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  1. #1
    i/e larguar Maska e Homza
    Anëtarësuar
    24-02-2006
    Vendndodhja
    Ne kat te siperm!
    Postime
    3,092

    Shtypi i huaj mbi shpalljen e pavarësisë së Kosovës

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/7246809.stm



    Kosovo vow as independence looms

    Mr Thaci said Kosovo was the homeland of all its citizens
    Kosovo's Prime Minister Hashim Thaci has vowed to protect the rights of all minorities as the province prepares to declare independence from Serbia.
    The declaration is widely expected on Sunday, but Mr Thaci refused to set a date at a news conference in Pristina.

    The US and most EU states are preparing to recognise Kosovo quickly, but Serbia and Russia strongly oppose the move.

    Serbia has threatened to use diplomatic and economic measures against Kosovo, though it has ruled out using force.

    "I will never give up fighting for our Kosovo," Serbian President Boris Tadic said as he took the oath of office on Friday, 10 days after being re-elected for a second term.

    In Kosovo, there will be security for all citizens. The government is committed to looking forward to the future and overcoming the sad past

    Kosovo's PM Hashim Thaci

    Separately, the Russian foreign ministry warned on Friday it would have to "take into account" any declaration of independence by Kosovo in regard to its relations with Georgia's breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

    Moscow has previously hinted that it could recognise the regions, if the West recognises Kosovo.

    EU mission

    Speaking to hundreds of reporters in Kosovo's capital Pristina, Mr Thaci pledged that the rights of all communities in the province, including Serbs, would be guaranteed.



    He said no citizen of an independent Kosovo should feel discriminated against and no-one would be left out.

    "In Kosovo, there will be security for all citizens. The government is committed to looking forward to the future and overcoming the sad past.

    "I invite all those who want to, to return to their homes and their property, including displaced Serbs living outside Kosovo," Mr Thaci said.

    Meanwhile, Human Rights Watch issued a report describing violence against ethnic minorities as a persistent feature of Kosovo's post-war history.


    See a map of Kosovo's ethnic breakdown
    It also expressed concern about violence against women, and the difficulties which face refugees who want to return home.

    The United Nations has administered Kosovo since a Nato bombing campaign in 1999 drove out Serb forces accused of persecuting the province's majority ethnic Albanians.

    A civilian police and justice mission for Kosovo is expected to be given the go-ahead by EU member states on Monday.


    There is a festive mood in Pristina, correspondents say

    BBC News website world affairs correspondent Paul Reynolds says the US and a number of EU countries, including the UK, will recognise Kosovo shortly afterwards.

    Kosovo's assembly will make the declaration of independence on Sunday, he says, making clear its acceptance of the limitations on independence outlined in the UN plan drawn up by Martti Ahtisaari.

    These include supervision by an international presence; limited armed forces; strong provisions for Serb minority protection; commitment to multi-ethnic democracy; and neither Kosovo nor any part of it will be allowed to join another country.

    Celebrate with dignity

    The BBC's Nick Thorpe in Pristina says there is a festive mood in the capital, with people thronging the streets and flags flying everywhere.

    Posters have gone up across Pristina thanking Britain and the US for their support for independence.

    "Celebrate with dignity. For a good start. Kosovo welcomes the future," the posters raid.

    Tons of fireworks have already arrived from Bulgaria.

    The mood among the remaining 100,000-plus Serbs of Kosovo is very different, our correspondent says.

    He says there has been no major exodus but some have decided to spend the next few days in Serbia.





    CDO NJERI QE FLET ANGLISHT, TE DALI DHE NE FUND TE KETIJ ARTIKULLIT TE LINKUT TE MESIPERM, SHKRUANI DHE JU PERSHTYPJET TUAJA NE MBESHTETJE TE PAMVARESISE SE KOSOVES.....ESHTE SHUM E RENDESISHME....TE FITOJME KTE DUEL MEDIATIK...ESHTE BBC NJEREZ, FLISNI ME NJE FJALOR FORMAL.

  2. #2
    Shpirt Shqiptari Maska e Albo
    Anëtarësuar
    16-04-2002
    Vendndodhja
    Philadelphia
    Postime
    30,348
    Postimet në Bllog
    17

    Shtypi i huaj mbi shpalljen e pavarësisë së Kosovës

    February 18, 2008

    Kosovo Declares Its Independence From Serbia

    By DAN BILEFSKY

    PRISTINA, Kosovo — The breakaway province of Kosovo declared independence from Serbia on Sunday, sending tens of thousands of ethnic Albanians streaming through the streets to celebrate what they hoped was the end of a long and bloody struggle for national self-determination.

    Kosovo’s intent to be recognized as Europe’s newest country — after a civil war that killed 10,000 people a decade ago and then years of limbo under United Nations rule — was the latest episode in the dismemberment of the former Yugoslavia, 17 years after its dissolution began.

    It brings to a climax a showdown between the West, which argues that Serbia’s brutal subjugation of Kosovo’s ethnic Albanian majority cost it any right to rule the territory, and the Serbian government and its allies in the Kremlin, which counter that Kosovo’s independence is a reckless breach of international law that will spur other secessionist movements across the world.

    As Albanians danced in the streets and fired guns in the air in the capital, Pristina, international reaction was sharply divided, suggesting that the clash between the principles of sovereignty and self-determination was far from resolved.

    Britain, France and Germany were expected to be the first recognize the new nation, as early as Monday, while other nations, fearing separatist movements within their own borders, have said they would refuse. Russia demanded an emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council to proclaim the declaration “null and void,” but the meeting produced no resolution.

    In declaring independence, Kosovo’s prime minister, Hashim Thaci, a former leader of the guerrilla force that just over 10 years ago began an armed rebellion against Serbian domination, struck a note of reconciliation. Addressing Parliament in both Albanian and Serbian, he pledged to protect the rights of the Serbian minority.

    “I feel the heartbeat of our ancestors,” he said, before paying tribute to Kosovo’s war dead and to the European Union and the United States. “We, the leaders of our people, democratically elected, through this declaration proclaim Kosovo an independent and sovereign state.”

    Ethnic Albanians from as far away as America streamed into Pristina this weekend, braving freezing temperatures and heavy snow, to dance in frenzied jubilation. Beating drums, waving Albanian flags and throwing firecrackers, they chanted: “Independence! Independence! We are free at last!” A 100-foot-long huge birthday cake was installed on Pristina’s main boulevard.

    In an outpouring of adulation for the United States, the architect of NATO’s 1999 bombing campaign against Serbian forces under President Slobodan Milosevic, thousands of revelers unfurled giant American flags, carried posters of former President Bill Clinton and chanted “Thank you U.S.A.” and “God bless America.”

    The spirit of exaltation in Pristina contrasted sharply with the despair, anger and disbelief that gripped Serbia and the Serbian enclaves of northern Kosovo.

    In Belgrade, up to 2,000 angry Serbs converged on the United States Embassy, hurling stones, smashing windows and lighting firecrackers.

    In the Kosovo Serb stronghold of Mitrovica, long a flashpoint, a grenade was thrown at a United Nations building, the police said. No one was injured.

    Vojislav Kostunica, the prime minister of Serbia, which has regarded Kosovo as its heartland since medieval times, vowed that Serbia would never recognize the “false state.”

    In an address on national television on Sunday, he said Kosovo was propped up unlawfully by the United States and called the declaration a “humiliation” for the European Union. The Serbian government has ruled out using military force in response, but was expected to downgrade diplomatic ties with any government that recognized Kosovo.

    Demonstrations are planned Monday in Serbian enclaves across Kosovo, with the expectation that Serbs will seek to entrench the parallel institutions they have set up as part of their rejection of Pristina’s rule.

    European Union officials said that Britain, France and Germany were expected to recognize Kosovo 48 hours after the declaration, in part to try to prevent Russia and Serbia from rallying opposition to recognizing Kosovo. Recognition by the United States other European Union member states was expected to follow in the coming days.

    At the Security Council, Russia argued that the proclamation violated the 1999 resolution that established the United Nations mission in Kosovo. “Our position is that the declaration should be disregarded by the international community and declared null and void,” said Vitaly I. Churkin, Russia’s ambassador.

    But Alejandro D. Wolff, the deputy American ambassador, said, “In our view this declaration is logical and consistent and completely in line with” the 1999 measure.

    In a statement on behalf of the European members of the Council, Johan Verbeke, the ambassador of Belgium, said, “Internationally supervised independence is the only viable option to deliver sustained stability and security.”

