COMMENT: Europe Must Halt the Last "Battle of Kosovo"
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09 11 2006 Brussels will only encourage Serbia to cling to myths about
Kosovo if it delays independence.
By Andrej Nosov in Belgrade (Balkan
Insight, 9 Nov 06)
When the Serbian
director Zdravko Sotra produced the feature film "Battle of Kosovo"
in the early Nineties in Serbia, the aim was to reinforce the myths surrounding
Serbia's historic defeat in 1389 at the hands of the Ottomans.
Although the battle ended with a Turkish
victory, the event has long since become the principal red-letter day in Serbia's
history. As Serbs drew pride and consolation from their resistance to the
Turks, they fashioned an image of themselves as the shield of Christendom that
had blunted the force of the Ottoman invasion.
It was no surprise, therefore, that the
film was shown once more on television on October 29, on the second day
of a referendum on a new constitution that is closely linked to the Kosovo
issue.
It was as if voters were being
encouraged to see themselves as warriors, coming to the battlefield to save
Kosovo from loss once more.
When turnout was lower than the
authorities had expected, rumors even spread in Belgrade that Agim Ceku,
Kosovo's pro-independence leader, was about to let off fireworks in Pristina to
celebrate the referendum's failure.
That alone prompted some Serbian
nationalists to rush to the polling stations, if only to prevent Kosovo's
Albanian majority from having the last say.
The links between Serbia's constitution and the crisis over Kosovo
are explicit, for although Belgrade effectively
lost control of the territory in 1999, the document describes it as an
"integral and inalienable part" of Serbia.
Belgrade's
argument at home and abroad is that a new constitution was needed as a kind of
backbone to save Kosovo and in order to prepare the country for the final
"Battle of Kosovo".
By restating its claim to the territory
in the new constitution and by calling early parliamentary elections, the
government hopes to postpone the need to face up to difficult decisions
concerning Kosovo's final solution and, at the same time, deal a blow to the
new democratic and civic forces inside Serbia.
This is why the earlier pressure from
the European Union for Belgrade to abandon its
mythical claims to Kosovo and embrace reality were conducive both to Serbia's
genuine democratisation and to Kosovo's peaceful resolution.
Sadly, the EU and other important
international factors are abandoning this principle and making the stability of
Vojislav Kostunica's government their priority.
Kostunica is taking advantage of this
situation to strengthen his position and to come up with new mathematical
formulas to win the incoming elections.
His strategists believe early general
and presidential elections will slow down the decision-making process on
Kosovo's final status.
The government has successfully
intimidated the international community over the issue, threatening them with
the possible rise to power of the hard-line nationalist Serbian Radical Party.
Kostunica's team believe both the
elections and the new constitution will galvanise his centrist bloc and bolster
his own position in any new government.
Their entire approach to the Kosovo
talks can be summed up as "the longer, the better". And while Kosovo
is the crucial issue on the agenda, the everyday problems of Serbian citizens
can be put on the back burner.
Serbia has dragged its feet on the
Kosovo negotiations ever since they started on July 24. It is still searching
for some kind of "third way" on Kosovo, after the international
community ruled out any return to the status quo before 1999, and also rejected
partition.
Montenegro's
exit from the state union with Serbia
in May has only reinvigorated its determination to keep Kosovo, as the idea of
losing two chunks of territory within only one year appears unbearable.
Belgrade
wants retention of Kosovo to offset "the loss" of Montenegro, which is partly why Belgrade
is demanding the creation of as many new Serbian municipalities in Kosovo as
possible, in the hope that they might follow in the footsteps of Republika
Srpska in Bosnia and
Herzegovina and create their own
semi-independent entity.
The increasingly close bonds between
Kostunica and Republika Srpska must be seen in this context, for these links
present yet another option in case Serbia
does lose Kosovo, which is to deconstruct Bosnia and Herzegovina by
encouraging the break-away aspirations of Republika Srpska.
However, the new constitution is not
intended solely to address the issue of Kosovo. It is also intended to
dismantle the autonomy of the prosperous northern province
of Vojvodina and damage the civic political option in Serbia.
The Kosovo constitutional conundrum is
closely linked to the civic option in Serbia, which is led by such
experienced fighters against the Milosevic regime as Cedomir Jovanovic.
A former key member of team of the late
Zoran Djindjic, Jovanovic has become the focus of liberal and democratic forces
that hold clearly defined views.
This is the bloc that wants Serbia openly
to accept the independence of Kosovo and to face up to the Milosevic's crimes
and accept responsibility for the atrocities committed under his regime.
Given its potential in a future
parliament to "tip the scales" one way or the other, the current
government sees this option as a particular obstacle, which is why they prefer
to rely in parliament on the support of the Radicals and Milosevic's Socialists.
With their evident reluctance to embrace
European democratic principles, Belgrade
must be pressurised into turning over a new leaf on Kosovo and into taking up a
more constructive approach towards the building of this new state in the
Balkans.
There is no a rationale for Kosovo to
remain under the Serbia's
jurisdiction, whatever new draft constitution says. It is crystal clear that
Kosovo has been independent from Belgrade
for seven years already. The only issue for Belgrade is to negotiate a new position for
the Kosovo Serbs with its counterparts in Pristina.
Isolated in their remote enclaves, the
Kosovo Serbs have been left to their own devices, to be used as pawns in Belgrade's power games.
There is even a danger that Belgrade may
encourage them to pack up and flee to Serbia proper in keeping with its
own internal agenda.
The EU has a big role to play here. It
must make it clear that Serbia
will never be a candidate for membership if it retains its old attitudes
towards its neighbors and keeps on manipulating the Kosovo Serbs. It is
somewhat disappointing in this respect that Europe
has instead welcomed the new constitution, although it contains provisions
clearly contrary to EU policy on Kosovo.
Belgrade
ought to acknowledge that the domestic public opinion is gradually coming round
to accepting Kosovo's independence and that within only one year, the
percentage of Serbs prepared to recognise this has increased from 18 to 32.
These people may believe that Kosovo's independence is undesirable, but they
accept that is the only solution.
Brussels
needs to adopt a clearer and less ambiguous policy if it wants to aid this
transition process in Serbia.
It must also make sure Kosovo's remaining Serbs do not pay too high a price for
the province's inevitable independence.
Andrej Nosov is director of Youth
Initiative for Human Rights, an NGO dealing with war crimes and transition issues.
Balkan Insight is BIRN's online publication.