethnic conflicts in Bosnia and Macedonia.

The aim of the new mission would be to help the majority Albanian population build a country where Serbs and others "can live a dignified, safe and economically sustainable life," Ahtisaari told the 46-country Council of Europe on Wednesday. Total unemployment in the province is estimated at 35 to 50 percent but is higher among Serbs.

Under Ahtisaari's plan, Feith -- whose low-key title would be international civilian representative -- would have what one U.S. official called "edict power" to remove officials or invalidate legislation, similar to the authority of the high representative who still helps govern Bosnia under terms of the 1995 Dayton peace accords. Feith's deputy is expected to be an American, and his staff would number about 100.

A separate international "rule of law" monitoring mission, under the control of the European Union, would number roughly 1,000 and exercise authority over Kosovo's troubled local police force and corrupt local judiciary. Officials said the Kosovo Protection Corps, a shadow local military force, would probably be disbanded and replaced by a NATO-trained civil defense force that would form the nucleus of an eventual Western-allied army.

Kosovo's Serbs, estimated to number 114,000, would be given control of a handful of new municipalities sprinkled across the territory. There, they could draw on money from Serbia to help finance their own health clinics and schools. Serbian religious sites, repeatedly targeted by Albanian extremists, would gain new protections, and Serb lawmakers would have the right to invoke a "vital interests" claim to block noxious legislation, officials said.

Kosovo Wins Support For Split From Serbia - washingtonpost.com

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Status resolution approaches


BBC Bulgaria
UN proposal lets Kosovo access world bodies - sources
Scotsman - 3 hours ago
PRISTINA, Serbia (Reuters) - A UN proposal on the future of Kosovo to be presented on Friday recommends the breakaway Serbian province be granted the right to join international bodies, political and diplomatic sources said.


US to push for quick resolution on Kosovo's future following ...
International Herald Tribune - 12 hours ago
WASHINGTON: Despite gains by ultranationalists in Serbian elections, the United States is looking for international negotiators to settle within months whether Kosovo, the restive Serbian province, will be recognized as independent.


ECIKS.org
Local Kosovo producers face problems
ECIKS.org - 3 hours ago
Prishtina, 22 january 2007 - KTV reported that following the EU membership of Bulgaria and Rumania, Kosovo producers are facing great difficulties as they have to wait several days in order to obtain a visa for Bulgaria, which is considered to be ...

Albania's economy 61.4% free
FreshPlaza - 2 hours ago
Albania is ranked 30th in a list of 41 European countries in the 2007 Index of Economic Freedom published in Washington by The Wall Street Journal and the Heritage Foundation.

Albania and the EU: Strong support, little understanding
Southeast European Times - 2 hours ago
The agreement, considered a first step towards EU membership, governs ties between the EU and Albania. It focuses mainly on enhanced political and economic co-operation as well as the creation of a free-trade area within the next ten years.

Montenegro in EU in 8 years
Visit Montenegro - 8 hours ago
He marked that in this phase joining of Montenegro in EU no one of the politicians will give precise time frames about the term of the termination of that process, which is understandable, because that process depends on a lot of factors, ...


The Observer Blog
EU, NATO call for pro-Western coalition government in Serbia
Southeast European Times - 2 hours ago
With preliminary results showing that democratic forces will dominate in Serbia's new parliament, top EU and NATO officials called on Monday (January 22nd) for the speedy formation of a government committed to the country's Euro-Atlantic integration.

Euro Welcomed to Slovenia with Fanfare
Slovenia Business Week - Jan 22, 2007
Slovenia ushered in the euro with a high-profile ceremony befitting of the keynote speakers' words about a historic event for the country as well as the whole of the EU.


Canada.com
In Turkey, mourners pay respects to slain journalist
Baltimore Sun - Jan 22, 2007
ISTANBUL, Turkey // Tens of thousands of people marched in a funeral procession for a slain ethnic Armenian journalist who had angered Turkish nationalists -- an extraordinary outpouring of support for a more liberal Turkey where people are not killed ...

EU Sets Deadline for Turkey to Open Up Its Ports
Journal Chrétien - 22 hours ago
The EU believes that a solution to the Turkish-Cypriot dispute that threatens to derail membership talks for Turkey to join the 25-member bloc is still possible with help from the United Nations.