    Secretary General Ban Ki-moon read a statement that avoided taking sides and pleaded with all parties “to refrain from any actions of statements that could endanger peace, incite violence or jeopardize security in Kosovo or the region.”

    The council agreed to a request by Russia and Serbia to hold an open meeting on Monday that will be addressed by the Serbian president, Boris Tadic.

    The declaration followed nearly two years of United Nations-sponsored negotations between Pristina and Belgrade. Those talks failed, as did a Security Council effort in December to resolve Kosovo’s future.

    President Bush, speaking Sunday in Tanzania on a tour of Africa, said the United States would continue to work to prevent violence in Kosovo, while reaching out to Serbia.

    “On Kosovo, our position is that its status must be resolved in order for the Balkans to be stable,” he said. “We also believe it’s in Serbia’s interests to be aligned with Europe, and the Serbian people can know that they have a friend in America.”

    The European Commission, the European Union’s executive branch, appealed for calm, while NATO’s secretary general, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, said the alliance would respond “swiftly and firmly against anyone who might resort to violence.”

    The Vatican called for “prudence and moderation.”

    Ulrich Wilhelm, the spokesman for the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, said Germany would decide what to do on Monday. “The last open question of the breakup of Yugoslavia must be answered now, because it impedes the security, stability and economic development of the entire region,” he said.

    Kosovo played a central role in the collapse of the Yugoslav federation built by the Communist strongman Josip Broz Tito after 1945. When Tito died in 1980, Western observers expected strife between Yugoslavia’s two biggest rival ethnic groups, the Serbs and Croats.

    In fact, Albanian nationalism erupted first, leading to bloody clashes in 1981. As the ’80s wore on, Mr. Milosevic used Serbs’ enormous sense of grievance that their ancestral heartland was now dominated by Muslim Albanians to come to power in Serbia. By 1989, he had abolished Kosovo’s autonomy, fired tens of thousands of Albanians from their jobs, suppressed Albanian language education and controlled the territory with a heavy police presence.

    In 1989, at celebrations of the 600th anniversary of the 1389 Battle of Kosovo, Mr. Milosevic delivered a thinly veiled warning that Serbs would fight to preserve their lands outside Serbia if rival republics such as Croatia declared independence.

    In 1991, that occurred, plunging the Balkans into almost a decade of wars that cost more than 200,000 lives.

    Ten years ago this month, Mr. Milosevic’s forces moved into Kosovo against the rebel Kosovo Liberation Army, killing a guerrilla leader and his family at their compound. As violence escalated, NATO intervened in a 1999 bombing campaign that caused hundreds of thousands Albanians and Serbs to flee.

    An estimated 10,000 civilians were killed in the 1998-99 conflict, many of them Albanians, while 1,500 Serbs perished in revenge killings that followed. Another 5,000 people were reported missing, of which half were never found.

    Kosovo — a predominantly Muslim, poor, landlocked territory of two million — has been a United Nations protectorate since 1999, policed by 16,000 NATO troops.

    For the ethnic Albanians who make up 95 percent of the population, independence marks a new beginning, after decades of repression and war.

    “Independence is a catharsis,” said Antoneta Kastrati, 26, an Albanian from Peja, who said her mother and older sister were killed by their Serbian neighbors in 1999. “Things won’t change overnight and we cannot forget the past, but maybe I will feel safe now and my nightmares will finally go away.”

    Newspapers in Belgrade lamented that the Albanians “have stolen Kosovo.”

    In Mitrovica, small groups of Serbs gathered at the bridge between the town’s Serbian north the Albanian south. Serbs said they were under orders from Belgrade to ignore the independence declaration and remain in Kosovo in order to keep the northern part of the territory under de facto Serbian control.

    “I will stay here forever ,” said a 70-year-old engineer who would give only his first name, Svetozar. “This will always be Serbia. I am not afraid of Kosovo’s independence because I don’t recognize it.”

    When a knot of Albanians tried to cross the bridge into the Serbian part, they were held back by the police and 10-foot-high metal barriers wound with razor wire.

    In Serbia, the police had to stop several hundred Serbian veterans of the 1998-99 Kosovo war from crossing into the territory before the independence declaration. The group, dressed in military uniforms, broke through a Serbian police cordon at the Merdare border crossing between Serbia and Kosovo before being held back.

    Kosovo’s declaration created immediate ripples in the former Soviet Union, where small separatist areas — one in Moldova and two in the republic of Georgia — have existed since the early 1990s.

    All three enclaves receive extensive political support from the Kremlin, and exist as Russian protectorates. Two of them — Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia — released coordinated statements announcing an intention to seek recognition as independent states by Moscow, the United Nations and members of the Commonwealth of Independent States, the loose alliance of 11 former Soviet republics.

    Conversely, several of the European Union’s 27 member states — including Greece, Cyprus, Slovakia and Romania — oppose recognizing Kosovo because they fear encouraging secessionist movements within their own borders.

    In Brussels, where retaining European Union unity over Kosovo has proved as tortuous a foreign-policy challenge as any dealing with Yugoslavia’s breakup, officials were drafting a statement for a foreign ministers’ meeting on Monday. Senior European Union officials said they expected it would acknowledge Kosovo’s independence declaration without explicitly endorsing it.

    On Saturday, however, the European Union approved a police and judicial mission that will help Kosovo’s government run the territory after the United Nations leaves.

    While the declaration of independence raises the prospects of a new constitution and emblems of nationhood, Kosovo’s sovereignty remains severely circumscribed, making it reliant on the international community. NATO still provides international security, while the European Union will have an administrative oversight role.

    Kosovo is desperately poor, with a war-torn infrastructure, an unemployment rate of about 60 percent and average monthly wage of $250. Electricity is so undependable that lights go out in the capital several times a day. Corruption is rife and human trafficking threatens to entrench a lawless state on Europe’s doorstep.

    In a sign of how hard it will be for Kosovo to forge the kind of multiethnic, secular identity urged on it by foreign powers, the government held a contest for the new flag, choosing one bearing a map of Kosovo topped by six stars.

    But the distinctive two-headed eagle of the red and black Albanian flag — displayed on the battlefield and reviled by Serbs — was everywhere Sunday, held by revelers, draped on horses, flapping out of car windows and hanging outside homes and storefronts across the territory.

    Warren Hoge contributed reporting from the United Nations, Nicholas Kulish from Berlin and C.J. Chivers from Moscow.







    Kosova në festë në Ditën e Pavarësisë
    Lajmi më i fundit nga Kosova e Pavarur
    Deklara e Pavaresise se Kosoves dhe reagimet e botes shqiptare mbi te.
    Fjala juaj për këtë ditë historike
    Albumi Fotografik i Pavarësisës së Kosovës
    Qëndrimi zyrtar i shteteve të huaja mbi pavarësinë e Kosovës
    Shtypi i huaj mbi pavarësinë e Kosovës
    Reagimet kundër pavarësisë së Kosovës
    Ndryshuar për herë të fundit nga Albo : 17-02-2008 më 21:35

  3. #3
    Evidenca Maska e RaPSouL
    Anëtarësuar
    09-03-2006
    Vendndodhja
    Gjermani
    Postime
    17,464
    Po ja filloj me nje artikull nga mediat amerikane, me saktesisht CNN.

    Kosovo declares independence from Serbia

    PRISTINA, Kosovo (CNN) -- Kosovo has formally declared its independence from Serbia and become the world's newest state in a move opposed by Serbia and Russia but backed by many western governments.

    Lawmakers in the legislature of the former Serbian province approved the declaration of independence at an extraordinary session Sunday afternoon. It was read out in Albanian, Serbian and English by Prime Minister Hashim Thaci before the approval of state symbols including Kosovo's new national flag and anthem.

    Thaci said that Kosovo was an "independent and democratic" state, adding: "From this day onwards, Kosovo is proud, independent and free."

    Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica promptly denounced the move.

    "Citizens of Serbia, we have to come together and show the world that we do not acknowledge the creation of a false state on our territory," Kostunica said. "We will do our utmost to bring the province of Kosovo to where it rightfully belongs." He added, "As long as there are Serbian people, Kosovo is Serbian."

    CNN's Alessio Vinci, reporting from Kosovo's capital of Pristina, said that thousands of Kosovar Albanians had braved the freezing wind and cold to sing, dance, wave flags in the streets and light firecrackers ahead of the much anticipated vote. Some revelers were even said to be firing guns skyward. "It's been like this for several hours now," he said.

