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  • 29
    Nov
    2012
    7:49am, EST

    UN court clears former Kosovo prime minister of war crimes charges

    Valdrin Xhemaj / EPA

    Kosovar Albanians celebrate in Pristina after the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia cleared the former Kosovo prime minister Ramush Haradinaj of war crime charges on Nov. 29, 2012.

    Koen Van Weel / AP

    Former Kosovo Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj in a courtroom in The Hague on Nov. 29, 2012.

    Reuters reports — Ramush Haradinaj, a former guerrilla fighter in Kosovo who served briefly as prime minister, was acquitted of war crimes for a second time on Thursday, clearing the way for his return to mainstream politics but angering Serbia.

    The retrial verdict by a United Nations court in The Hague comes on the heels of the acquittal on appeal two weeks ago of top Croatian general Ante Gotovina, fuelling nationalist accusations in Serbia that the court is biased against them.

    The verdict, and Haradinaj's return to frontline campaigning, could undermine a new effort by the European Union to encourage Serbia and Kosovo to mend ties almost five years after the former southern Serbian province declared independence with the backing of the West. Read the full story.

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    Armend Nimani / AFP - Getty Images

    Supporters of Ramush Haradinaj celebrate in Pristina on Nov. 29, 2012 after he was acquitted of murder and torture.

     

     

    1 comment

    With these decisions it is surely looking more like the US-NATO war against Yugoslavia was, as was then argued by many -- a racist war. A war of anti-Serbian and anti-Yugoslavian racism!

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    Explore related topics: europe, justice, kosovo, war-crimes, world-news, hague, ramush-haradinaj
  • 28
    Nov
    2012
    7:12pm, EST

    Albania marks independence with giant cake and quarrels

    Armend Nimani / AFP - Getty Images

    Kosovo Albanian youth march under Albanian flags during celebrations for the 100th anniversary of Albania's independence in Pristina, Kosovo, Nov. 28, 2012.

    Arben Celi / Reuters

    Albania's special army forces march during a parade to celebrate the country's 100th anniversary of independence in Tirana, Nov. 28.

    Reuters reports — The foreign minister of neighboring Greece boycotted festivities on Wednesday marking 100 years of Albania's independence after its prime minister hailed a town over the border as "Albanian lands".

    Ethnic Albanians from across the region meanwhile celebrated in the national colors of red and black with a 14 ton cake and bushy mustaches to honor the founding fathers.

    Albanian Prime Minister Sali Berisha's remarks were in a text he sent to a museum on Tuesday evening to mark the 100th anniversary of Albanian independence from Ottoman rule and honor the founder of modern Albania, Ismail Qemali. Full story…

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    Gent Shkullaku / AFP - Getty Images

    A chef cuts cake measuring 5920 square feet on the main boulevard of Tirana, Albania, Nov. 28.

    Arben Celi / Reuters

    Children eat cake measuring 5920 square feet prepared for the 100th anniversary of Albania's independence in Tirana, Albania, Nov. 28.

    Visar Kryeziu / AP

    Kosovo Albanians buys balloons in the main square decorated with Albanian flags in Pristina, Kosovo, Nov. 28.

    1 comment

    Great..thanks to America's incompetent foreign policy..Albanians will have two votes in the UN!! What a joke..Albanians who are practicing Muslims are traitors to Christian Europe....their "Lands" should be divided by Greece,Bulgaria and Serbia!! No Muslim states in Europe..including "Turkey in Euro …

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    Explore related topics: europe, anniversary, kosovo, albania, greece, world-news
  • 1
    Jun
    2012
    7:08am, EDT

    Kosovo Serbs and NATO troops clash in tense north

    Zveki / AP

    German army soldiers serving in the NATO peacekeeping mission in Kosovo guard a bridge near the town of Zvecan, Kosovo, on June 1, 2012. NATO-led peacekeepers have confronted stone-throwing Serbs seeking to prevent the international troops from removing their roadblocks in the tense north of Kosovo.

    Reuters reports — At least three Kosovo Serbs and a NATO soldier were wounded in a gunfight on Friday as peacekeepers tried to dismantle Serb roadblocks blocking traffic, a Reuters witness said. NATO troops fired tear gas and small arms and some protesters fired back with handguns.