Monday, January 22, 2007

Balkans Diary

Balkans Diary

Jan 22nd 2007
From Economist.com

A week on the road with a roving correspondent

Monday

As the bus from north Mitrovica pulled into the station in Belgrade, on time to the very minute that it was supposed to arrive, six hours after leaving Kosovo, I felt vindicated. "Ha," I thought, "it just goes to show…." This region has problems aplenty, and one of them is the mental time lag between the reality on the ground and the way people outside continue to think about it.

I am here for the Serbian elections, and over the past week I have also been in Bosnia and Kosovo. None is so far away from the other, of course, but still, getting from A to B to C just ain't what it used to be. But I am getting ahead of myself. more...

Europe | Balkans Diary | Economist.com


Sunday, January 21, 2007

A telling election

Serbia

A telling election

Jan 21st 2007 | BELGRADE
From Economist.com

Serbs are going to the polls. The outcome matters in the Balkans and beyond


Reuters

FOR a small country in the Balkans, Serbia has been receiving a fair amount of attention from people in high places of late. In the week or so before elections on Sunday January 21st the leaders or foreign ministers of Greece, Romania, Sweden and Slovakia have visited. The United States Senate passed a resolution on the poll and messages from top European Union officials in Brussels have flooded in. The reason is clear. The results will affect the entire region.

The decision of Serbia’s 6.6m voters will have an impact on Bosnia and Kosovo, and that in turn will affect what happens in the rest of the Balkans. If memories of the disastrous Yugoslav wars of the 1990s are not reason enough for foreign leaders to be concerned about what happens then a glance at a map may be. The recent accession of Romania and Bulgaria to the EU leaves the western Balkans as an enclave within it.

In theory Serbian voters have a clear choice between the extreme nationalist Radicals and a loose cluster of pro-reform, pro-European parties dubbed the “Democratic Bloc”. In practice it is not so simple. At the moment, the largest party in parliament is the Radical Party, led by Vojislav Seselj, who is on trial at the UN’s war crimes tribunal in The Hague. Its nationalist supporters have been joined by large numbers of the former middle classes, whose status and jobs have been destroyed over the past 17 years by war and sanctions, and now by the strains of economic transition.

The Democratic Bloc includes the party of Vojislav Kostunica, the current prime minister, and that of Boris Tadic, Serbia’s president. Mr Kostunica is a conservative nationalist who has little love for Mr Tadic. But the result may yet force both to hold their noses and do business together.

Most recent opinion polls suggest that the Radicals will win nearly a third of the vote, Mr Tadic's party perhaps a quarter and Mr Kostunica's, including a main ally, perhaps a fifth. So Mr Kostunica may hold the balance of power. He is unlikely to enter into a coalition with the Radicals but, depending on how the votes fall, his price for a teaming up with Mr Tadic's party is likely to be the premiership. If no coalition is formed then fresh elections will have to be called.

Serbia's electoral calculus matters to the rest of Europe because on February 2nd the country will be presented with a UN-devised plan for Kosovo. Since 1999 this overwhelmingly Albanian-inhabited territory has been under UN jurisdiction while technically remaining part of Serbia. The plan will, in effect, prescribe independence for Kosovo, an outcome opposed by all Serbian leaders. If and when this comes about, reactions will vary.

The Radicals care far more about Kosovo than about Serbia's future within Europe. At the other end of the scale, although Mr Tadic's spokesmen do not say so publicly, if Kosovo is lost, his party will not seek to cause havoc in the region by isolating Kosovo and trying to sabotage resurgent regional co-operation. Mr Kostunica's position lies somewhere in between.

Mr Kostunica's government has succeeded in getting Russia to say it opposes independence. If Russia vetoes the UN plan in the Security Council, which it might, violence could break out. And, though flouting international law, many countries will recognise Kosovo's independence anyway. If this happens Bosnia will feel the effects. Serb leaders there are determined to use Kosovo's independence as both a precedent and an example for the secessionist hopes of their own. Mr Kostunica would probably support this; Mr Tadic would not. Either way, uncertainty and upheaval would be bad for the region and thus for Europe as a whole.

Serbia | A telling election | Economist.com


Friday, January 19, 2007

Road to Rugova


Dangerous, originally uploaded by _BeCks_.

This is pretty amazing.

