Donate...
[i-link]
Our Manifesto
Our manifesto
Who governs Britain?
EU Documents
The Lisbon Treaty
That "mandate" analysed
EU Constitution - official version
Constitution analysis
Constitution Summit analysis
Building a political Europe
Myths
The seven basic myths
Good for the environment
Co-operating nation states
Europe reunited
The EU is democratic I
The EU is democratic II
Can't be a "superstate"
Keeping the peace in Europe
A free trade area?
Constitution for enlargement?
Qanagate
Corruption of the Media
click here for contents[i-click here for contents]
Blogroll
-
15 minutes ago
-
17 minutes ago
-
26 minutes ago
-
43 minutes ago
-
45 minutes ago
-
1 hour ago
-
1 hour ago
-
1 hour ago
-
2 hours ago
-
3 hours ago
-
3 hours ago
-
4 hours ago
-
4 hours ago
-
4 hours ago
-
4 hours ago
-
6 hours ago
-
7 hours ago
-
9 hours ago
-
10 hours ago
-
13 hours ago
-
14 hours ago
-
20 hours ago
-
20 hours ago
-
21 hours ago
-
21 hours ago
-
21 hours ago
-
22 hours ago
-
23 hours ago
-
23 hours ago
-
1 day ago
-
1 day ago
-
1 day ago
-
1 day ago
-
1 day ago
-
1 day ago
-
1 day ago
-
2 days ago
-
2 days ago
-
2 days ago
-
2 days ago
-
2 days ago
-
3 days ago
-
3 days ago
-
4 days ago
-
5 days ago
-
5 days ago
-
6 days ago
-
6 days ago
-
6 days ago
-
6 days ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
1 week ago
-
2 weeks ago
-
2 weeks ago
-
3 weeks ago
-
3 weeks ago
-
3 weeks ago
-
3 weeks ago
-
4 weeks ago
-
5 weeks ago
-
1 month ago
-
1 month ago
-
1 month ago
-
2 months ago
-
2 months ago
-
2 months ago
-
2 months ago
-
2 months ago
-
2 months ago
-
2 months ago
-
3 months ago
-
4 months ago
-
5 months ago
-
5 months ago
-
-
Climate Change
-
14 minutes ago
-
42 minutes ago
-
2 hours ago
-
4 hours ago
-
7 hours ago
-
12 hours ago
-
15 hours ago
-
1 day ago
-
1 day ago
Blog Archive
-
►
2012
(407)
-
►
April
(29)
- We're moving home
- They keep on charging
- I have not forgotten
- Après le Dellers
- Cameron gets tough
- One of those days
- An all-time low
- This tells us precisely what?
- Why the cover-up?
- Water thieves
- Not only Greece
- An invite to the discussion?
- A dignified end
- We're not asking
- Thieves out to play
- Looters still at large
- A constitutional democracy
- Happy days
- Holding on to Boris
- Big European Brother
- A real veto
- We're sick of the lot of you
- A non-event
- Dismally led
- The burdenless burden
- The end of the Muppet show?
- A complete coincidence?
- Out to play
- Skulking in the shadows
-
►
March
(109)
- Framing the argument
- Clever old Sun
- A jolly good thing?
- Muddying the waters
- The not-so-free market
- A real rebellion
- By-bye election
- We've been busy
- Nuke plans scrapped
- Hold the front page
- The illusion of choice
- Schools 'n' hospitals reprise
- Dying the death
- The trivia rolls on
- Muddling through is awfully jolly
- Making a mockery of themselves
- The elephant in the letter box
- The Old Swan Manifesto
- A huge political mistake
- You don't say
- Why is this news?
-
►
April
(29)
-
▼
2008
(1456)
-
▼
February
(124)
- More on the mass lobby and the House of Lords
- The real news from Afghanistan
- North on Euroscepticism
- Look far back in order to look forward
- Energy saving day (not)
- Reshuffle in the wind?
- Tinkering at the margins
- Prince Harry in Afghanistan
- A matter of understanding
- A good starting point…
- Ploughing a lonely furrow
- That protest
- Upstaged!
- You don't say!
- Thought for the day
- Screwed by the EU
- The snows of Kilimanjaro
- Lib-Dems walk out
- No longer sovereign
- A taste of things to come
- How we are governed
- Can't resist this one
- A real world crisis
- It was that big!
- Whither Cyprus?
- Business as usual
- Times change
- "It will start in Kosovo and end in Kosovo"
- Mushroom government
- Unravelling the Gordian knot
- Serving its paymasters
- "Allowance abuse"
- Second thoughts from the commission?
- More on the fraudulent MEPs
- Grown-up choices
- Please, could we have a new scriptwriter?
- It's not secret – it's confidential
- Costing lives
- So we can do business with the Kremlin?
- The China effect
- Just asking
- Brown to visit his masters
- Selling snake-oil
- Has anybody thought about Scotland?
- A half-way house
- More global warming
- Basket case Britain
- The only leader worth voting for
- Politics, policy and the internet
- A diet of unremitting negativity
- Calm sun, cold earth
- They shoot horses …
- Quote of the day
- Weeping after the event
- The shame of Iran
- Behind the curve
- Now ... and then
- "An ill-prepared rush"
- We are on our own
- They're going home
- The mouse that didn't quite roar
- Too much ice!
- They've got it all worked out!