    "It's a day they have been waiting for for such a long time that many of them are trying to figure out just how they got to this day."

    In Belgrade, Serbia's capital, riot police used flares and tear gas Sunday evening to disperse several hundred people protesting outside the U.S Embassy, said Time magazine's Dejan Anastajevic. Some of the protestors carried Serbian flags, and some threw things at the embassy, Anastajevic reported. Video from the scene also showed some demonstrators throwing things at police.

    Video also showed one apparently injured police officer being taken to an ambulance.

    President Bush said Sunday that Kosovo's status must be resolved before the Balkans can become stable and that the United States supports the Ahtisaari plan, which calls for a form of supervised independence.

    The United Nations Security Council said it would hold an emergency session Sunday to discuss Kosovo's declaration, at Russia's request. Russia has also called for an open Security Council meeting on Monday so that Serbian President Boris Tadic can attend, Russia's ambassador to the U.N., Vitaly Churkin, said. He said that the Council was expecting a briefing from U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Sunday.

    Russia -- Serbia's historic ally -- has remained opposed to Kosovo's independence. Russia, which has fought two wars against separatist rebels in its southwestern republic of Chechnya, has said that U.S. and European support for Kosovo's independence could lead to an "uncontrollable crisis" in the Balkans.

    The European Union decided Saturday to launch a mission of about 2,000 police and judicial officers to replace the United Nations mission that has been controlling the province since the end of the war with Serbia in 1999.

    Kosovo has been under U.N. supervision and patrolled by a NATO-led peacekeeping force since the end of the three-month war, in which NATO warplanes pounded Serbia to roll back a campaign of "ethnic cleansing" of the province's Albanian population under former President Slobodan Milosevic.

    The disputed province is dear to the Serbs -- Orthodox Christians who regard it as Serbian territory. But it is equally coveted by Kosovo's ethnic Albanians -- Muslims who have a 90 percent majority. Two years of talks on its final status ended in failure last December.

    "Its status must be resolved in order for the Balkans to be stable," Bush told reporters Sunday during a news conference in Tanzania.

    U.S. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the United States was reviewing the situation.

    Bush said the Ahtisaari plan -- named for former Finnish President Marti Ahtisaari -- is the best option. The proposal would give Kosovo limited statehood under international supervision.

    Bush added that "it's in Serbia's interest to be aligned with Europe and the Serbian people can know that they have a friend in America."


    "We are heartened by the fact that the Kosovo government has clearly proclaimed its willingness and its desire to support Serbian rights in Kosovo," Bush said.

    Thaci said Thursday he would establish a new government office for minorities and it would protect the rights of minorities after the province declares independence.

    Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic has promised his country will refrain from using force against Kosovo after independence, though he has warned that Serbia will take punitive diplomatic, political, and economic measures against the province.


    The EU said Saturday that "around 1,900 international police officers, judges, prosecutors and customs officials and approximately 1,100 local staff will be based in headquarters in Pristina or located throughout the judicial and police system in Kosovo."

    The EU mission's objective is "to support the Kosovo authorities by monitoring, mentoring and advising on all areas related to the rule of law, in particular in the police, judiciary, customs and correctional services," it said.


    CNN News.
    Sui generis

  4. #4
    Evidenca Maska e RaPSouL
    Anëtarësuar
    09-03-2006
    Vendndodhja
    Gjermani
    Postime
    17,464
    Po vazhdojme me nje artikull nga gazeta me e madhe Gjermane ajo "Bild".

    Gazeta gjermane po refen per Kosoven ne menyre te pergjithshme duke filluar nga pozita e deri tek banoret e saj!

    Nur halb so groß wie Mecklenburg-Vorpommern

    Die südserbische Provinz Kosovo, die an Albanien, Montenegro und Mazedonien grenzt, ist mit knapp 11.000 Quadratkilometern etwa halb so groß wie Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.

    Von den geschätzten 2,1 Millionen Einwohnern sind 95 Prozent Albaner. Die serbische Minderheit zählt nur noch 100.000 Menschen. Die Kosovo-Bevölkerung wächst im Rekordtempo: 40 Prozent der Einwohner sind unter 20 Jahre alt.

    Heute wird der Kosovo unabhängig

    Die extrem hohe Arbeitslosigkeit von mehr als 80 Prozent in einzelnen Regionen der serbischen Provinz begünstigt allgegenwärtige Korruption und Vetternwirtschaft. Der Kosovo ist auch ein Dreh- und Angelpunkt für Menschenschmuggel, Zwangsprostitution sowie Waffen- und Drogenhandel.

    Weil es praktisch keinen Warenexport gibt, ist das Land von ausländischen Hilfen und Gastarbeiterüberweisungen abhängig. Experten sehen Chancen im Ausbau des maroden Bergbaus und des Energiesektors, wofür allerdings Rieseninvestitionen für erforderlich seien.

    Der Kosovo war kurz vor dem Ersten Weltkrieg gewaltsam dem serbischen Königreich eingegliedert worden. Das Verhältnis zwischen der albanischstämmigen Bevölkerungsmehrheit und Belgrad blieb über die Jahrzehnte gespannt, bevor das Gebiet 1999 einer UN-Verwaltung unterstellt wurde.

    Die traditionellen Clan- und Großfamilienstrukturen sind im Kosovo noch weitgehend intakt. Der vorherrschende Islam ist weltlich geprägt und weit von jedem Fundamentalismus entfernt. Die orthodoxen Serben wanderten seit dem 15. Jahrhundert nach Norden aus.

    Im Kosovo befindet sich auch das historische Amselfeld (Kosovo polje), an dem die Serben 1389 die Schlacht gegen die vorrückenden Türken verloren.

    Mit der Unabhängigkeitserklärung wird der Kosovo zu einem Binnen-Zwergstaat, der nördlich an Albanien angrenzt und vorerst zu den ärmsten in Europa zählt.
    Sui generis

  5. #5
    Evidenca Maska e RaPSouL
    Anëtarësuar
    09-03-2006
    Vendndodhja
    Gjermani
    Postime
    17,464
    Artikulli i radhes eshte i marrur nga mediat amerikane me saktesisht BBC.

    Kosovo MPs proclaim independence

    Kosovo's parliament has unanimously endorsed a declaration of independence from Serbia, in a historic session.
    The declaration, read by Prime Minister Hashim Thaci, said Kosovo would be a democratic country that respected the rights of all ethnic communities.

    But Serbia's PM denounced the US for helping create a "false state" and protesters in Belgrade later pelted the US embassy with stones.

    The UN Security Council is meeting in an emergency session to discuss Kosovo.

    The meeting was demanded by Serbia's ally Russia.


    See a map of Kosovo's ethnic breakdown
    Tens of thousands of people had thronged the streets of Kosovo's capital, Pristina, since the morning.


    When news came of the declaration in parliament, the centre of the city erupted with fireworks, firecrackers and celebratory gunfire.

    Hundreds of ethnic Albanians staged noisy celebrations in the Macedonian capital, Skopje, and in Brussels, outside the headquarters of Nato and the European Union.

    Hand grenades

    The first sign of trouble in Kosovo came in the ethnic Serbian area of the flashpoint town of Mitrovica, where two hand grenades were thrown at international community buildings.

    One exploded at a UN court building while the other failed to go off outside offices expected to house the new EU mission.

    In Belgrade, demonstrators threw stones and broke windows at the US embassy as riot police tried to fend off a crowd of around 1,000 people.

    The protesters, described as gangs of youths, also attacked a McDonald's restaurant, the Serbian government building and the embassy of Slovenia which currently holds the EU presidency.

    Several Serbian ministers had travelled to Kosovo to show their support for the ethnic Serbian minority.

    Kosovo's 10 Serbian MPs boycotted the assembly session in protest at the declaration.

    Serbia's Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica blamed the US which he said was "ready to violate the international order for its own military interests".

    "Today, this policy of force thinks that it has triumphed by establishing a false state," Mr Kostunica said.

    Search for equality

    The declaration was approved with a show of hands. No-one opposed it.

    "We have waited for this day for a very long time," Mr Thaci told parliament before reading the text, paying tribute to those who had died on the road to independence.

    From today, he said, Kosovo was "proud, independent and free".

    "The independence of Kosovo marks the end of the dissolution of the former Yugoslavia," the prime minister said.

    He said Kosovo would be built in accordance with the UN plan drawn up by former Finnish President, Martti Ahtisaari.

    The international military and civilian presence - also envisaged by the Ahtisaari plan - was welcome, the PM said.