Way to independence

AP Interview: Kosovo's president counts on U.N. plan to pave way to independence
The Associated Press

Published: January 19, 2007

Photo

Kosovo's president Fatmir Sejdiu speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in Kosovo capital Pristina on Friday, Jan. 19, 2007. Kosovo's president said Friday that the upcoming U.N proposal for the future of Kosovo will pave the way to Kosovo's independence.(AP Photo/Visar Kryeziu)

PRISTINA, Serbia: Kosovo's president said Friday he was counting on a U.N. proposal for resolving the province's disputed status to pave a way for its independence from Serbia.

The proposal, to be presented within weeks, should offer "direct help in the process of defining Kosovo's final status, President Fatmir Sejdiu told The Associated Press in an interview at his office in the provincial capital, Pristina.

"We insist ... this package provide a clear formula for Kosovo's future, considering that Kosovo's people have no other determination but the determination for independence," Sejdiu said.

U.N. envoy Martti Ahtisaari — who mediated yearlong talks between Serb leaders and representatives of Kosovo's majority ethnic Albanian population — is expected to make his proposal on the province's future shortly after Sunday's parliamentary elections in Serbia.

The talks touched on issues of minority rights, security and community representation, but failed to resolve Kosovo's status, as leaders in Belgrade insisted the province be given autonomy but remain within Serb borders.

Kosovo has been administered by the U.N. since 1999, when a NATO air war halted a Serb crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatists.

EU diplomats in Brussels and other officials in Kosovo said they expected Ahtisaari, a former Finnish president, to recommend limited sovereignty for Kosovo, eventually leading to full independence.

The plan also is expected to call for continued supervision by international presence with executive and corrective powers over laws and government decisions. NATO is set to keep troops in Kosovo for several years.

Ahtisaari's proposal must go to the U.N. Security Council for approval.

Sejdiu said it was expected to lead to a new U.N. resolution that would "open the main gate leading to recognition of Kosovo as an independent state."

Ethnic Albanian leaders have said a continued international presence is necessary after Kosovo's status is resolved.

"This brings a new concept on the issue of sovereignty in this phase of development," Sejdiu said. "In this period, Kosovo wants this international help."

AP Interview: Kosovo's president counts on U.N. plan to pave way to independence - International Herald Tribune

Thursday, January 18, 2007

What happened to Greater Albania?

Albania and Kosovo

What happened to Greater Albania?

Jan 18th 2007 | PRISTINA AND TIRANA
From The Economist print edition

Nationalism is not nationality


SOON after Serbia's parliamentary election on January 21st, Martti Ahtisaari, a former Finnish president asked by the United Nations to produce a plan for the future of Kosovo, will present his ideas. Since 1999 Kosovo has been under UN jurisdiction. Technically it is part of Serbia, but 90% of its 2m people are ethnic Albanians who want full independence. Mr Ahtisaari's plan will suggest that Kosovo becomes independent, but only with conditions. One is clear: Kosovo will unite neither with Albania nor with Albanian-inhabited parts of Macedonia.

In the 1990s, when the old Yugoslavia collapsed in blood, Serbs and Croats tried to carve out a Greater Serbia and a Greater Croatia. Many Serbs feel that it is thus only a matter of time before Albanians seek a Greater Albania. Yet neither in Kosovo nor in Albania have politicians advocating union ever made headway. A poll in Kosovo in 2005 found that whereas more than 90% backed independence, fewer than 10% wanted union with Albania. This points to a conclusion that Albanian nationalists hate: younger Albanians in Kosovo have developed a Kosovar identity of their own. It is not that they do not feel Albanian; rather that they see no contradiction in feeling Kosovar as well.

Over the next few months this debate will intensify, not least because Kosovo will need a flag. Today Kosovo Albanians use Albania's; but if Kosovo becomes independent, it will need its own. Prominent in the discussion will be Migjen Kelmendi, who edits a paper written in Kosovo's Albanian dialect, as opposed to the standard literary form. He says that when Kosovo was oppressed by Serbia, “I had to identify with Albanianism.” Now, he feels proud about being a Kosovar as well.

The difference between Serbs and Croats on the one hand, and Albanians on the other, is that most Serbs and Croats lived in one country until 1991. Since the end of Ottoman rule in 1912 Albanians never have, and so they have grown apart. Politicians in Albania have never shown much interest in their kinsmen outside the country. With independence in sight, Kosovo's leaders have no intention of submerging their new state into another.

