Kosovo 1 year on: EU Special Representative Pieter Feith interviewed

Published: 17 February 2009 y., Tuesday

 

Kosovas
Working as an EU diplomat on Darfur and Iraq has given Pieter Feith plenty of experience for his current role as EU Special Representative to Kosovo. The former Dutch diplomat has to try and reconcile the wishes of the majority Albanians with the minority Serbs in Kosovo. As its 2 million people mark one year of fledgling independence from Belgrade we spoke to Pieter Feith.

In February last year the European Parliament passed a resolution vowing to assist the Kosovo authorities in developing a “stable, viable, peaceful and multi-ethnic society in Kosovo”.
 
Formally recognised by 54 UN states, questions still remain over the key nations which refuse to recognise Kosovo's autonomy, and ultimately is status amongst the UN. The opposition of Russia has been a notable feature of its painful emergence.
 
Mr Feith, participated last week in a meeting of the Parliament's External Affairs committee, stressing key targets for this country.
 
You have said that “there is no alternative to a multiethnic society”. How true is this in Kosovo
 
We are making progress but there is more work to be done. It is a long-term effort of reconciliation, and it is not being helped at present by the regional context.
 
There is still a political debate about the legality of Kosovo which doesn't help, but I see more and more readiness and willingness from the communities, including the Serb community, to step forward and work with the central institutions in Kosovo.
 
How do you work to improve the dialogue between Pristina and Belgrade?
 
I have no particular responsibility in this dialogue, but I would like to note that the EU would like to see both Belgrade and Pristina start work on practical issues, cross-border issues, because we see this is part of the European perspective that has been granted to both countries.
 
Five European countries don't accept this European perspective for Kosovo. Why should they recognise Kosovo even if the UN has not?
 
There are at least two important decisions to which all the 27 Member States have joined: one of them is the deployment of the EULEX (The European Union Rule of Law Mission in Kosovo) mission with a key task of fighting corruption and organised crime. That's a border crossing issue, so you will see EULEX working with the authorities in Belgrade and Pristina.
 
The European Union is available to facilitate any further contacts between Belgrade and Pristina.
 
Could Serbia and Kosovo become EU members?
 
This is not a matter of membership at this stage. I think all EU members are keen to see stability maintained. The perspective has been granted in the Thessaloniki summit in 2003, so that has to move forward. I think there is no real dispute on that.
 
Last year the EU's office in Pristina found it difficult to establish an official dialogue with the Serbian minority. How far have things progressed?
 
We are making progress, we have a round table format in which a number of key Kosovo Serb representatives are joining together with members of the government to discuss practical issues related to health, education, decentralisation and preserving the cultural and religious heritage of Kosovo. I think that is an encouraging step forward.

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

2010: European Year for Combating Poverty and Social Exclusion

Approximately 80 million people in the EU have such limited resources that they cannot afford the basics and face unpredictable long-term consequences of the 2008 international economic and financial crisis. more »

Uganda Launches Second Northern Uganda Social Action Project

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni on February 8 launched the Second Northern Social Action Fund (NUSAF II), aimed at improving access for beneficiary households and communities in Northern Uganda to income earning opportunities and improved basic socio-economic services. more »

IMF Statement on Greece

Caroline Atkinson, Director of External Relations at the International Monetary Fund, issued the following statement in Washington today. more »

Statement following the meeting of the Heads of State and Government on 11 February 2010

Following the meeting of the Heads of State and Government on 11 February 2010 in Brussels, Jean-Claude Trichet, President of the European Central Bank (ECB), made the following statement. more »

Parliament marks twentieth anniversary of liberation of Nelson Mandela

EP Vice President Libor Rouček told MEPs that Thursday was the twentieth anniversary of Nelson Mandela's release from prison, recalling his role in the dismantling of apartheid and that he was the first winner of Parliament's Sakharov Prize for freedom of thought. He then gave the floor to Michael Cashman, chair of the European Parliament delegation for relations with South Africa, who paid a tribute on behalf of Parliament to that country's former President. more »

Human rights: Venezuela, Madagascar, Burma

Three human rights resolutions, on the media in Venezuela, the political crisis in Madagascar and the situation in Burma, were approved by Parliament on Thursday. more »

Climate change: call for "new climate diplomacy"

The EU should create a "new climate diplomacy", and its future budget must provide enough funding to protect against, and adapt to, climate change, say MEPs in a resolution approved on Wednesday more »

Germany: 2010 Article IV Consultation Concluding Statement of the IMF Mission

After a sharp fall in the first half of 2009, the government’s globally-coordinated policy measures were crucial to the resumption of growth in the second half. more »

EBRD boosts energy security in south-eastern Europe

The EBRD Board of Directors has approved a €150 million sovereign loan to Serbijagas, a state-owned Serbian company responsible for the transmission, storage, distribution and trade of natural gas, to finance the upgrade of the country’s gas transmission network and the construction of a new gas storage facility. more »

Commissioner Hahn attends the Baltic Sea Action Summit in Helsinki

Johannes Hahn, the new European Commissioner for Regional Policy, will today address the Baltic Sea Action Summit in Helsinki. more »