| February 23, 2008 Serbia blames U.S. for Kosovo's recent violence
|
KOSOVSKA MITROVICA, Kosovo (AP) - Serbia's hard-line leaders on
Saturday called the U.S. "the main culprit" in the violence that
has broken out since Kosovo declared independence.
Several thousand Serbs chanting "Kosovo is Serbia!" and
"Russia, Vladimir Putin!" protested peacefully in the ethnically
divided town of Kosovska Mitrovica, the sixth day of demonstrations
against Kosovo's break with Serbia. Russia backs Serbia's fierce
resistance to Kosovo's secession.
On Thursday night, protesters in the Serbian capital Belgrade
set fire to the U.S. embassy, angered by Washington's recognition
of Kosovo. The U.S. and the European Union responded by demanding
Serbia protect foreign embassies.
"The United States is the main culprit ... for all those
violent acts," Serbia's Minister for Kosovo Slobodan Samardzic
said in Belgrade.
Other Serbian leaders have called for calm after the riots. But
an aide to hard-line Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica said
any future violence also will be blamed on the U.S.
"If the United States sticks to its present position that the
fake state of Kosovo exists ... all responsibility in the future
will be on the United States," Kostunica adviser Branislav
Ristivojevic said in a statement.
The comments were an indication that Serbia is drifting further
from the West and more toward ally Russia.
The vast majority of Kosovo's population is ethnic Albanian and
Serbs represent about 10 percent of the
region's 2 million people.
Kosovo had formally remained a part of Serbia even though it has
been administered by the U.N. and NATO since 1999, when NATO
airstrikes ended former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic's
crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatists, which killed 10,000
people.
Kosovo's minority Serbs have staged protests daily since the
territory's ethnic Albanian leadership proclaimed independence last
Sunday. They have vented their anger by destroying U.N. and NATO
property as well.
In the divided town of Kosovska Mitrovica in Serb-dominated
northern Kosovo, a few protesters hurled firecrackers as U.N.
police in riot gear formed a cordon across the main bridge
separating the Serb and ethnic Albanian sides. Demonstrators waved
Serbian and Russian flags and chanted in support of Moscow's
refusal to recognize Kosovo's independence.
The protest was far less violent than one on Friday, when angry
demonstrators hurled stones, glass bottles and firecrackers at U.N.
forces protecting the bridge.
In the Serb enclave of Strpce in southern Kosovo, about 100
Serbs also marched peacefully Saturday. They carried Serbian flags
to a nearby church, where they rang the bells to sound their
disapproval of Kosovo's statehood. Some carried posters reading
"Kosovo is Serbia" and "Kosovo will never be Albania."
"The whole nation is angry," said Sinisa Tasic, one of the
organizers. "We are furious with the Americans. Wherever they go
they create problems."
There, too, solidarity with Moscow was on display.
"For the first time ever, Serbia is not alone - it has Russia
by its side. Sooner or later, Serbia will get Kosovo back," added
Radojko Kecic, 48.
Dmitry Medvedev, Putin's chosen successor and the man expected
to easily win Russia's presidential election March 2, is scheduled
to visit Belgrade on Monday.
On Friday, the State Department ordered between 80 and 100
nonessential embassy employees, their families and the families of
American diplomats in Belgrade to leave Serbia.
"We are not sufficiently confident that they are safe here,"
U.S. Ambassador Cameron Munter said in an interview.
The U.S. and the EU have warned Serbia to boost protection of
foreign diplomats and missions, and the U.N. Security Council has
unanimously condemned the attacks on foreign missions.
EU representative Pieter Feith said Saturday he recalled his
staff from Kosovo's restive north.
There have been scattered protests against Kosovo's independence
in other countries as well. In Athens, Greece, about 2,000
pro-Communist demonstrators marched to the U.S. embassy on
Saturday. And in Germany, about 1,200 people demonstrated in a
square in downtown Stuttgart and 500 others protested in Frankfurt.
In Belgrade, the chief Serbian state prosecutor said Saturday
that authorities were searching for participants in Thursday
night's riots when the U.S. embassy was attacked. Police said have
they arrested nearly 200 rioters in the worst anti-Western violence
seen since the ouster of former strongman Slobodan Milosevic in
2000.
Protesters torched several offices of the U.S. Embassy's
consular section and attacked the missions of Germany, Belgium,
Turkey, Croatia and other countries. One person died and more than
150 were injured in the violence.
Authorities identified the dead person as Zoran Vujovic, 21, of
the northern Serbian city of Novi Sad. Serbian media said Vujovic
used to live in Kosovo, but fled in the wake of the 1998 war.
---
Slobodan Lekic reported from Belgrade, Serbia. Associated Press
writers William J. Kole in Pristina; Nebi Qena in Strpce; and
Jovana Gec in Belgrade, contributed to this report.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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