    See pictures of several incidents of violence in Kosovo last year

    The troops, in armored personnel carriers, were confronted by hundreds of Serbs who pelted them with stones near barricades in the villages of Rudare and Dudin Krs outside the town of Zvecan in a Serb-dominated northern area of Kosovo. Read the full story.

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    Bojan Slavkovic / Reuters

    A German KFOR soldier aims his gun towards Kosovo Serbs during clashes in the town of Zvecan on June 1, 2012.

    Zveki / AP

    Kosovo Serbs carry an injured man near the town of Zvecan on June 1, 2012.

     

    39 comments

    If or when the global economy totally crashes, and no one can afford to police the world as we do now, we will see more and more regional outbursts. People basically don't like each other and resort to violence to settle their differences. We are likely to see the same in the US some day.

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    Explore related topics: europe, nato, military, kosovo, conflict, world-news, zvecan
  • 28
    Feb
    2012
    4:07pm, EST

    Serbia inches closer to EU candidacy

    Stringer/Belgium / Reuters

    Serbia's President Boris Tadic and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso hold a joint news conference after a meeting in Brussels on Feb. 28, 2012. Romania threatened on Tuesday to derail European Union plans to grant Serbia membership candidate status in a row over minority rights in the former Yugoslav state.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    European Union foreign ministers are recommending that Serbia be allowed to become an official candidate for membership in the 27-member bloc after the country reached a key agreement with its former province of Kosovo.

    Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt tweeted congratulations to Serbia after a meeting of the EU's foreign ministers.

    Nicolai Wammen, minister of European affairs for Denmark, which holds the rotating EU presidency, said Serbia had fulfilled the conditions demanded by the bloc.


    The ministers were expected to confirm Serbia's candidacy, an essential step toward membership, but couldn't overcome objections from Romania.

     

    Bucharest unexpectedly refused to sign an agreement on granting Serbia the coveted status of candidate to join the 27-country bloc, in a row over minority rights in the former Yugoslav state, EU diplomats said.

    "This is not a critique," Romania's foreign minister Cristian Diaconescu told a Romanian daily, adding that Romania wants to encourage Belgrade to improve its attitude toward minorities.

    There are about 30,000 ethnic Romanians living in Serbia. Some members of the 40,000-strong ethnic Vlach community also consider themselves Romanian, while other Vlachs think of themselves as Serbian.

    Romanian President Traian Basescu has urged Serbia to grant ethnic Romanians living on its territory the right to education in the Romanian language and access to services in Romanian Orthodox churches.

    "We ask (Serbian authorities) to grant them the right to tuition in Romanian, to have an Orthodox church, to have a newspaper in their language, to have the right to tune into Romanian television or have a broadcast in Romanian," Basescu told a gathering of ethnic Romanians last year after meeting Serbian President Boris Tadic.

    Belgrade appeared to have been taken unawares by the Romanian move and had no immediate reaction.

    But other EU capitals insisted Serbia should be rewarded for years of democratic reforms, the capture of war crimes fugitives and efforts to mend fraught relations with Kosovo, a former province that declared independence in 2008.

    In a compromise, foreign and EU affairs ministers meeting in Brussels left it to their heads of state and government to make a formal decision when they meet on Thursday and Friday.

    Serbia had been expected to be made a formal candidate in December, after it captured two top war crimes suspects. But ministers delayed, saying they wanted to see more progress in talks between Serbia and Kosovo.

    The BBC reported Serbia agreed on Friday to allow Kosovo to participate in west Balkan regional meetings, even as it still refuses to recognize its 2008 self-declared independence.

    An EU proposal to have Kosovo's nameplate at meetings followed by an asterisk was also accepted, according to the BBC. There will be an added footnote explaining the territory's disputed status.

    Some 80 countries have recognized Kosovo since it declared independence in 2008, but the European Union has no official position toward Kosovo's status. Romania does not recognize the former province's independence.

    Winning EU candidate status is a largely symbolic step toward the start of accession negotiations, which often require years as applicants seek to harmonize their laws with EU rules and meet other requirements.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    2 comments

    Serbia has made great strides since the days of the war over Kosovo and Bosnia.And they must be on the right side.The coach of the national teamn is Israeli and Iran refuses to play them-.Any country that has an Israeli coach and is boycotted by Iran must be a very solid country.Viva Serbia !..When …

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