    There should be no fear of discrimination in new Kosovo, he said, vowing to eradicate any such practices.

    The declaration was signed by all the MPs present.

    Russian protest

    The UN Security Council went into emergency session on Sunday evening after Russia called for the United Nations to declare the Kosovo declaration illegal.

    Russia's UN ambassador Vitaly Churkin told reporters that the resolution allowing the UN to administer Kosovo since 1999 had been violated and said the council had a duty to annul the declaration.

    Three other permanent members of the council, the US, the UK and France disagree. Serbian President Boris Tadic is heading to New York for a second emergency session due on Monday.


    BBC UN correspondent Matt Wells said Russia was using every means at its disposal to make the strongest possible diplomatic protest.

    The declaration approved by Kosovo's parliament contains limitations on Kosovan independence as outlined in Mr Ahtisaari's plan.

    Kosovo, or part of it, cannot join any other country. It will be supervised by an international presence. Its armed forces will be limited and it will make strong provisions for Serb minority protection.

    Recognition by a number of EU states, including the UK and other major countries, will come on Monday after a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels, says the BBC's Paul Reynolds.

    The US is also expected to announce its recognition on Monday.

    Three EU states - Cyprus, Romania and Slovakia - have told other EU governments that they will not recognise Kosovo, says our correspondent.

    Russia's foreign ministry has indicated that Western recognition of an independent Kosovo could have implications for the Georgian breakaway provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

    BBC
    Sui generis

  6. #6
    Evidenca Maska e RaPSouL
    Anëtarësuar
    09-03-2006
    Vendndodhja
    Gjermani
    Postime
    17,464
    Gazeta BBC e shkruan nje fjale teper interesante lexoni:

    Joy in Kosovo and anger in Belgrade at independence move
    Sui generis

  7. #7
    Evidenca Maska e RaPSouL
    Anëtarësuar
    09-03-2006
    Vendndodhja
    Gjermani
    Postime
    17,464
    Mediat Australiane reth pavarsise se Kosoves shkruajne.

    World's Newest State

    Kosovo declares independence

    KOSOVO has declared its independence from an angry and anxious Serbia in the final fallout from the conflict-strewn break-up of the former Yugoslavia.

    Tens of thousands of flag waving people packed the capital, Pristina, as the Kosovo parliament voted a declaration of independence that insisted the world's newest state would be "dedicated to peace and stability".

    The parliament also approved a new flag for the landlocked state of about two million people.

    While the United States and European Union are quickly expected to recognise the new state, Serbia is infuriated by the move and has been given strong support by Russia.

    Serbia's President Boris Tadic said his country would never accept the move.

    Kosovo police had to stop several hundred former Serbian army reservists - veterans of the 1998-99 Kosovo war - from crossing into the territory ahead of the independence declaration.

    The group, dressed in military uniforms, broke through a Serbian police cordon at the Merdare crossing before being held back.

    On the eve of the declaration, the NATO-led peacekeeping Kosovo Force - with 17,000 troops from 34 nations - said it would intervene robustly to prevent any inter-ethnic violence.

    Belgrade, which insists it retains sovereignty over what it considers the cradle of Serbian culture and religion, has branded independence an illegal act and a geopolitical land grab by the European Union.

    "Whatever happens in Pristina tonight it will not be the end of a part of our history, but just the beginning," said the influential Politika newspaper, summing up the mood in Belgrade.

    Independence would bring down the curtain on the long and brutal break-up of Yugoslavia in the 1990s that followed the demise of communism in Europe and witnessed the continent's worst atrocities since World War II.

    About 10,000 people died in the 1998-1999 war as Serb forces tried to put down ethnic Albanian separatists. A NATO air war against late Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic halted the conflict and Kosovo has since been under UN administration.

    "We've been waiting for this day for such a long time," said Sherife Bajrami, a Pristina doctor and mother of four.

    "We'll celebrate with dignity, with respect for minorities, for all to live happily in the land of Kosovo."

    The declaration started a 120-day transition period and the deployment of a 2000-strong EU police and judicial team to help the transition.

    A constitution - based on a blueprint for "supervised independence" proposed by UN special envoy Martti Ahtisaari that Serbia refused to accept - would come later.

    Russia blocked the Ahtisaari plan at the UN and Kosovo's independence declaration will be made without UN security council approval, despite its backing by Western powers.

    The US today reaffirmed its strong backing for an independent Kosovo.

    "On Kosovo, our position is that its status must be resolved in order for the Balkans to be stable," US president George W Bush said.

    With an estimated 40 per cent unemployment, and half its population under the age of 25, Kosovo will nevertheless remain highly dependent on massive infusions of Western economic aid.

    Many of its neighbours fear its independence will unsettle a region still rife with inter-ethnic tension more than a decade after the end of the Balkan wars.

    Within the EU, countries such as Greece, Romania and Bulgaria which are close to Serbia, or which like Spain and Cyprus have their own separatist problems, have said they would not recognise Kosovo.

    Serbia has vowed to oppose the EU police mission. Deputy Prime Minister Bozidar Djelic said in a formal protest to Brussels that only the UN security council could rule on Kosovo's status.

    Russia - Serbia's closest partner on the global stage, and mindful that Kosovo's independence might set a precedent in restive corners of its vast territory - is certain to block such moves.

    An estimated 120,000 Serbs live in Kosovo, which is home to some of the most important shrines of the Serbian Orthodox faith. More than 220,000 others have left since 1999.

    Belgrade is imploring Serbs in Kosovo to stay put as an act of defiance - a message echoed yesterday by the pretender to the long-abolished Serbian throne, Crown Prince Aleksandar II.

    "The most important thing for you is to stay here and remain calm," he told a Serb crowd in the divided town of Kosovska Mitrovica, where he attended Orthodox mass.

    "Wisdom, calm, along with law and order are our only weapons. You must not forget that."

    Russia has condemned Kosovo's declaration of independence from Serbia and called for an immediate meeting of the UN Security Council, the Russian foreign ministry said in a statement.

    The declaration of independence "violates the sovereignty of the republic of Serbia," the statement said.

    "Russia is calling for an immediate emergency session of the UN Security Council to consider the situation."

    News Au
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  8. #8
    Evidenca Maska e RaPSouL
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    Mediat Australiane kesaj radhe ABC News shkruan:

    Kosovo declares independence from Serbia

    Kosovo has declared independence from Serbia, ending a long chapter in the bloody breakup of Yugoslavia.

    The proclamation was made by leaders of the breakaway province's 90 per cent ethnic Albanian majority, including former guerrillas who fought for independence in a 1998-99 war which claimed about 10,000 civilian lives.

    "We, the leaders of our people, democratically elected, through this declaration proclaim Kosovo an independent and sovereign state," said the text read out in parliament by Prime Minister Hashim Thaci.

    "This declaration reflects the will of the people."

    He said Kosovo would be a "society that respects human dignity" and that was committed to confronting the "painful legacy of the recent past, in a spirit of reconciliation and forgiveness".

    All 109 deputies present at the session in the capital Pristina voted in favour with a show of hands. Eleven deputies from ethnic minorities, including Serbs, were absent.

    Belgrade bitterly opposes the secession. Backed by Russia, Serbs vow never to give up the territory, in which their history goes back 1,000 years.

    But the West supports the demand of Kosovo's two million ethnic Albanians for their own state, nine years after NATO went to war to save them from Serbian forces.

    Kosovo will be the sixth state carved from the former Serbian-dominated Yugoslav federation since 1991, after Slovenia, Croatia, Macedonia, Bosnia and Montenegro.

    It will be the world's 193rd independent country but Serbia says it will never win a seat at the United Nations.

    Serbs in the north of Kosovo will reject independence, cementing an ethnic partition that will weigh on the new state for years to come.

    Fewer than half of Kosovo's 120,000 remaining Serbs live in the north, while the rest are in scattered enclaves protected by NATO peacekeepers.

    The United States and most EU members are expected to quickly recognise Kosovo, despite failing to win United Nations Security Council approval - blocked by Russia last year.

    The EU will also send a supervisory mission to take over from the current UN authorities.


    Celebrations

    Tens of thousands of cheering, flag-waving Kosovars flocked onto the streets of Pristina ahead of the declaration of independence.

    The joyful scenes were a repeat of the all-night partying that broke out the day before after Mr Thaci confirmed the long-awaited declaration was imminent.

