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Thousands March in Kosovo, Fearing Country's Division
Thousands of Kosovo Albanians protested in Pristina against a United Nations plan, which, they say, would split the country along ethnic lines. Protesters Wednesday took to the streets of the Kosovo capital, backing the country's leadership in opposing the plan, which sets out conditions for the deployment of a new European Union peacekeeping force in Kosovo.

The plan, backed by Belgrade and the United Nations, would create separate chains of command for Serbian and Albanian police forces operating in Kosovo. Police forces in ethnic Albanian areas would report to the new EU mission, while police in Serb-majority areas would report to U.N. officials.
That's a particularly dumb idea, so it clearly came from the U.N. There can only be one police and one chain of command. If you have to split the country, split it cleanly along ethnic lines and be done with it.
Ethnic Albanians say the plan amounts to creating two, parallel chains of administration within Kosovo. They also worry it would give Serbia too much influence over Kosovo's internal affairs.

But Serbs say they will not accept the new EU force unless the six-point plan goes through.
Serbs got ejected so they don't really have much to say about the EU force, do they ...
Last week, EU officials agreed to Serbian demands that the mission remain neutral regarding Kosovo's status and have its personnel endorsed by the United Nations Security Council.
Why should the EU be neutral? Kosovo is an independent country, recognized by the U.N. The Serbs don't like it, of course, but maybe next time they won't star a war and ethnic cleansing.
The mission is to replace U.N. security forces that have administered the former Serbian province since 1999.
The EU force can be a trip-wire, but if Kosovo is to be sovereign, it has to be responsible for its own security.
Kosovo's leaders are on their way to London, where they will meet Britain's foreign secretary, David Miliband.

Kosovo's ethnic Albanian majority declared independence from Serbia in February. Serbia, its ally Russia, and ethnic Serb leaders in Kosovo reject Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence as a violation of Serbian territorial integrity. More than 50 countries, including the United States and many EU states, have recognized Kosovo's independence.
Posted by: Steve White 2008-11-20
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=255586