Albanian nationalists generally dislike the term “Greater Albania”, preferring to talk about “ethnic Albania”. This covers not just Albania, Kosovo and western Macedonia, but parts of Serbia and Montenegro too. Few Albanians, however, are interested in fashioning a new state out of this land. For most, joining the European Union is a far more pressing concern.

In any case, especially between Kosovo and Macedonia, a quarter of whose 2m people are Albanians, politicians and academics, students, businessmen—and criminals—all move around as if they lived in one country. A Macedonian Albanian, Teuta Arifi, argues that Albanians should emulate German-speakers, who have built separate identities in Germany, Switzerland and Austria while continuing to belong to the same German culture.

A pan-Albanian market of 6m consumers, is slowly emerging. But in terms of business there is some way to go. In 2005 Kosovo's exports to Albania were a mere €5.2m ($6.5m), and Albania did not even rank among its top ten importers.

Albania and Kosovo | What happened to Greater Albania? | Economist.com


Albanian Family Honored for Helping Jews

By MARCUS FRANKLIN
The Associated Press
Thursday, January 18, 2007; 2:16 PM

NEW YORK -- World War II was over, and Anna Kohen, then a small child, was walking with her mother in Vlora, Albania, when a Muslim woman ran toward them, crying and calling her mother by an unfamiliar name.

The women hugged and cried. Later, her mother explained that the woman was from a village where she, Kohen's father and other Jews had hidden during the Nazi occupation before Kohen was born. To protect themselves, Kohen's mother and father had taken Muslim names.

Albanian ambassador to the United Nations, Adrian Neritani speaks to audience during an awards ceremony at the Anti-Defamation League in New York Wednesday, Jan. 17, 2007. The Anti-Defamation League posthumously honored a Muslim Albanian man and his son for protecting six Jewish families from the Nazi's during World War II.  (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)

Albanian ambassador to the United Nations, Adrian Neritani speaks to audience during an awards ceremony at the Anti-Defamation League in New York Wednesday, Jan. 17, 2007. The Anti-Defamation League posthumously honored a Muslim Albanian man and his son for protecting six Jewish families from the Nazi's during World War II. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II) (Frank Franklin Ii - AP)

"Everyone in the village knew they were Jews, but no one betrayed them," Kohen recalled Wednesday as the Anti-Defamation League praised Albania as the only occupied country where no Jews died at the hands of the Nazis, thanks to the country's Christians and Muslims.

Although records from that period are incomplete, Michael Salberg, the league's director of international affairs, estimated that several thousand Jews fled to Albania from surrounding countries in Eastern Europe.

"All of them were saved," Salberg said. "Albania is the only country occupied by the Nazis that had more Jews at the end of the war than at the beginning of the war, which is a reflection of Jews having sought refuge in Albania and survived."

The league posthumously honored a Muslim Albanian man and his son for protecting six Jewish families during the war.

The organization presented its Courage to Care Award to three relatives of the late Mefail Bicaku and his son Njazi. The two led the six families _ a total of 26 people _ to safety in the mountains of central Albania.

For months, the Bicakus shared their home and food with the families, the league said.

The award was presented to Mefail's son Muhamet and Njazi's daughter, Elida Hazbiu, and son, Qemal Bicaku.

With Kohen translating, Muhamet Bicaku thanked the Anti-Defamation League said he was greatly honored to accept the award on his father's behalf. His father was jailed in 1961 for "collaborating with Jews" and died in 1969, he said.

"I'm very proud of what he has done," he said.

___

On the Net:

Anti-Defamation League: http://www.adl.org/

Albanian Family Honored for Helping Jews - washingtonpost.com


Elections, Elections



Playfuls.com
UN envoy poised to recommend ’provisional independence’ for Kosovo ...
Boston Herald - 3 hours ago
BRUSSELS, Belgium - European Union officials and diplomats in Belgium expect a UN mediator to recommend limited sovereignty for Serbia’s breakaway province of Kosovo that could eventually lead to full independence for the region, a UN protectorate ...

US Seeks Pro-Europe Outcome for Serbia Election, Kosovo Ruling
Washington File - 51 minutes ago
Washington - The United States would like to see pro-European political parties defeat nationalists in Serbia’s elections January 21, which will be followed by an international decision on Kosovo’s future status, a senior US diplomat says.

Kosovo Government adopts agenda for EU partnership
ECIKS.org - 6 hours ago
Prishtina, 18 January 2007 - The Government of Kosovo adopted yesterday an action plan for European partnership, which foresees regular meetings of ministers to discuss the European integration agenda.