    Young and old alike mingled shoulder-to-shoulder along the pedestrianised Mother Teresa avenue, snapping pictures of each other with pocket cameras or mobile phones, as the odd firecracker went off.

    Beneath a statue of Zahir Pajaziti, a slain hero of the Kosovo Liberation Army's guerrilla war against Serbia a decade ago, a merry crowd danced to music and drumbeats, under a bright winter sun.

    Everywhere, the blood-red Albanian flag - flown here in the absence of Kosovo's own standard - could be seen, alongside those of the United States, Britain, Germany and the NATO military alliance.

    In one part of downtown, a giant barbecue was being prepared, the centrepiece of which was a 180-kilogram bull on a spit. Elsewhere, a giant cake in the shape of the province was ready to eat.

    ABC News
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  9. #9
    Evidenca Maska e RaPSouL
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    ABC News shkruan reth paregullsive qe ndodhin dhe kan ndodhur diten e sotme si gjate festimeve ashtu edhe gjate protestave.

    Grenades thrown during Kosovo independence protest


    Hand grenades have been thrown at buildings of the European Union and United Nations in the Kosovo Serb stronghold city of Mitrovica.

    Kosovo earlier declared independence from Serbia, ending a long chapter in the bloody breakup of Yugoslavia, but Serbia has vowed to resist it.

    One grenade exploded at the UN mission causing no significant damage, a Western source in the city said. EU officials evacuated their building, which houses the team preparing a mission to supervise Kosovo's independence.

    "Officials abandoned the [EU] building. Security guards said two hand grenades had been thrown. One had exploded," the source said.

    Police sources said a vehicle belonging to the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) was damaged in the blast at the UN carpark.

    French troops of the NATO-led peacekeeping force KFOR earlier prepared concrete and wire barriers to close off the bridges dividing Albanians and Serbs in Mitrovica in case of clashes.

    The ethnically divided town, where 20,000 Serbs live in the north and 80,000 ethnic Albanians in the south, symbolises the tensions of Kosovo.

    Nationalist Serbs are fiercely opposed to the independence of Kosovo, which has dozens of centuries-old Serbian Orthodox churches and monasteries, and which they consider their historic heartland.

    In Serbia's second largest city Novi Sad, several hundred people gathered on the main square in the city for a protest march, Tanjug news agency said. No incidents were reported.

    Earlier, several hundred former Serbian army reservists were prevented on from crossing into Kosovo ahead of its independence declaration, witnesses said.

    Dressed in military uniforms, the group broke through a Serbian police cordon before being stopped on the other side of the border by the Kosovo Police Service (KPS), Beta news agency and B92 radio reported.


    'Null and void'

    Russia UN Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said his country wanted the UN mission in Kosovo to declare "null and void" the independence.

    Speaking shortly before the start of an emergency meeting of the Security Council, Mr Churkin said he would insist on council "resolution 1244 and other relevant documents being implemented by the leadership of UNMIK (UN mission in Kosovo).

    "In accordance with those, they are supposed to declare the proclamation of independence null and void," he added.

    Resolution 1244, adopted at the end of Kosovo's 1998-1999 war, gave the disputed province "substantial autonomy" under Serbian sovereignty and put in place the UN mission and NATO-led peacekeepers.


    US in damage control

    The United States has been the most powerful backer of Kosovo, but must now limit the damage to relations with Serbia and its strong ally Russia, which reject Kosovo's action.

    The US cautiously acknowledged the declaration, saying it would review the move with European allies and meanwhile calling for "utmost restraint" in the region.

    But in fact the US has backed Kosovo's breaking away from Serbia since 1999, when then-president Bill Clinton spearheaded the NATO bombing campaign that stopped Belgrade's bloody crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatists in the province.

    US President George W Bush has stuck to that position, even as tensions grew deeper with Belgrade and Moscow as Kosovo's declaration grew closer.

    "At some point in time, sooner rather than later, you got to say 'enough's enough, Kosovo's independent,'" Mr Bush said last June on a visit to Albania, the first by a US head of state while in office.

    The stance earned Mr Bush a rapturous welcome in Tirana, and two days later, the US State Department said Washington was ready to recognise a unilateral declaration of Kosovan independence.


    'Recognise' independence

    Kosovo President Fatmir Sejdiu on Sunday called on "all the countries of the world" to recognise Kosovo's independence from Serbia which was proclaimed earlier by its parliament.

    "I have the honour to ask that all the countries of the world recognise [our independence] and establish normal diplomatic relations with us," he told a press conference.

    European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana said that stability in Kosovo and the whole Balkan region was essential.

    "I urge everybody to act calmly and in a responsible way," he said in a statement.

    Meanwhile, the Vatican has called for "prudence and moderation" in Kosovo and Serbia.

    The Holy See urged politicians in the region to show "a decisive and concrete commitment to ward off extremist reactions and violence", Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said in a statement.

    The respect of all ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities in Kosovo must be ensured, he said, and he called for its Christian artistic and cultural heritage to be safeguarded.

    "The Holy Father continues to look with affection at the people of Kosovo and Serbia, is close to them and is praying at this crucial moment of their history," the statement said.

    ABC News
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  10. #10
    Evidenca Maska e RaPSouL
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    NPR News reth pavaresis se Kosoves dhe shtetit me te ri ne bote shkruan:

    Kosovo Parliament Declares Independence

    Kosovo is declaring independence. During a special parliamentary session Sunday, Serbia's breakaway province proclaimed itself the world's newest state.

    The declaration received a stern reaction from the Serbian president, who said his nation would never accept an independent Kosovo. President Bush said the U.S. would work to prevent violence after the declaration and the European Union also appealed for calm.

    Deputies unanimously approved the declaration of independence in a solemn session of Parliament. Prime Minister Hashim Thaci . read the declaration, saying, "We the leaders of our people, democratically elected, through this declaration proclaim Kosovo an independent and sovereign state," adding, "This declaration reflects the will of the people."

    Across the capital, Pristina, revelers danced in the streets, fired guns into the air and waved red and black Albanian flags in jubilation at the birth of the world's newest country.

    Earlier, Thaci delivered a speech underscoring that the new state would ensure the rights of all minorities and will be democratic and multiethnic.

    By sidestepping the U.N. and appealing directly to the U.S. and other nations for recognition, Kosovo set up a showdown with Serbia — outraged at the imminent loss of its territory — and Russia, which warned that it would set a dangerous precedent for separatist groups worldwide.

    From NPR reports and The Associated Press
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  11. #11
    Evidenca Maska e RaPSouL
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    Gazeta e lartpermendur shkruan:

    Q&A: The State of Kosovo

    by Emily Harris

    After years of dispute over Kosovo, the breakaway Serbian province is expected to declare its independence this weekend.

    The plan includes keeping NATO's peacekeeping force in place — and having the European Union take over from the United Nations in overseeing the judicial system and ensuring rule of law.

    Serbia has rejected the idea of an independent Kosovo, but has said it would not use force against the province.

    Here's some background on the situation:

    Where is Kosovo?

    Kosovo is in southern Europe. It is a landlocked area a bit smaller than Connecticut — north of Macedonia, east of Albania, south of Serbia, and west of Bulgaria. It's at nearly the same latitude as the "ankle" of Italy.

    What is Kosovo's legal status?

    Kosovo is technically still a part of Serbia, which was the dominant republic in the former Yugoslavia. But since 1999, Kosovo has been run by a U.N. mission and protected by NATO troops. When Yugoslavia existed as a country, Kosovo was — for part of that time — an autonomous area within Serbia.

    What led to the current situation?

    In 1999, NATO bombed Serbia in order to stop what the organization called a "campaign of terror" against ethnic Albanians in Kosovo, carried out by the then Yugoslav military and irregular Serb paramilitary groups. At the end of the bombing, the Security Council approved Resolution 1244, which gave a U.N. mission the responsibility to administer Kosovo, while developing elements of a local provisional government, until a final political solution could be arranged for Kosovo.

    The antagonism between Serbs and Albanians has roots that date back to the Middle Ages. These tensions have flared into violence in varying degrees since then, including in the years just prior to the 1999 bombing.

    What has Russia's stance been?

    Russia's major public objection is that the United Nations doesn't have the right to carve up sovereign states and warns this will set a bad precedent. Moscow refers frequently to U.N .Security Council resolution 1244, which mentions the U.N. "commitment" to the "sovereignty and territorial integrity" of Yugoslavia. In addition, Moscow backs Serbia in saying that Serbs in Kosovo have not, and cannot be, adequately protected, and says further talks should be held between Serbia and Kosovo.

