EurActiv Logo
Actualités & débats européens
- dans votre langue -
Actualités en Bulgarie
Actualités en Turquie
Actualité en Allemagne
Actualités en Espagne
Actualités en France
Actualités au Royaume-Uni
Actualités en Pologne
Actualités en République tchèque
Actualités en Slovaquie
Actualités en Hongrie
Actualités en Roumanie
Actualités en Serbie
Greece News
Italy News
Bulgaria Turkey Germany Spain France United Kingdom Poland Czech Republic Slovakia Hungary Romania Serbia Greece Italy
EurActiv.com Réseau

TOUTES LES RUBRIQUES

Le Kosovo célèbre l’anniversaire de son indépendance malgré l’avertissement de la Serbie

Publié 18 février 2009
Version imprimableEnvoyer à un ami

Hier (17 février), des dizaines de milliers d’Albanais du Kosovo ont célébré le premier anniversaire de leur déclaration d’indépendance, bien que le président Fatmir Sejdiu ait averti que la Serbie contestait toujours la sécession de son ancienne province.

"Serbia is continuing its interference and has a tendency to destabilise us," Sejdiu said in an address to parliament. 

Sejdiu said "the mentality of conflict and hate is still present in the heads and institutions in Serbia". He added: "These destabilising policies of Belgrade do not help Serbs or the region." 

At a meeting in Zvecan, just outside the ethnically divided northern town of Mitrovica, 80 Serbian lawmakers from Belgrade and 31 delegates from Kosovo's Association of Serb Municipalities adopted a declaration that denounced the territory's independence. 

After the session, Slobodan Samardzic, a Serb politician from the nationalist Democratic Party of Serbia, said, "Kosovo hasn't moved an inch from where it was a year ago". 

Police had increased their presence in Mitrovica. 

Earlier on Tuesday, hundreds rallied against Kosovo independence in Serbia's second-largest city of Novi Sad. There were no major incidents. 

Serbia's capital Belgrade, where embassies and businesses were attacked last year after Kosovo's secession, was calm, but police strengthened security around diplomatic missions. 

Serbia and its huge ally Russia remain opposed to Kosovo independence, although it has been recognised by the United States and its key European allies. 

On Monday, Serbia's President Boris Tadic told Reuters his country would never recognise Kosovo. "Serbia will never take a single action that implies Kosovo's independence," he said. 

(EurActiv with Reuters) 

Contexte : 

Kosovo, the smallest Balkan nation, seceded from Serbia in 2008, nine years after the end of a 1998-1999 war between Belgrade's security forces and ethnic Albanian guerrillas. In the following years, Kosovo was an international protectorate patrolled by NATO peacekeepers. 

Over the past year, the two million-strong republic, 90% of the population of which are ethnic Albanians, has established many of the trappings of statehood, including a new constitution, an army, national anthem, flag, passports, identity cards and an intelligence agency. 

Last October, the United Nations approved Serbia's request to ask the Netherlands-based International Court of Justice whether Kosovo's secession is legal. It will take up to two years for the ruling to be made. 

More in this section

Publicité