Reactions in Kosovo Kosovo Albanians unveiled at the celebration of the 2008 Kosovo declaration of independence proclaimed earlier that day, 17 February 2008, in the capital,
Pristina. Ethnic Albanians in Kosovo greeted the news with celebration.
Kosovo Serbs The bishop of the
Serbian Orthodox Church in Kosovo,
Artemije Radosavljević, reacted in anger, stating that Kosovo's independence was a "temporary state of occupation", and that "Serbia should buy state of the art weapons from Russia and other countries and call on Russia to send volunteers and establish a military presence in Serbia." In
North Kosovo, a UN building housing a courthouse and jail was attacked by a hand grenade, causing slight damage but no casualties. An unexploded grenade was found across the street, near a hotel that houses EU officials. An explosive device was detonated in
Mitrovica, damaging two vehicles. No casualties or injuries were reported. Serb protestors in Kosovo set fire to two border crossings on Kosovo's northern border. Both crossings are staffed by Kosovar and
UNMIK police. No injuries were reported in the attacks, but the police withdrew until
KFOR soldiers arrived. A Japanese journalist wearing a UN uniform was beaten by Serbs in northern Mitrovica. Hundreds of Serbs protested in the Kosovo town of
Mitrovica on 22 February, which was somewhat peaceful aside from some stone-throwing and limited fighting. On 14 March 2008 Serb protesters forcibly occupied the UN courthouse in the northern part of Kosovska Mitrovica. On 17 March, UNMIK peacekeepers and KFOR troops entered the courthouse to end the occupation. In the following clashes with several hundred protesters, one Ukrainian UNMIK police officer was killed, over 50 persons on each side were wounded and one UNMIK and one KFOR vehicle were torched. The UNMIK police withdrew from northern Mitrovica leaving KFOR troops to maintain order. The
Community Assembly of Kosovo and Metohija first met on 28 June 2008, to coordinate Serb responses to the new government.
Serbian reaction Official reaction by the
Government of Serbia included instituting pre-emptively on 12 February 2008 an Action Plan, which stipulated, among other things, recalling the Serbian ambassadors for consultations in protest from any state recognising Kosovo, issuing arrest warrants for Kosovo leaders for high treason, and even dissolving the government on grounds of lack of consensus to deal with Kosovo, with new elections scheduled for 11 May 2008, as well as a rogue minister proposing partitioning
Kosovo along ethnic lines, which initiative was shortly thereafter disavowed by the full Government, as well as the President. Late in March the government disclosed its intent to litigate the issue at the
International Court of Justice and seek support at the
United Nations General Assembly in September 2008. The
Prime Minister of Serbia,
Vojislav Koštunica, has blamed the United States for being "ready to violate the international order for its own military interests" and stated that "Today, this policy of force thinks that it has triumphed by establishing a false state. [...] As long as the Serb people exist, Kosovo will be Serbia."
Slobodan Samardžić, the Serb minister for Kosovo, stated that, "A new country is being established by breach of international law [...] It's better to call it a fake country." However, the Serbian government says they will not respond with violence. On 17 February, about 2,000 Serbs protested at the United States Embassy in Belgrade, with some throwing stones and
firecrackers at the building before being driven back by riot police. In
Belgrade and
Novi Sad,
McDonald's restaurants were damaged by protestors. The Serbian division of
U.S. Steel, based in
Smederevo, had a false bomb threat called in. The Crown Council of
House of Karadjordjevic, a former royal family of Serbia and Yugoslavia, rejected Kosovo's declaration of independence, saying that: "Europe had diminished its own morale, embarrassed its own history and shown that it carries within its organism the virus of its own downfall", and that "it is a defeat of the idea of democracy... a defeat of the universally accepted rules of international law", and that a "part of the project of
Mussolini and
Hitler has finally been accomplished, in the territory of Serbia". On 21 February, there were
large demonstrations by Serbs in Belgrade. There were more than 500,000 protesters. Most protesters were non-violent, but small groups attacked the United States and Croatian embassies. A group broke into The United States embassy, set it on fire, and attempted to throw furniture through the windows. The embassy was empty, except for security personnel. No embassy staff were injured, but a corpse was found; embassy spokeswoman Rian Harris stated that the embassy believes it to be an attacker. Police took 45 minutes to arrive at the scene, and the fire was only then put out. US ambassador to the UN
Zalmay Khalilzad was "outraged", and requested the UN Security Council immediately issue a statement "expressing the council's outrage, condemning the attack, and also reminding the Serb government of its responsibility to protect diplomatic facilities." The damage to the Croatian embassy was less serious. On 22 February, the
United States embassy in Serbia ordered the temporary
evacuation of all non-essential personnel, after the protests and attacks on the embassy. Rian Harris, a U.S. embassy spokeswoman, explained the evacuation to
AFP saying that "Dependents are being temporarily ordered to depart Belgrade. We do not have confidence that Serbian authorities can provide security for our staff members." Hundreds of
Bosnian Serb demonstrators broke away from a peaceful rally in
Banja Luka on 26 February 2008 and headed for the
United States Embassy's office there, clashing with police along the way.