    The United States and the Kosovo government have rejected the idea of more talks, and the U.N. envoy has said the possibilities for discussion are exhausted. The United States also argues that Kosovo is a unique case and should not be seen as setting a precedent for other independent-minded or "breakaway" regions around the world. The situation in Kosovo is being watched closely by people elsewhere around the world who have been seeking their own states, including the Kurds in northern Iraq and the Basques in Spain. A number of such conflicts directly involve Russia, including in Chechnya, Transdniestr, South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

    Why is this important to the United States?

    The United States got involved militarily against the Serbs in Kosovo in 1999 after sitting out similarly horrible wars in Bosnia and Croatia. The U.S.-led NATO bombardment set the stage for U.N. governance of Kosovo — and for the current question of its future status. In the U.S. view, the only possible path to stability in the Balkans region is for Kosovo to become independent.

    What are the chances of more violence in this area?

    Officials from both sides have assured the international community that they would not resort to violence. After the December 10 deadline for an agreement passed without any resolution, Kosovo's prime minister-designate, Hasim Thaci, began talks with his ethnic Albanian political rivals. Thaci leads one of the biggest ethnic Albanian parties.

    At the same time, Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica said his country would not accept European Union supervision in Kosovo, and would abandon efforts to join the European Union, if the group recognizes Kosovo as an independent state. The Serbs have insisted that the Kosovo question must be resolved in the United Nations Security Council. That's because Russia, a traditional ally of the Serbs, has a veto on the council. Russia has already said it will ask the U.N. Security Council to nullify any unilateral declaration of independence by the Kosovo Albanians.

    Serbia has said it would not use force against the breakaway province, though it's possible that fringe elements on both sides could take advantage of the uncertainly to re-ignite violence.


    Nje analize e gjere reth Kosoves marrura nga gazeta NPR.

    PS: Ketu e keni edhe nje foto nga harta e ballkanit!
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  12. #12
    Rising Star and Legend Maska e Davius
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    Analysis: Kosovo strains US-Russian ties

    By WILLIAM J. KOLE, Associated Press Writer 1 hour, 45 minutes ago

    PRISTINA, Kosovo - American flags flutter almost everywhere in Kosovo, a symbol of how — through successive Democratic and Republican administrations — the U.S. has long been a friend of this nation in the making.
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    But Washington's stalwart support of statehood in recent months in the face of fierce resistance from Russia has raised the stakes in its increasingly testy relations with a Kremlin increasingly eager to shore up its influence among its former Soviet vassal states.

    By backing Kosovo's independence outside the U.N. Security Council, the U.S. and its European allies have taken a calculated risk. They are betting that the turbulent Balkans will not plunge into violence.

    If it does, the White House will take much of the blame. Reflecting the concern, President Bush said Sunday that the U.S. will work to prevent violence.

    "Moscow is convinced that it holds the moral high ground and will live to see yet another Western 'blunder' on par with Iraq," said Oksana Antonenko, a Russia expert at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London-based think tank.

    "If violence returns to Kosovo, Russia and the West will blame each other, worsening general relations," Atonenko warned. The world is watching to see whether "Kosovo will be an exception — that independence will bring stability and rule of law, not chaos and insecurity," she said.

    Russia is a traditional ally of Serbia. But that is not the only reason it vehemently opposes Kosovo's independence. The Kremlin contends it will set a dangerous precedent for secessionist movements across the former Soviet Union, including Chechnya and Georgia.

    The confrontation over Kosovo could harden Russia's resolve on the other disputes that have brought ties to a post-Cold War low. While analysts say Russia is unlikely to restrict energy supplies to the West in response to recognition of the province, ignoring Russia's concerns could make Moscow less cooperative on crucial issues such as Iran's nuclear program.

    Russia could also launch aggressive moves on ex-Soviet territory, such as recognizing the independence claims of breakaway regions in Georgia or even encouraging violent resistance to NATO membership in Ukraine.

    The U.S. is not deliberately trying to provoke Russia, but Washington sees no way around supporting Kosovo independence, said Charles Kupchan, a senior fellow for Europe studies at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York.

    "There's no question that Kosovo will serve as an irritant between Russia and the U.S., but there won't be a sudden outburst of shock," he said. "Both sides are trying to prevent an open rift."

    Washington also appears eager to support the independence of predominantly Muslim — but largely secular — Kosovo to help bridge the gulf with the Islamic world and to show how democracy can work in a Muslim country.

    Russia and the U.S. already are at odds over Washington's plans to station a missile defense system in Poland and the Czech Republic. The U.S. says the interceptor rockets are designed to counter a threat from the Middle East, but the Kremlin contends the real purpose is to weaken Russia.

    The U.S., meanwhile, is rankled at recent rhetoric from President Vladimir Putin suggesting that Russia could aim nuclear missiles at Ukraine if the former Soviet republic joins NATO.

    "It's a relationship that's been going downhill pretty much since 2002," said Steven Pifer, a former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine and a senior specialist on Russia for the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies.

    And both sides share the blame, he said.

    "Both sides are having a hard time seeing how they can engage in a constructive manner," he said. "I don't see anyone in Washington who wants to have a more difficult relationship with the Russians."

    Progress in that relationship probably will have to wait until next month's presidential elections in Russia and the U.S. election in November, Pifer said.

    Kupchan believes the U.S. would have preferred to shepherd independence through the U.N. Security Council, but Moscow made that impossible by threatening to use its veto.

    He and others say the next best thing will be a robust round of official recognitions from as many nations as possible, which will help vindicate the U.S. and key allies in the eyes of a wary world. A flurry of recognitions was expected from Monday's meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels, Belgium.

    Independence does not mean the U.S. and Europe can disengage from Kosovo, where 16,000 NATO-led troops — including about 1,000 Americans — still keep the peace.

    "The U.S. wanted to wash its hands of its strategic commitments in the region, but the commitments will actually grow ... they'll need to take on greater responsibility to make sure violence doesn't break out," Kupchan said.

    "The immediate implication for the U.S. is that it ain't over yet in the Balkans."

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  13. #13
    VOICE OF AMERICA

    Celebrations are being held in Kosovo after the parliament declared independence from Serbia. But Serbia and Russia reacted immediately to what they consider an illegal act backed by the international community. UN Security Council is meeting on Kosovo's declaration of independence, after Russia called on Council to block the move. Sabina Castelfranco reports for VOA from Rome.

    People danced in the streets of Pristina, fired guns into the air and waved red and black Albanian flags in jubilation at the birth of the world's newest country: Kosovo. The chamber burst into applause after a unanimous vote approved the document proclaiming independence and parliament speaker Jakup Krasniqi declared Kosovo an independent, democratic and sovereign state.

    The document was signed by Krasniqi, Prime Minister Hashim Thaci and President Fatmir Sejdiu.


    Kosovo's Prime Minister Hashim Thaci greets the crowd as he walks in Kosovo's capital Pristina, Sunday, 17 Feb. 2008
    Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci declared: "The day has come and from today onwards, Kosovo is proud, independent and free."

    Mr. Thaci added: "There is no room for intimidation, discrimination or unequal treatment of anyone. Our state institutions and our society will stamp out discriminatory practices. In Kosovo there will be tolerance, mutual understanding, solidarity and progress."

    But Serbian President Boris Tadic immediately denounced the declaration as unilateral and illegal. Russia also rejected it and and called for an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council.

    Tadic has said Serbia would do everything in its power to revoke Kosvo's declaration of independence, but added that Serbia would not use force to reclaim the breakaway province. He urged urged Serbia's political parties and the 130,000 Serbs living in Kosovo "to remain calm."

    Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica said today, February 17, the fake country of Kosoco was illegally declared, on part of the territory, which is under NATO military control. He called it an unprecedented illegal act.