Nationalism on Balkans is like cheap alcohol: Fried
Makfax - 9 hours ago
Nationalism is like cheap alcohol, first it makes you drunk, then it makes you blind, then it kills you, said high-ranking US official Daniel Fried, on the occasion of the upcoming elections in Serbia.


Election campaign in Albania started
Makfax - 5 hours ago
The campaign for local elections in Albania to be held on 18 February officially started on Thursday. As reported by Makfax's correspondent, largest opposition and ruling parties are finishing their agreements with coalition partners.


Macedonia requested extradition of Cocorovska
Makfax - 9 hours ago
Necessary extradition documents were handed over to the Ministry of Justice of Serbia, in accordance with the Law on Criminal Procedure and provisions of the Agreement between Republic of Macedonia and Serbia and Montenegro on legal assistance in civil ...

Montenegro joins the International Monetary Fund and World Bank
CBC News - 13 minutes ago
"Montenegro is claiming its place as a respected member of the global community of nations, and it is demonstrating its commitment to meet the responsibilities and reap the benefits of international cooperation," IMF chief Rodrigo de Rato said.


Voice of America
Serbia’s Fateful Choice
Council on Foreign Relations - 54 minutes ago
The endgame for Kosovo’s final status and, to some extent, the closing chapter on the late 20th-century’s Balkan wars, begins with Serbia’s parliamentary elections (ElectionGuide) on January 21. UN special envoy Martti Ahtisaari is waiting until after ...
Fate of Kosovo looms large over Serbia election MSNBC
West urges Serbia to vote for European future Southeast European Times


Jurnalul National
Row threatens Romania coalition
BBC News - 5 hours ago
Romania is in the grip of a political storm as relations between President Traian Basescu and his prime minister hit rock bottom.


Angus Reid Global Monitor
The Turkey Question: The EU and the Concept of Borders
Brussels Journal - 1 hour ago
The acceptance speech made last Sunday by Nicolas Sarkozy, France’s Interior Minister and now Union pour un Mouvement Populaire presidential candidate, has attracted considerable attention for its references to Turkey’s European future.

Kosovo's moment

Kosovo's moment

PRISTINA, Kosovo: This is a critical time for the Balkans: Serbia holds parliamentary elections on Sunday as Kosovo anxiously awaits a final report on the future status of the disputed province by the UN special envoy, Martti Ahtisaari.

We expect Ahtisaari to deny Serbia's demand to grant Kosovo broad autonomy within Serbian borders, and to endorse its bid for independence.

We need an independent Kosovo and a democratic Serbia. The European Union, now under German stewardship, can help by ensuring a common EU position in support of independence.

An independent Kosovo would benefit the region economically, politically and in terms of security. A decision on its status is long overdue, and as a result local frustrations are on the rise while the region continues to stagnate.

We need a new dynamic if we are to catch up with the EU. An independent Kosovo can provide that dynamic. Only the people of Kosovo — ethnic Albanians, Serbs and other minorities working together — can ensure that the province undergoes a successful transition.

A stable and prosperous Kosovo means a stable and prosperous region. Kosovo has a sound macroeconomic system, a broad tax base and a modern legislative system that protects private property and investors. Our labor laws are flexible. Kosovo has one of the simplest mechanisms for registering a company in the region. The government is currently overseeing a $2.3 billion coal energy development project — Kosovo has the fifth largest reserves of coal in the world.

Kosovo has changed in fundamental ways since NATO forces defeated Slobodan Milosevic's army in 1999 and a UN mission came to administer the province. Standards of living and personal freedom have improved, and we are working to give practical underpinnings to our reassurance to our minority citizens that the process of transition in Kosovo is for the good of us all.

We are ensuring that our Serb minority will live in municipalities where the police, schools and hospitals will be run by Serbs. We recognize Serbian as one of the official languages of Kosovo, and we further guarantee representation to our minorities in the government.

The future of the Kosovo Serbs is in Kosovo, and Kosovo's future is with its Serbs. We will succeed if we manage to preserve the multiethnic character of Kosovo. Those who misguidedly advocate partition, ignoring the fact that most of our Serbs are spread across Kosovo, are trying to challenge this future as well as call into question the territorial integrity of Bosnia and Macedonia.

