Serbia's Tadic vows to preserve Kosovo

Serbia swore in President Boris Tadic today two days before Kosovo proclaims independence, in the country's most traumatic moment…

Serbia swore in President Boris Tadic today two days before Kosovo proclaims independence, in the country's most traumatic moment since it was bombed by NATO in 1999 to end ethnic cleansing in the province.

"I will never give up fighting for our Kosovo and I will, with all my might, fight for Serbia to join the European Union," said Tadic, who narrowly won re-election earlier this month against a hardline nationalist candidate.

Kosovo, a mountain-ringed province, is steeped in Serb myth but now home to 2 million Albanians, a 90 per cent majority.

Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica, who eclipsed pro-Western Tadic to become undisputed defender of Serbian sovereignty, told Serbs yesterday that the loss of Kosovo was "about to become a reality" that he could not stop, but would never accept.

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Most EU members and the United States will recognise Kosovo. They say Serbia relinquished the moral right to rule its people because of the brutality it used against them under the late Slobodan Milosevic, and because there is no hope of compromise.

The EU and World Bank are preparing a donors' conference to underwrite the development of the new state, probably in June.

But Serbia's EU aspirations are now under a cloud.

Kostunica says Serbia cannot pursue EU membership if EU states approve Kosovo's secession, and an early election now looks inevitable.

Serbia and its ally Russia say the legal rights of sovereignty and territorial integrity are more important than an ethnic minority's demands for self-determination.

Serbia has offered autonomy to Kosovo Albanians within Serb borders, but no role as full citizens. The West believes this formula is unsustainable in the long term.

Kosovo has already been under United Nations administration and NATO protection for nearly nine years. Its leader Hashim Thaci says he can count on recognition by 100 countries.