The final round of talks between Serbian and ethnic Albanian
negotiators around the plans drafted by UN special envoy Martti
Ahtisaari on the future status of Kosovo started in Vienna
yesterday.
Ahtisaari told a press conference later in the day it was a
"good beginning."
But the delegation from Belgrade insisted that Kosovo should
remain part of its territory, while the province's ethnic Albanian
majority demanded the final outright independence.
Both the rival sides did not change their positions and move
closer to a compromise, as Ahtisaari said after the meeting.
Furthermore, the Kosovo's future plan, in which Kosovo was
envisaged as a very wide-area self-rule, including matters
concerning its own flag and anthem, was unlikely to be realized in
the future.
Ahtisaari first presented his plans to representatives of the
Contact Group on January 26, and he received support from the
majority Western developed countries, such as the US, Britain,
France, Italy and Germany.
Then he visited Belgrade and Kosovo's provincial capital
Pristina to present his plan to the two sides in earlier February.
However, his plan prompted violent protests from the local people,
and the Serbia's parliament also rejected it and said in a
resolution the plan was "illegal."
In the meantime, Ahtisaari, who is also Finnish ex-president,
warned against the continuing delay to solve the Kosovo's problems
and he said it would probably cause more safety problems in the
area.
After the final round of talks on the status settlement for
Kosovo, set to end on March 2, Ahtisaari is expected to draw out
his final version of the Kosovo status plan in details and the UN
Security Council will make the final decision in the coming
months.
By that time, Serbia's President Boris Tadic and head of
government Vojislav Kostunica would also attend Ahtisaari's final
presentation about Kosovo's plan in Vienna on March 10, according
to a report from Belgrade.
(Xinhua News Agency February 22, 2007)