We understand the stakes. Independence is above all a responsibility — a responsibility toward our citizens and the region. Independence is a beginning. Kosovo must develop a sustainable economy and we must improve our security capabilities. We can do both if we invest now in our young population so as to ensure their competitive edge in a globalized economy.

Kosovo is committed to a European future, but we have no illusions. We know that the European perspective for Kosovo is a work in progress. But I firmly believe that the whole region will move faster once Kosovo's independence is recognized; this includes Serbia, which would move relatively quickly toward the EU if it were free of the Kosovo issue.

We have two Serbias today. One is modern and economically progressive, open-minded about Kosovo, and has its compass set on the EU. The other Serbia is obsessed with Kosovo and stifled by backward-looking nationalist thinking.

The election Sunday in Serbia is about Europe and the future. Serbia does not need Kosovo in order to move to Europe. In fact, Serbia risks losing both Kosovo and its European perspective if voters on Sunday elect radicals and nationalist politicians. The illusion that Kosovo will again be part of Serbia is better left aside.

International law bestows upon states both rights and responsibilities. It is the responsibility of a government to protect its citizens and accord them equal rights. Serbia has failed to do so.

Europe will play a key role in coming months as the discussion on the final status of Kosovo moves to the UN Security Council. European consensus on Kosovo's final status will help ensure that we soon have a UN mandate, which would be a preferred solution.

As the leader of the EU, Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany can use her moral authority and Germany's political clout to build a European consensus backing Kosovo's independence.

Success in Kosovo would remind the world of the potential of the United Nations and of NATO to work for international peace. It would bolster international and national confidence in their continued relevance.

I firmly believe that both institutions have played a crucial role in Kosovo's transformation. It would be truly unfortunate to undermine all these years of hard work and progress by losing the political will to move to the logical next stage — the recognition of an independent Kosovo.

This is Kosovo's moment, but we share it with the European Union. Strong leadership by the German presidency in overcoming division in Europe on Kosovo's final status will ensure that we seize this historic opportunity, pronounce Kosovo independent and begin a genuine regional push toward the EU.

Agim Ceku is the prime minister of Kosovo.

Kosovo's moment - International Herald Tribune


I have a tank in my backyard

Photo
Kosovo Albanian children play beside a destroyed Yugoslav army tank from the 1998-99 war, in the village of Fustica, 25 km (15 miles) south-west of Kosovo's capital Pristina, January 18, 2007. Kosovo's Serb minority will vote in a general election in Serbia on Sunday. A U.N. proposal on the fate of the breakaway province is due days later. REUTERS/Hazir Reka (SERBIA)

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Review of: Heavenly Serbia, Branimir Anzulovic

I had promised to post some reviews of books related to the Balkans. Here is a review of Branimir Anzulovic's "Heavenly Serbia." It is short. I hope you find it useful, and I hope you let me know whether you found it useful.

Review of
Branimir Anzulovic
Heavenly Serbia
by BYTYCCI

Anzulovic’s Heavenly Serbia is a great resource for students of the Balkans and the Yugoslav wars. It is also a good read for those with a general interest in the Balkans. The book is well written and well researched.

Strengths
Anzulovic sets out to explain how the myth of Heavenly Serbia has set the stage for the genocidal wars of the 1990s. He manages to do that very well in this book. He uses historical documents to prove that the myth was initially not a popular myth at all, but a church version of what had happened at the Battle of Kosovo in 1989. Further, he shows how the narrative spread among the population through the singing bards. Then, Anzulovic explains how the myth was used in the 19th and 20th centuries to justify Serbian megalomaniac ambitions. An, intriguing part of the book is the section where the author talks about how international circles had accepted the myth thus giving legitimacy to both the Serbian territorial ambitions and the genocidal campaigns.

Weaknesses
One weakness of the book is that Anzulovic often becomes repetitive. Also, one could argue that the author draws from too few sources when trying to prove his hypothesis. He relies a lot on Njegos’s The Mountain Wreath to argue that the idea of eliminating entire ethnic groups to create a compact Serbian state was accepted widely. However, the content of one Serbian book is not as significant as the popularity of that book,. And, Anzulovic mentions the popularity of this and other similar books (Noz) to argue that the Serbian intellectuals were in fact promoting the myth Serbian victimization and calling for ‘revenge.’