    Some violence was reported after Kosovo declared its independence, but there was no significant damage. Hand grenades were thrown at buildings of the European Union and United Nations in the Kosovo-Serb stronghold city of Mitrovica. And Angry Serbs also stoned the U.S. embassy in Belgrade

    The U.S., Britain, France and Germany are expected to quickly recognize Kosovo's independence. The European Union foreign policy chief said that stability in Kosovo and the whole Balkan region is essential, and urged everyone to act calmly and responsibly.
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  14. #14
    Shpirt Shqiptari Maska e Albo
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    Postimet në Bllog
    17
    "Independent": Kosova një shembull i suksesshëm i ndërhyrjes ndërkombëtare

    Londër, 17 shkurt - T'i lëmë mënjanë pesimistët vetëm për një ditë dhe t'i bashkohemi shumicës së popullit të Kosovës në festimet dhe reflektimin pse shtetësia është gjë e mirë, shkruan në numrin e sotëm gazeta britanike "Indipedent". Marrëdhëniet mes shumicës shqiptare dhe pakicës serbe vazhdojnë të jenë armiqësore, pohon gazeta dhe shton se Serbia nuk pranon të heqë dorë nga pretendimet territoriale rreth Kosovës. Sipas gazetës, ekzistenca e shtetit të ri si ekonomikisht dhe financiarisht do varet nga NATO ja dhe Bashkimi Evropian në një të ardhme të parashikueshme. Por, pavarësisht të gjithave Kosova mbetet një shembull i suksesshëm i ndërhyrjes ndërkombëtare, vlerëson "Indipendent" dhe thekson se dy gjëra janë të qarta. "E para se ishte plotësisht e drejtë t'i thuhej ndal nacionalizmit të Millosheviçit. Politika më e turpshme e qeverisë britanike të Xhon Mejxhorit ishte bindja në heshtje ndaj agresionit në Ballkan duke qëndruar anash në kohën që bëhej spastrimi etnik. Lufta e Kosovës i dha fund gjithë kësaj, Millosheviçi ra dhe Serbia hyri në rrugën e gjatë për t'iu bashkuar bashkësisë ndërkombëtare". Gazeta po ashtu thekson një element tjetër që duhet të ishte bërë e qartë që në vitin 1999 se Serbia e kishte humbur Kosovën.

    QIK

  15. #15
    Restaurator Orbis Maska e Baptist
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    Artikulli ka rreth 150 foto lidhur me pavaresine

    http://news.aol.com/story/_a/kosovo-...00010000000001

    Kosovo Declares Independence
    By WILLIAM J. KOLE,AP

    Posted: 2008-02-17 19:29:42


    Filed Under: World News
    PRISTINA, Kosovo (Feb. 17) - A decade ago, Kosovo rumbled with artillery fire as ethnic Albanian separatists battled Serbian forces. On Sunday, the booms came from celebratory fireworks after parliament declared independence - a final act of defiance that dismantled the last remnant of the former Yugoslavia.

    Lawmakers achieved what the bloody 1998-99 war that claimed 10,000 lives could not: They pronounced the disputed province the Republic of Kosovo, and pledged to make it a "democratic, multiethnic state."

    As thousands of jubilant ethnic Albanians poured into the streets - firing guns in the air and waving red-and-black Albanian flags with their distinctive doubleheaded eagle - their leaders looked for swift recognition from the U.S. and key European powers and braced for a bitter showdown with Serbia and its ally Russia.

    Revelers braved subfreezing temperatures to ride on the roofs of their cars, singing patriotic songs and chanting: "KLA! KLA!" the acronym for the now-disbanded rebel Kosovo Liberation Army. They waved American flags alongside the Albanian banner.

    Many dressed in traditional costumes and played trumpets and drums, and an ethnic Albanian couple named their newborn daughter Pavarsie - Albanian for "independence."


    Photo Gallery
    Bela Szandelszky, AP Statehood Movements
    Around the World 1 of 6
    The ethnic Albanians who make up the majority of Kosovo's population declared independence from Serbia on Sunday. It's only one of several statehood movements around the world. Here, Kosovars carry an Albanian flag Friday as they anticipate the creation of a new nation.

    "This is the happiest day in my life," said Mehdi Shehu, 68. "Now we're free and we can celebrate without fear."

    Kosovo had formally remained a part of Serbia even though it has been administered by the U.N. and NATO since 1999, when NATO airstrikes ended former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic's crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatists.

    Ninety percent of Kosovo's 2 million people are ethnic Albanian - most of them secular Muslims - and they see no reason to stay joined to the rest of Christian Orthodox Serbia.
    Ndryshuar për herë të fundit nga Lioness : 17-02-2008 më 22:32
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  16. #16
    ILIR NË GEN Maska e flory80
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    Citim Postuar më parë nga Albo Lexo Postimin
    "Independent": Kosova një shembull i suksesshëm i ndërhyrjes ndërkombëtare

    Londër, 17 shkurt - T'i lëmë mënjanë pesimistët vetëm për një ditë dhe t'i bashkohemi shumicës së popullit të Kosovës në festimet dhe reflektimin pse shtetësia është gjë e mirë, shkruan në numrin e sotëm gazeta britanike "Indipedent". Marrëdhëniet mes shumicës shqiptare dhe pakicës serbe vazhdojnë të jenë armiqësore, pohon gazeta dhe shton se Serbia nuk pranon të heqë dorë nga pretendimet territoriale rreth Kosovës. Sipas gazetës, ekzistenca e shtetit të ri si ekonomikisht dhe financiarisht do varet nga NATO ja dhe Bashkimi Evropian në një të ardhme të parashikueshme. Por, pavarësisht të gjithave Kosova mbetet një shembull i suksesshëm i ndërhyrjes ndërkombëtare, vlerëson "Indipendent" dhe thekson se dy gjëra janë të qarta. "E para se ishte plotësisht e drejtë t'i thuhej ndal nacionalizmit të Millosheviçit. Politika më e turpshme e qeverisë britanike të Xhon Mejxhorit ishte bindja në heshtje ndaj agresionit në Ballkan duke qëndruar anash në kohën që bëhej spastrimi etnik. Lufta e Kosovës i dha fund gjithë kësaj, Millosheviçi ra dhe Serbia hyri në rrugën e gjatë për t'iu bashkuar bashkësisë ndërkombëtare". Gazeta po ashtu thekson një element tjetër që duhet të ishte bërë e qartë që në vitin 1999 se Serbia e kishte humbur Kosovën.

    QIK
    Ndoshta jam pak i dehur sonte por per here te pare po me pelqen nje shkirm i ALBOS
    Gezuar te gjithe Shqiptareve ku do ku jane
    Le te festoje sot me mua
    Rrofte shteti me i ri Shqiptar ne harten Boterore...
    EH I ZIU NJERI, GËLLTIT DIKU NJE LUGË ÇORBË TË PRISHUR, EDHE VJELL PASTAJ PËR GJITHË JETËN!

  17. #17
    Gezuar Kosoven e Pavarur Maska e dodoni
    Anëtarësuar
    07-11-2002
    Postime
    3,393
    The Birth of Kosovo
    February 18, 2008
    When Slovenia declared independence in 1991, Belgrade sent in tanks. When Croatia and Bosnia did the same, the Serbs started wars that left a quarter million dead. So Serbia's resort to violent rhetoric in response to Kosovo's declaration of independence yesterday counts as a kind of Balkan progress.

    The newborn isn't out of danger, with Serbia and Russia wishing Kosovo ill. But the presence of NATO troops, and expected swift recognition by the U.S. and major European powers, ought to calm nerves and end the last territorial dispute in the Balkans. By taking the lead during the 1999 aerial war that forced Slobodan Milosevic's ethnic cleansers from Kosovo and now on independence, the U.S. is shepherding one more Muslim nation to freedom—not that it will get credit for it in the Islamic world.

    The proliferation of small states since the fall of communism has made Europe more stable and democratic, from Estonia to Macedonia. A sovereign Kosovo, which follows the entry of even tinier Montenegro into the club of nations, can be a force for good in the region and in the wider Europe. Though lawyers may quibble, Kosovo differs in no way from the other stand-alone parts of Yugoslavia that won their freedom after 1991, and are now better off for it. Serbian lobbyists portray the Kosovars as Muslim terrorists, but that strains credulity, given their moderate and secular practice of Islam (and Christianity) and their stated commitment to democracy.

    Kosovar leaders say they want their country to join the European Union and NATO, which would open their borders to free trade and bring them into European security structures. The Kosovar Albanians also seem aware that their new state will be judged on their protection of minority Serbs and willingness to make up with former enemies. International oversight and scrutiny can help ensure these promises are kept. Western chaperones will also have to watch the fragile multiethnic constructs in nearby Bosnia and Macedonia, where separatists may try to use Kosovo independence to push for a breakup.

    Russia has called for an emergency U.N. Security Council meeting to revoke the independence declaration. With no troops or permanent interests on the ground, however, Moscow may be happy merely to score political points against the West—and then, as usual, abandon the Serbs to their fate.

