New cracks became evident on Saturday, Dec. 5, in the fragile Serbian ruling coalition when Deputy Prime Minister Djelic negated Prime Minister Kostunica's warning to the EU that it must choose between Serbia and Kosovo.
Kostunica on Thursday said that Belgrade would not sign
a Stabilization and Association Agreement with the EU if Brussels sends
its civil mission to Serbia's breakaway province Kosovo.
But daily Blic in its Saturday edition quoted
Djelic, who was on a visit to Israel, as saying that Serbia would
certainly sign the agreement if the offer is made.
"Yes, we will sign if EU invites us," said Djelic, a top official of the pro-European Democratic Party (DS).
Kosovo, backed by the United States and most EU
countries, is preparing to declare independence from Serbia within
months. The EU plans to send a law-enforcing mission of 1,800 police,
customs and judicial officials to help Kosovo's first steps as an
independent state.
"The EU will ... have to choose whether it would sign a
Stabilization and Association Agreement with Serbia or send its civil
mission to Kosovo," said Kostunica, who heads the nationalist
Democratic Party of Serbia (DSS).
Election tactics
DS and DSS are also at odds over the upcoming
presidential election, in which Kostunica has refused to back the DS
chief and incumbent Boris Tadic, who is strongly challenged by the
ultra-nationalist leader Tomislav Nikolic.
The first round of the election is on Jan. 20, while the certain run-off between Tadic and Nikolic is expected on Feb. 3.
Brussels, which so far did not react to Kostunica's
statement, may invite Serbia to sign the Stabilization and Association
Agreement -- a significant step towards membership of the EU -- on
January 28.
It is also expected that Kosovo may declare
independence shortly after the Serbian presidential run-off and that
the move would be followed by a series of recognitions from Western
powers in spite of vehement opposition from Russia.
Parliament for independence
Meanwhile, the new Kosovo parliament met on Friday for
its first session after Nov. 17 elections, meeting a legal deadline but
still without an agreement on a ruling coalition which would lead the
breakaway Serbian province to independence.
The new legislators were sworn in and administrative
committees appointed, averting a crisis, but parliament adjourned until
Jan. 9 without naming a speaker.
That signals that the anticipated alliance of the two
largest parties remains elusive, despite the paramount agenda of
declaring Kosovo's secession from Serbia.
Designated prime minister Hashim Thaci's Democratic
Party of Kosovo (PDK) won the most seats, 37, in the assembly of 120.
He had been widely expected to ally with the late independence icon
Ibrahim Rugova's Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK), which has 25 seats.
Thaci, however, promised a government "by next Wednesday" and a proclamation of independence by the new assembly.
"We have now the new parliament for the independence o
Kosovo," Thaci said. "It's a joint commitment of ours and of our
Western partners to cooperate closely ... finish as soon as possible
the status process and make our country independent and sovereign."
|