In conclusion, Heavenly Serbia is an indispensable book for those who seek to understand the wars of 1990s in the Balkans. And, not only those but, also, previous wars of the 19th and 20th century in the Balkans which in fact were prequels to the 1990s, as this book implies.

The erased

I hate to admit this, but I became familiar with the issue of 'the erased' in Slovenia only recently (May be, it is because we had other issues to worry about in Kosova). Anyway, the story of this Kosovar guy seems especially interesting and understandably tragic. It turns out the Slovenes are not quite the 'nice Yugoslavs,' that they are assumed to be. Every society has its skeletons in its closet, but it would be nice if they are dealt with and not ignored.

Slovenian authorities turned legal resident into asylum seeker
16 Jan 2007 17:38:01 GMT

LJUBLJANA, Slovenia, January 16 (UNHCR) – Alija Berisha is puzzled and angry. "Why do I have to ask for asylum in my own country? I have a right to live in Slovenia with my family," the ethnic Kosovan Roma tells a UNHCR visitor.

Reuters AlertNet - Slovenian authorities turned legal resident into asylum seeker


Thursday, January 11, 2007

Back

The new year is here. All the crazy stuff that has been going on in the world makes me think it is alread an old year. I would single out the cocaine bust, which was made possible by the cooperation of the Montenegrin, Kosovar and Macedonian customs services. Anyway, it is amazing how a cargo of cocaine can go from Venezuela through, Spain and Italy to Greece without being noticed. And all this organized by a woman (Stanislava Čočorovski Poletan) that runs her 'business' in her apartment in Belgrade. Kudos to the people that cought it.

Saturday, December 30, 2006

New Year

We are taking a break from blogging for about a week due to recreational and celebratory activities. See you next year.

Happy 2007!

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Kosovo's president predicts decision on province's final status ...
International Herald Tribune - 8 hours ago
AP. PRISTINA, Serbia: Kosovo's president said Wednesday that he expects a decision on Kosovo's final status within months.


BOSNIA: SERB LEADER BLASTS MEP BALKANS DELEGATION HEAD
AKI - 8 hours ago
Sarajevo, 27 Dec. (AKI) - Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik has accused Euro-MP and chair of the European Parliament's Delegation for South-East Europe, Doris Pack, of being a "liar" and a "Serb hater," saying he doesn’t ever want to meet her.


Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia Sign Agreement on
Focus News - 7 hours ago
Sarajevo. Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia have signed today an agreement on military cooperation, a month after Bosnia and Herzegovina signed a similar agreement with Serbia, AFP reported citing the country’s Ministry of Defense.


Playfuls.com
Macedonia Police Intercept Explosives
Playfuls.com - 7 hours ago
by News Staff. Macedonian police confiscated more than a pound of C-4 high explosives from a furloughed convict who was allegedly trying to take it into Greece.

SERBIA: KOSOVO AND EARLY ELECTIONS SEEN AS KEY TO COUNTRY'S FUTURE
AKI - 8 hours ago
Belgrade, 27 Dec. (AKI) - During the government of prime minister Vojislav Kostunica Serbia has for the past three years experienced a period of relative political stability and modest economic recovery.


With EU membership approaching, Romania enjoys an economic boom
Southeast European Times - 5 hours ago
Romania's national currency exceeded a six-year high this year, and the economy continues to expand at a robust rate. By Paul Ciocoiu for Southeast European Times in Bucharest - 27/12/06.


Slovenia Opens Labour Market for Bulgarians, Romanians
Sofia News Agency - 6 hours ago
Bulgaria: The Slovenian government decided to leave its labour market open for newcomers Bulgaria and Romania joining the EU next January.

Gerald Ford Dies at 93
KVBC - 49 minutes ago
Nevada leaders are remembering the legacy, and mourning the loss, of President Gerald Ford. They are calling him a devoted leader who led the country with dignity through one of its most turbulent times.
President Gerald Ford Dies at 93 Salem-News.Com
Gerald R. Ford: A Healer of Wounds Washington Post

Tuesday, December 26, 2006

What's next for Kosovo?

I hope you had a good Christmass. This article on Kosovo seems pretty good. Further we have some interesting news from the region. Plus, we have a new war in Africa.

What's next for Kosovo?

25/12/2006

With Belgrade and Pristina unable to bridge their differences over Kosovo's future, a decision on status is now up to the international community. That poses its own set of challenges.

