SERBIA MUST ACCEPT KOSOVO INDEPENDENCE TO JOIN EU: GERMAN FOREIGN MINISTER
German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel on state visit to Kosovo |
Serbia will need to accept the independence of Kosovo, its former
province, in order to join the European Union, German Foreign Minister Sigmar
Gabriel said in Pristina late on Wednesday.
Kosovo declared
independence 10 years ago, almost a decade after NATO bombed Serb forces to
halt the killing and expulsion of ethnic Albanians from the region during a
1998-99 counter-insurgency war.
“If Serbia wants to
move toward the European Union, the building of the rule of law is a primary
condition, but naturally also the acceptance of Kosovo’s independence,” Gabriel
said during a joint press conference with Kosovo’s Prime Minister Ramush
Haradinaj.
“That is a central
condition to take the path toward Europe.”
Gabriel said he had
given the same message to Serbian officials in Belgrade earlier on Wednesday.
Serbia aims to join
the EU by 2025, a date set by Brussels as it looks to bring Western Balkan
nations into its fold.
Serbian officials
are hoping recognition of Kosovo will not be a key condition for EU membership,
and the defense minister, Aleksandar Vulin, said Belgrade and Pristina should
partition Kosovo.
Gabriel said his
country would help to get Kosovo recognized by the five EU member states that
have yet to do so - Spain, Romania, Cyprus, Greece and Slovakia.
“Naturally, enabling
membership of the European Union is the end goal. One of the conditions for
that will be to persuade the five European Union countries which don’t
recognize Kosovo that such a recognition makes sense because Kosovo will never
again be a part of Serbia.”
“Membership of the
European Union is a win-win situation for all,” he said.
Kosovo has been
recognized by 115 countries, including 23 of the 28 EU members. Its UN
membership has been blocked by Serbia’s allies Russia and China. Around 120,000
Serbs who live in Kosovo still consider Belgrade their capital, and they are
financially supported by Serbia.
Germany, one of the
first countries to recognize Kosovo’s independence along with the United
States, France and the United Kingdom, remains one of the biggest investors in
Kosovo.
SOURCE: REUTERS
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