International reaction Unlike the
1990 Kosovo declaration of independence, which only
Albania recognised, Kosovo's second declaration of independence has received 111
diplomatic recognitions. However, many states have also showed their opposition to Kosovo's declaration of independence, most notably
India,
China and
Russia. Serbia announced before the declaration that it would withdraw its ambassador from any state which recognised independent Kosovo. Serbia, however, maintains embassies in many countries which recognise Kosovo, including Albania, Canada, Croatia, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Norway, South Korea, Turkey, the UAE, the UK, and the US.
Reaction within the European Union ,
Austria On 18 February 2008 the EU presidency announced after a day of intense talks between foreign ministers that member countries were free to decide individually whether to recognise Kosovo's independence. The majority of EU member states have recognised Kosovo, but Cyprus, Greece, Romania, Slovakia and Spain have not. Some Spanish people (scholars or from the Spanish Government or opposition parties) challenged the comparison made by the Basque Government that way of Kosovo's independence could be a path for the
independence of the Basque Country and
Catalonia. Shortly before Kosovo's declaration of independence, the
European Union approved deployment of a non-military 2,000-member Rule of Law mission, "
EULEX", to develop further Kosovo's police and justice sector. All twenty-seven members of the EU approved the EULEX mandate, including the minority of EU countries that have still not recognised Kosovo's independence. Serbia has claimed that this is an occupation and that the EU's move is illegal.
Russia reacted with condemnation, stating they "expect the UN mission and NATO-led forces in Kosovo to take immediate action to carry out their mandate [...] including the annulling of the decisions of Pristina's self-governing organs and the taking of tough administrative measures against them." and a square in central Tirana was named for this occasion.
Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoğan phoned
Prime Minister Hashim Thaçi, commenting on the declaration of independence, and that it "will bring to
Balkans peace and stability". The
Republic of China's (commonly known as Taiwan; non-UN member) Foreign Ministry stated "We congratulate the Kosovo people on their winning independence and hope they enjoy the fruits of democracy and freedom. [...] Democracy and
self-determination are the rights endorsed by the United Nations. The Republic of China always supports sovereign countries' seeking democracy, sovereignty and independence through peaceful means." Taiwan's political rival, the
People's Republic of China, responded quickly, saying that "Taiwan, as a part of China, has no right and qualification at all to make the so-called recognition". while the
Philippines declared it will not oppose, nor support Kosovo's independence. Both countries face pressures from Muslim separatist movements within their territories, notably
Aceh and southern
Mindanao respectively.
Vietnam expressed opposition, while
Singapore reported that it was still studying the situation.
Malaysia, which headed the
Organisation of the Islamic Conference at the time, formally recognized Kosovo's sovereignty three days after its independence. and then U.S. Vice President
Joe Biden with the Declaration of Independence of Kosovo.
Australian
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd backed Kosovan independence on the morning of 18 February, saying "This would appear to be the right course of action. That's why, diplomatically, we would extend recognition at the earliest opportunity."
New Zealand's Former
Prime Minister Helen Clark said that New Zealand would neither recognise nor not recognise an independent Kosovo. Pro-Independence rallies were held by ethnic Albanians in Canada in the days leading up to the declaration. On 9 November 2009 New Zealand formally recognised Kosovo's independence. The President of
Northern Cyprus (a state not recognised by the UN),
Mehmet Ali Talat, saluted the independence of Kosovo and hopes that the state is respected and assisted, in staunch opposition to the position of the
Republic of Cyprus.
United Nations Following a request from
Russia, the
United Nations Security Council held an emergency session in the afternoon of 17 February 2008. The
United Nations Secretary-General,
Ban Ki-moon, issued a statement that avoided taking sides and urged all parties "to refrain from any actions of statements that could endanger peace, incite violence or jeopardize security in Kosovo or the region." Speaking on behalf of six countries—
Belgium,
Croatia,
France,
Germany,
Italy and the
United States—the Belgian ambassador expressed regret "that the Security Council cannot agree on the way forward, but this impasse has been clear for many months. Today's events... represent the conclusion of a status process that has exhausted all avenues in pursuit of a negotiated outcome."
ICJ ruling On 22 July 2010, the
International Court of Justice ruled that the declaration did not violate international law, holding that the authors were acting in their capacity as representatives of the people of Kosovo outside the framework of the interim administration (the
Assembly of Kosovo and the
Provisional Institutions of Self-Government), and were therefore not bound by the
Constitutional Framework (promulgated by
UNMIK) or by
UNSCR1244 that is addressed only to
United Nations Member States and
organs of the United Nations. ==See also==