By Robert C. Austin for Southeast European Times – 26/12/06

Regional stability in Southeast Europe depends ultimately on the resolution of Kosovo's status, a process which the UN Security Council formally launched in late 2005. Several rounds of talks under UN auspices were then held between Kosovo Albanian and Serbian representatives, in the hope that a solution acceptable to both sides could be reached. That hope has not borne fruit. The Kosovo Albanians want nothing less than statehood. The Serbian side, meanwhile, has stuck to its refrain of "more than autonomy but less than independence", though it remains unclear what this would amount to in practice. In October, Serbian voters approved a constitution which describes Kosovo as an integral part of the country. more



Playfuls.com
UN To End Kosovo Talks
Playfuls.com - 8 hours ago
by News Staff. There will be no further talks once a UN envoy announces his proposal for Serbia's mainly ethnic-Albanian Kosovo province, a media report said Tuesday.
What's next for Kosovo?Southeast European Times


Serb jailed 20 years for Kosovo war crimes
Earthtimes.org - Dec 25, 2006
BELGRADE, Serbia, Dec. 25 Serbia's high court upheld a 20-year jail sentence for a former Serbian police convicted of 1999 war crimes in Serbia's Kosovo province.


Vjesti: Joining the Western Balkans to the EU Will be Priority of ...
Focus News - Dec 24, 2006
Slovenia. Slovenia expects that Montenegro will receive a mandate for talks for EU membership at the beginning of the Slovenian EU Presidency in the first half of 2008, Rano Genorio, high-standing Slovenian ...


Albania hosts inter-border co-operation conference
Southeast European Times - 7 hours ago
The closer the ties with neighbouring countries, the shorter Albania's path to the EU will be, says Integration Minister Arenca Trashani.


OVERVIEW OF EU-CROATIA MEMBERSHIP TALKS IN 2006
Journal of Turkish Weekly - 16 hours ago
The most important event in the year 2006 regarding the relations between Croatia and the European Union was Brussels' decision to separate Croatia's membership talks from the process of Turkey's negotiations.



Playfuls.com
Christmas Eve Shooting In Croatia Leaves Four Dead
Playfuls.com - Dec 25, 2006
by News Staff. A Croatian man shot an killed three people on Sunday night and later took his own life in a town some 30 kilometres west of the capital of Zagreb.


FEATURE-Sex slavery plagues Romania and Bulgaria
Reuters AlertNet - 1 hour ago
(This is part of a package of stories ahead of Romania and Bulgaria's entry into the European Union on Jan. 1). By Justyna Pawlak.



Montenegro to introduce two official languages
Makfax - 16 hours ago
Montenegro's authorities are set to introduce changes to the Constitution, including official use of both Montenegrin and Serbian languages and refraining from treating the Church in the supreme state law.


Serbia drug seizures sparks killings
Earthtimes.org - 6 hours ago
NIS, Serbia, Dec. 26 Police said gang fighting is under way to control the drug market in the southern Serbian city of Nis, following seizures of 90 pounds of heroin this year.


50 euros for passing through Serbia
B92 - 9 hours ago
SOFIA -- Bulgaria's citizens will have to pay a fee of 5- euros when passing through Serbia, starting in January 1. Orlin Nikolov of the border police has told Bulgarian BNR radio that the Kalotina Border ...


Slovenia takes cautious approach in giant step to euro
Monsters and Critics.com - Dec 23, 2006
By Andrew McCathie Dec 24, 2006, 3:34 GMT. Berlin - The small ex-Yugoslavian republic of Slovenia is leaving nothing to chance as it prepares to become the first of the new European Union member states to join the euro on January 1.

Zaman Online


Finland to Open 'New Window' for Turkey's EU Bid
Zaman Online - 10 hours ago
By Cihan News Agency. Countries supporting Turkey in the European Union (EU) and the EU Commission have started an initiative to 'immediately open' eight suspended chapters in Turkey's EU talks if one of the ...
Turkey announces new EU accession strategy Southeast European Times



CBC News



War Returns to Horn of Africa
Zaman Online - 7 hours ago
By Foreign News Desk. Ethiopia’s war against the Somalia Islamic Courts Council (SICC) is a new chapter of violence and uncertainty in war-torn Somalia’s history.
1,000 dead in Somalia clashes RTE.ie
US signals support for Ethiopian attacks on Somali Islamists International Herald Tribune
Times Online - USA Today - Guardian Unlimited - People's Daily Online
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