People wave flags during a protest against an EU-sponsored deal to normalise ties between Serbia and breakaway Kosovo, in Belgrade, Serbia, yesterday.
LUXEMBOURG/ BELGRADE: The European Commission encouraged EU governments yesterday to start membership talks with Serbia, in recognition of Belgrade’s accord with Kosovo last week that marked a milestone for the Balkans’ recovery from the collapse of Yugoslavia in the 1990s.
Talks could start within the year — if all European Union capitals agree at a meeting in June — provided Serbia puts in place all the conditions of the deal meant to address the status of the Serb-populated northern part of its former province.
“It’s a game changer for Serbia and Kosovo, it’s a game changer for the whole region of the western Balkans,” EU commissioner for enlargement Stefan Fuele told reporters in Luxembourg where EU ministers discussed Serbia’s EU path. The negotiation process would help drive reforms in the largest country to emerge from federal Yugoslavia, luring investors to its ailing economy.
The EU executive said Belgrade had met a key condition of visible and sustainable improvement in relations with Kosovo, which broke away from Serbia in a war in 1999 and declared independence with Western backing in 2008.
Thousands of Serb demonstrators, chanting “Treason, Treason,” protested yesterday against the agreement to normalise relations with breakaway Kosovo, a potentially landmark deal that could end years of tensions between the Balkan antagonists and put them both on a path to European Union membership.
Up to 10,000 flag-waving protesters gathered in the divided northern Kosovo town of Mitrovica, demanding that the EU-brokered agreement be annulled and branding the Serbian officials who endorsed it “traitors.” Thousands also marched in Belgrade, the Serbian capital.
The Serbian government yesterday approved the deal unanimously at an extraordinary session and ordered ministries to implement it.
The prime ministers of Serbia and Kosovo reached a tentative deal in Brussels on Friday that would give Kosovo’s ethnic Albanian leadership authority over rebel Kosovo Serbs. In return, the minority Serbs would get wide autonomy within Kosovo.
After Serbia’s approval, the EU’s executive Commission recommended yesterday that the bloc start membership negotiations with Belgrade. The Commission said in a report that “Serbia has taken very significant steps towards visible and sustainable improvement in relations with Kosovo.”
“This agreement is a huge step forward. It can mark a historic turning point for the two countries, but also for the entire region if it is implemented,” German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said at an EU meeting in Luxemburg.
Kosovo, which is considered by nationalists to be the medieval cradle of the Serbian state and religion, declared independence in 2008. Serbia has vowed never to recognise it, and Serbian officials insist that the latest agreement does not mean Belgrade has de-facto recognised Kosovo’s statehood.
It is not clear how the deal will be implemented on the ground in northern Kosovo where hardline Serb leaders vehemently reject any authority coming from Pristina’s ethnic Albanians and consider the region a part of Serbia. In Mitrovica, hardline Kosovo Serbs said they will prevent the implementation of the agreement and form their own, self-ruled region in the north.
On Sunday, Kosovo’s parliament voted in favour of a resolution to support the agreement. The Serbian parliament is expected to do the same later this week. The influential Serbian Orthodox Church, however, denounced the deal as a “clear surrender” of “our most important territory,” and urged the country’s lawmakers to reject it.
The church said in a statement that the deal amounts to “indirect and silent, but still de-facto recognition” of the Kosovo state.
The deal allows Serbs to police and manage the north of Kosovo, which is inhabited predominantly by ethnic Serbs, in exchange for nominal recognition of the authority of the Kosovo government. It also calls for the two sides not to obstruct one another as they seek eventual membership in the EU.
Serbia relinquished control of most of Kosovo in 1999 when Nato chased its troops out of the region after a three-month bombing campaign. Ending the partition of Kosovo between the Albanian majority and the Serb-controlled north — about a fifth of the country — is a key condition of Serbia’s further progress toward EU membership.
Agencies