Kosovo will split from Serbia, says PM

KOSOVO: Kosovo's prime minister has said he expects the province to declare independence from Serbia this month, with or without…

KOSOVO:Kosovo's prime minister has said he expects the province to declare independence from Serbia this month, with or without the backing of a United Nations resolution.

It is feared that Kosovo's Serb minority may try to break away from the mostly ethnic-Albanian region if it makes a unilateral bid for independence, raising the spectre of renewed violence in a province where more than 10,000 people died between 1998 and 1999.

"I expect Kosovo to be able to declare its independence by the end of May," said Kosovo premier Agim Ceku. "There is a very strong US commitment to do this," he told the Internationa Herald Tribune . "It wants to finish the job. Britain's [prime minister] Tony Blair is on board, too." Mr Ceku dismissed Russia's threat to veto independence in the UN Security Council, where Moscow has demanded a solution that is amenable to both Belgrade and Kosovo, which has been run by the UN since Nato bombing drove out Serb forces in 1999.

"Russia is using Kosovo to prove it is a player," he said, adding that he expected the province of two million people to declare independence regardless of Moscow's position. "Our friends who are realistic and countries that have invested soldiers, money and eight years of engagement here . . . want an end to this unresolved status."

Mr Ceku also suggested that major EU nations wanted to reach a final decision on Kosovo before the G-8 meeting of industrialised nations begins in Germany on June 6th. "I don't think Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany will want G-8 countries to attend the summit without resolving Kosovo's status," he said.

On Sunday Serbia's prime minister urged Kosovo's leaders to accept "supervised autonomy" rather than "supervised independence", saying that would avert strife and allow Serbia to retain its territorial integrity. But the vast majority of Kosovo's residents demand sovereignty, and Washington has stated clearly that it will not tolerate further delay over a decision on Kosovo.

"We hope that Russia understands that Kosovo is going to be independent one way or another," US under secretary of state Dan Fried said this weekend.

"It will either be done in a controlled, supervised way that provides for the wellbeing of the Serbian people, or it will take place in an uncontrolled way and the Kosovo Serbs will suffer the most, which would be terrible."

Daniel McLaughlin

Daniel McLaughlin

Daniel McLaughlin is a contributor to The Irish Times from central and eastern Europe