    Serbia is the sole former Yugoslav state that is not on track to integrate with the West. Responsible for and unapologetic about so much bloodletting in the 1990s, it doesn't seem to realize that history has moved on. The furious reaction to Kosovo independence has been redolent of Milosevic's "Greater Serbia" nationalism. In a televised address on the weekend, Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica blamed the U.S. for "this violence," stoking the Serb sense of grievance.

    Some European countries want to indulge the Serbs, offering them fast-track membership in the EU. In return, Serb politicians have threatened to freeze EU talks and downgrade relations with countries that recognize Kosovo—in short, most of the West. If the Serbs want to live through yet another lost decade, that is their choice to make.

    The one Serbian politician brave enough to challenge Serbian historical nationalism was the late Prime Minister Zoran Djinjic, who was killed in 2003. Serbia needs another leader who can acknowledge the country's cultural and historical links to Kosovo, while accepting its neighbor's desire for freedom. One doesn't cancel the other. Germans appreciate Gdansk's role in their history without calling for another invasion of Poland, and Poles treasure Vilnius but accept Lithuania's freedom.

    Serbian President Boris Tadic, who barely beat an ultranationalist in elections this month, has pledged to "do everything in [Serbia's] power to revoke the unilateral and illegal declaration of independence." He also said Serbia wants to join the EU. Brussels can help Serbia's re-education by insisting that any progress on membership be conditional on Belgrade's recognition of Kosovo. It can also insist, as the EU has for the past 13 years, that Serbia hand over indicted war criminals Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic for trial.

    The EU's great achievement has been to bring World War II enemies into a club committed to peace and prosperity. It's now the Balkans' turn. Kosovo's independence opens the way to bringing this region into Europe, which is a victory for everyone, including the Serbs.

    Wall Street Journal
    Leje mos m'trano, pashe zotin!!!!

    Rrofte Shqiperia Etnike

  18. #18
    Sipas nje informacioni i dale minutat e fundit duket se qeveria federale e Australise eshte e para qe ka njohur zyrtarisht pavaresine e Kosoves. Me poshte linku:

    http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2...18/2165873.htm
    ABCÇDDhEËFGGjHIJKLLlMNNjOPQRRrSShTThUVXXhYZZh (Alfabeti Shqip, 36 gërma)

  19. #19
    Rising Star and Legend Maska e Davius
    Anëtarësuar
    20-04-2003
    Vendndodhja
    Underground
    Postime
    11,956
    Bush recognizes Kosovo's independence

    ARUSHA, Tanzania - President Bush on Monday recognized Kosovo's bold and historic bid for statehood, saying "The Kosavars are now independent."
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Kosovo's ethnic Albanian leadership announced its independence from Serbia over the weekend, and suspense gripped the province on Monday as its citizens awaited key backing from the United States and key European powers.

    "It's something that I've advocated along with my government," Bush said in an interview on NBC's "Today."

    By appealing directly to the U.S. and other nations for recognition, Kosovo's independence set up a showdown with Serbia — outraged at the imminent loss of its territory — and Russia.

    Kosovo had formally remained a part of Serbia even though it has been administered by the U.N. and NATO since 1999, when NATO airstrikes ended former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic's crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatists, which killed 10,000 people.

    In April 2007, U.N. envoy Martti Ahtisaari recommended that Kosovo be granted internationally supervised independence. But talks that followed failed to yield an agreement between the ethnic Albanian leadership, which pushed for full statehood, and Serbia, which was willing to offer only autonomy.

    "The Ahtisaari plan is our blueprint forward," Bush said. "We'll watch to see how the events unfold today. The Kosovars are now independent."

    Serbia made clear it would never accept Kosovo's statehood. On Monday, Serbia said it would seek to block Kosovo from gaining diplomatic recognition and membership in the U.N. and other international organizations.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has argued that independence without U.N. approval would set a dangerous precedent for "frozen conflicts" across the former Soviet Union, where separatists in Chechnya and Georgia are agitating for independence.

    European Union nations have stood deeply divided over whether to recognize Kosovo's independence as their foreign ministers gathered in Brussels, Belgium, to try to forge a common stance. Britain, France, Germany and Ireland indicated they would push ahead with recognition. But Spain, which has struggled with its own separatist movement in the Basque region, called Kosovo's declaration illegal.

    On Sunday, Bush said the U.S. will work to prevent violent clashes following the historic announcement.

    "The United States will continue to work with our allies to do the very best we can to make sure there's no violence," Bush said several hours before Kosovo's parliament approved the declaration.

    ___

    Associated Press Writers William J. Kole and Nebi Qena in Pristina, Dusan Stojanovic in Kosovska Mitrovica and Jovana Gec in Belgrade contributed to this report.

    YAHOO
    My silence doesn't mean I am gone!

  20. #20
    Evidenca Maska e RaPSouL
    Anëtarësuar
    09-03-2006
    Vendndodhja
    Gjermani
    Postime
    17,464
    EU splits on Kosovo recognition

    European Union foreign ministers have failed to forge a joint position on Kosovo's declaration of independence from Serbia.
    While France confirmed that it would recognise independence, as expected, several member states led by Spain made clear their legal concerns.

    US President George W Bush said Kosovo's people were "independent" but stopped short of formal recognition.

    Russia has backed Serbia in its refusal to recognise Kosovo's secession.

    About 10,000 students protested in Belgrade on Monday, and thousands of the city's taxi-drivers went on strike in protest at the declaration of independence, while thousands of ethnic Serbs in Kosovo's enclaves also rallied.


    See a map of Kosovo's ethnic breakdown
    On Sunday, Kosovo's majority ethnic Albanians celebrated the declaration with fireworks late into the night.

    Serbian security forces were driven out of Kosovo in 1999 after a Nato bombing campaign aimed at halting the violent repression of ethnic Albanian separatists.

    The province has been under United Nations administration and Nato protection since then.

    'Many doubts'

    Sunday's declaration by the Kosovo parliament said independence would be built in accordance with the UN plan drawn up by former Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari.

    This outlines several limits on independence including an international presence and provision for the protection of the Serb minority.

    Mr Bush, speaking in Tanzania during an Africa tour, said the plan would be the "blueprint forward".

    One of the first states which recognised Kosovo was Afghanistan which referred to "the right of sovereignty".

    In Brussels, the EU presidency announced after a day of intense talks between foreign ministers that member countries were free to decide individually whether to recognise Kosovo's independence.

    French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said after the meeting that Paris would recognise Kosovo's independence.

    The issue exposed major splits within the EU, the BBC's Oana Lungescu reports.

    Spanish Minister for Europe Alberto Navarro told the BBC he was frustrated that the future of Kosovo was being decided by the world's big powers in breach of international law, and said he feared it would boost separatism.


    "What I say as a European is that I'm really frustrated that the future of Kosovo has been decided in Washington and to some extent in Moscow, and not in Europe," he added.

    "...I think many people have many doubts about the international legality of what it is going on about this declaration of independence."

    Cyprus, Greece, Romania, Bulgaria and Slovakia also expressed anxiety about the signal that recognition might send to separatists.

    UK Foreign Secretary David Milliband had said it was critical for the EU to show leadership and end the cycle of violence in the Balkans.

    Together with France, Germany and Italy, Britain insists Kosovo is a unique case, not a precedent, our correspondent adds.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel had said her country was seeking a "platform of unity within the EU" and would not declare its position on Monday.

    The EU has already agreed to send about 2,000 police, justice and civil administration officials to oversee Kosovo and help develop the province's institutions.

    'False state'

    Russia's parliament passed a motion on Monday condemning the declaration of independence.


    As a permanent member of the UN Security Council, Russia can block Kosovo's entry into the organisation as a sovereign state and it said on Sunday that Kosovo's declaration should be null and void.

    Serbia's interior ministry filed criminal charges on Monday against Kosovo Albanian leaders instrumental in proclaiming independence.

    It accused Prime Minister Hashim Thaci and two others of proclaiming a "false state" on Serbian territory.

    Chanting and playing music, students marched in Belgrade under a huge banner reading "Kosovo is a part of Serbia and Serbia is a part of the world".

    The scenes were in stark contrast to riots that took place in the capital a few hours earlier when a few hundred, mainly football hooligans, went on the rampage clashing with police and stoning embassies, the BBC's Nick Hawton reports.


    Some acts of violence were reported in Kosovo itself after Sunday's declaration.

    A hand grenade thrown at a UN court building in the divided town of Mitrovica, and a UN car was reported to have been destroyed in the nearby village of Zubin Potok.


    BBC
    Sui generis

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