EUROPEAN UNION TO DEPLOY POLICE MISSION IN KOSOVO, BRUSSELS NEWS HEADLINES: -
European Union leaders decided Friday to deploy a vast police mission to Kosovo as the Serbian province edges toward independence, a move that could fuel tensions with Russia. "This is the clearest signal that the European Union could possibly give that it intends to lead on the whole issue of Kosovo's future, its status and its role in the region," Portuguese Prime Minister Jose Socrates told reporters after an EU summit in Brussels.
EU EUROPEAN UNION PREPARING 1800 PERSONNEL TO DEPLOY
The EU European Union has been preparing the police and justice operation of around 1,800 personnel that was meant to be deployed under a UN proposal to grant Kosovo "supervised independence" but the move was blocked by Russia. French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Serbia had "a future" in the EU European Union "if it respects human rights and the independence of Kosovo".
EU EUROPEAN UNION MAY DEPLOY POLICE AFTER CHRISTMAS IN KOSOVO
In a friendly gesture to Serbia, which implacably opposes Kosovan independence, the European Union EU leaders in their written conclusions also voiced confidence that Serbia's "progress on the road towards the European Union EU, including candidate status, can be accelerated." An EU European Union official said there was no exact date set but "that it could be decided at the council (of EU European Union foreign ministers)" on January 28. Socrates did not say when the police mission would be deployed, but Luxembourg's Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn said: "Not before Christmas but immediately after."
KOSOVO LEADERS WILL ANNOUNCE INTENTION TO DECLARE INDEPENDENCE IN DECEMBER
Kosovo has been administered by the UN since NATO bombed Belgrade in 1999 to end a crackdown on separatist ethnic Albanians, and the Albanian majority has been impatient for independence ever since. Western officials and experts believe that Kosovo's leaders will announce next month their intention to declare independence, and then break away by May in "coordination" with its EU and US allies. The mission would help ease the southern province's transition of power from the UN administration, which has been in place since 1999, to the local authorities.
EU EUROPEAN UNION READY TO RECOGNISE KOSOVO WHEN IT BREAKS AWAY
When asked whether the deployment of the mission meant that EU European Union nations were ready to recognise Kosovo when it does break away, Socrates said: "No." The EU European Union must also send a clear diplomatic signal ahead of the security council debate on its position and possible intentions in the weeks and months ahead. After failing to prevent the bloody breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, the leaders want to show they can meet the credibility test posed by Kosovo. "What we are doing at the moment is undertaking negotiations in the (United Nations) Security Council," which meets on December 19 to debate Kosovo's status after the breakdown of talks between Belgrade and Pristina.
EU EUROPEAN UNION WILL PLAY LEAD ROLE TO STRENGTHEN STABILITY
"The EU stands ready to play a leading role in strengthening stability in the region and in implementing a settlement defining Kosovo's future status," the leaders said in their text of conclusions. "We will not recognise a declaration of independence by Kosovo which is made unilaterally," Cypriot President Tassos Papadopoulos said Friday. "We still believe there is room for a negotiated agreement." But while a core group of European countries and Washington are prepared to recognise eventual independence for Kosovo, EU member Cyprus, concerned about its own divisions, refuses to go along.
KOSOVO INDEPENDENCE NOT ACCEPTABLE TO BELGRADE
Kosovo's leaders, meanwhile, have been careful to underscore that they intend to break away in "close coordination" with EU European Union nations and the United States. But the EU official said: "The Cypriots could abstain, and abstaining would not be an obstacle. They could even make a declaration" to attach to any final EU European Union position. Serbian President Boris Tadic said Friday that Belgrade would never accept Kosovo's independence, but his country's defence minister has confirmed that no troops would be sent in if Pristina severs ties.
