Kosovo
Whispering to the deaf
By Miroslav Filipović
The international community takes that Kosovo
Albanians have been taken care of: they got a state of their own, they
have money enough and they are well on their way to full international
recognition. Therefore, the international community is now completely
focused on Kosovo Serbs. They are the ones it tries to take care of, to
protect from revenge and retaliation, they are the ones it tries to
ensure freedom, jobs and a life in peace for – of course within the
already “cemented” state of Kosovo.
The official Belgrade still understands nothing and,
like in the past decades, has no clear and consequent policy for Kosovo
– anyway it has none for anything else that matters. Governments change,
officials and parties in power change but what never changes is what we
witness these days: state-run underhand dealings, semisecret jargonistic
whispers and winks, something unbecoming of grownups, something to be
tolerated to children and young bachelors only. What’s going on today is
wrong as usual, as wrong as everything Belgrade has done so far but
nevertheless calls it the policy for Kosovo. In brief, we now have the
project called the community of Serb municipalities that Belgrade wants
to impose on all Serbs worldwide as the only rescue plan for Kosovo
Serbs and the sole precondition for their survival in Kosovo.
Actually, Belgrade politicians are trying again to con
the international community, to take it on a ride. They are trying to
rename the incumbent para-political, para-police and para-military
parallel structures - employing some thirty thousand Serbs - the
Community of Serb Municipalities /ZSO/ Prishtina would be financing
after the elections while Belgrade would be controlling it. But no one
wants ZSO, Kosovo Serbs in particular. They need it not the same as
Prishtina. Only Belgrade politicians need ZSO: they have an eye to some
elections and have an eye on Kosovo Serbs as a voting machine that could
tip the scales. Many a time have we witnessed the hypocrisy of Belgrade
politicians and many a time argued that all they were interested in was
Kosovo Serbs’ vote. They care nothing about the blood, sweat and tears
of Kosovo Serbs.
Competent people are coming to Belgrade and telling
our politicians how things stand in Kosovo, what matters that have
already been settled, what matters that are not worth bother and a waste
of moneys and what matters we could profit on – but their knowledge
falls on deaf ears. They could have instructed many others but cannot
teach our politicians. The later are rock-hard in their mission of
making life miserable for us, Serbs from Serbia, and making us ashamed
of our nation. We had been put to shame for inhuman crimes we had been
standing for and now we are ashamed of stupidity of our politicians who
would not solve what could be solved but tamper with things the world
would not allow them to tamper with.
The international community has a watchful eye on
whatever goes on in Belgrade. People that rule the world are -no longer
taken aback by cheap tricks our politicians are trying to play on them.
From time to time they let them believe that their swindle worked. And
then Germans or the British come on the stage or, like this time, they
come in together.
Few are those in Serbia who know or even guess the
price Belgrade’s petty politicians will have to pay for swindling the
international community. The British-German extra request implies
progress in the relations with Kosovo in each chapter of accession
negotiations. In other words, Kosovo will be not only a chapter by
itself, the 35th, but also all other chapters will be dealing with
normalization of relations and respect of the fact that Kosovo is an
internationally recognized state. So, for instance, the chapter on the
territory and borders cannot be closed until the state of Serbia and the
state of Kosovo sign an agreement on state borders. And once all
chapters close Kosovo will be officially recognized by Serbia and
recommended as such for the membership of UN and other international
organizations.
For the time being the government meticulously covers
up the international community’s plans the same as it keeps under wraps
the crucial outcome of Brussels talks: Serbia is not allowed to question
Kosovo’s status of an internationally recognized state. No matter how
cocky statements Belgrade politicians make, the fact remains that
Brussels talks are between two internationally recognized states. No
matter what Belgrade politicians say they cannot cross the border with
Kosovo unless they officially ask for Prishtina’s permit and Prishtina
officially issues the permit. Of course, they can try to smuggle
themselves in, through woods, like that pair of ministers did and put us
all to shame.
Even more carefully does the government try to hush up
that the process of accession negotiations - we are all looking forward
to – will treat Kosovo as an independent and internationally recognized
state south of Serbia. Therefore, the more so strange are Serbia’s
interference into internal affairs of a neighboring state and its
attempt to organize and crucially influence elections in it. This is why
– using accession negotiations and playing on billions of Euro from IPA
funds – the international community has already decided to impose a
solution on Serbia and has been preparing itself for this rather
unpleasant move since. As the common people would put it, the broth is
cooked and it just remains to be seen who will be the one to spoon in
it. Before taking this move the international community has several
problems to solve – and, although Belgrade nationalists narcistically
see themselves as one of these problems, they are not. Because no one
cares a straw about Belgrade’s attitude, nationalistically doctrinal,
snarling and spleenful as it is. Therefore, Belgrade will not be allowed
to decide on anything.
The international community’s first and last problem
is in Kosovo: even if willing to, Albanians and their institutions
simply cannot ensure the rule of law and safety to Serbs (neither can
they to Albanians for this matter). This is why the international
community seeks for a mode of making Albanians provide a sustainable
package of guaranteed rights for Kosovo Serbs and other minority
communities in three domains at least: central government,
decentralization and cultural-religious heritage. I say “seeks for”
because everyone knows that a solution is not in sight yet. Apart from
promises of “I shall do it, cross my heart and hope to die” type, Kosovo
politicians have nothing convincing to offer either to Serbs or to their
international mentors. The problem is that Serbs and Albanians have
bloodied their hands too much and that the antagonism among them has
reached incredible proportions that a conflict can break out any time
and anyplace. Hence, the international community takes that Kosovo
Albanians have been taken care of: they got a state of their own, they
have money enough and they are well on their way to full international
recognition. Therefore, the international community is now completely
focused on Kosovo Serbs. They are the ones it tries to take care of, to
protect from revenge and retaliation, they are the ones it tries to
ensure freedom, jobs and a life in peace for – of course within the
already “cemented” state of Kosovo.
But unlike the international community trying to treat
Serbs as “people with rights,” Serb politicians have been smashing
everything for decades: rather than solving Kosovo Serbs’ everyday
problems, they’ve been giving them empty phrases about “never, ever
recognizing Kosovo” and pitiful columns of tractors heading towards Nis
and Krusevac. It’s really good that Belgrade has no say about Kosovo.
For, although its politicians believe that they are cheating on Europe
and the world, that’s far from the truth. Everyone who knows where to
look already sees that Belgrade’s petty swindlers will be swindled at
the end. |