- The single European newt
- A dose of reality
- We are funding this
- On the one hand …
- You can look but you can't fly
- Charles endorses the EU
- The state of the Empire
- It had to happen
- The great disconnect
- La famille Sarkozy
- The only growth industry in town
- Black gold
- We’re all (not) going to die!
- Arrests in Denmark
- Why are they shocked?
- What's going on 'ere then?
- "At the going down of the sun ..."
- Dial 112 for European unity
- A silent edit?
- Does nobody care any more?
- If this is global warming …
- The disappearing Labour rebels
- A case-study of impotence
- They can see it!
- "Collective amnesia"
- "An exotic and wasteful box-ticking exercise"
- A reckoning to come
- Crying "dog"
- Who will rid us?
- Colonial baggage
- Service may be interrupted
- Biofools?
- Touching a raw nerve?
- A new blog on the street
- Not with a bang, but a whimper
- How very sensible
- We have a problem
- Who do you think you are kidding, Mr Duncan?
- In space, no one can hear you scream
- Elections in Italy
- Picture post
- EU macht frei
- It was never going to happen
- Another failure unrecorded
- The trouble with bloggers ....
- "Mass producers of distortion"
- "This is going to end badly"
- Education, education, education
- "Secretive and bizarre" decision-making
- A new logo?
- A Letter from Limburg
- Not drowning, but waving!
- An establishment turning in on itself
- The new Roman Empire
- A quick round-up
- Man-in-pub
- Mote and beam
- Ooooooo … it's dangerous!
- China on the brink
- A corrosive indifference
- A marathon trial of strength
-
▼
February
(124)
Showing posts with label Kosovo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kosovo. Show all posts
link[i-link]Kosovo’s declaration of independence last Sunday was the least surprising event of this year (though, naturally, there is plenty of time to go for more dog-bites-man-supermodel-takes-drugs stories in 2008). While I am not at all surprised that Serbia and Russia are going through the motions of rage and astonishment I find the silliness and ignorance of commentators in the West – for once, I think, the blogosphere is slightly worse than the MSM – perpetually odd.
When Hashim Thaci was elected to be Prime Minister of Kosovo last November he announced that he would declare his country to be independent as soon as possible after December 10, when the international mediators were supposed to report back to the UN on the progress of negotiations over Kosovo’s status.
The negotiations led nowhere and the UN continued to procrastinate. The election of Boris Tadic, supposedly pro-Western but really little different from his more nationalist rival, as Serbia’s President earlier this month speeded up events. Mr Tadic may want Serbia to be in the EU – promising the Serbs great prosperity through that move – but he, too, was against Kosovan independence. For that matter, no Serb politician at this time is interested in any arrangements with Kosovo apart from some kind of a return to the past, something that was clearly never going to happen. But then Yugoslavia was never going to be turned into Greater Serbia either but it took ten years of war, thousands of dead, tens of thousands displaced and severe economic hardship for the Serbs to accept that.
President Tadic, backed by the Russian government, has gone to the United Nations Security Council asking for the independence to be annulled and Serbia’s “territorial integrity” to be restored.Serbia has also recalled its ambassador from Washington and filed legal charges against Hashim Thaci and the Kosovan leadership in general. Other measures against countries that insist on recognizing Kosovo are being threatened.
The one thing that our readers were missing was a long posting from me on the subject of Kosovo, Serbia, the EU, Russia and related matters. Well, fear no more. It is up on EUReferendum 2 and you can read it. Be warned: it is very long.
Hashim+Thaci[i-Hashim+Thaci]Saturday saw an election in Kosovo, which is still administered by the UN and whose status remains a matter for discussion between yet another “troika”, that of the EU, the USA and Russia, which has to come to some sort of an agreement by December 10 (Human Rights Day, if you want to know) when the winsome threesome is supposed to report back to SecGen Ban Ki-Moon. And, of course, pigs will take to the sky on the very same day.
Meanwhile, the pro-independence party of Hashim Thaci, the Democratic Party of Kosovo seems to have gained more votes than any other, 34 per cent according to unofficial results.
Reports say that the election went reasonably well except for one problem – low turn-out. In fact, only 43 per cent bothered to vote.
The Kosovan Serbs boycotted the election, a matter for sorrowful head-shaking on the part of Javier Solana and Olli Rehn, the Enlargement Commissar.
In fact, the low turn-out was not just because of the Serbs. Many of the Albanian Kosovars decided that they really wanted none of the above.
Analysts said the absenteeism was in effect a strong protest vote against the Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK), in power in Kosovo since its 1998-1999 war between the ethnic Albanian rebels and Serbian forces.The Chief Common Foreign Policy Spokesman (until the
The low turnout slashed support for the LDK, the party of late independence icon Ibrahim Rugova, credited with only 22 percent of the vote compared with 45 percent in elections just three years previously.
"Fifteen percent of people experience extreme poverty and live below the poverty line," said political analyst Behlul Beqaj.
In addition, the electorate was disenchanted with politicians' corruption through misuse of public funds, said the head of the European Movement in Kosovo, a non-governmental organisation.
However, Solana sounded a less positive note about the voting figures in Kosovo’s parliamentary and municipal elections.Well, indeed, that is what happens when the population is widely dissatisfied with the political elite. When you think about it and remember the last few elections for the Toy Parliament, 43 per cent is actually quite high.
“I am concerned about the low turnout, which reflects the population’s widespread dissatisfaction with the political elite”, the EU’s foreign policy chief said in a written statement.
COMMENT THREAD