U.N. accuses Serbia of "provocation" in north Kosovo
By Matt Robinson
PRISTINA, Serbia (Reuters) - The U.N. mission in Kosovo accused Serbia on Wednesday of "provocation" by opening a government office in the north of the breakaway province, and said it was closely monitoring developments in the area.
The opening of the office to oversee public services in the Serb half of the ethnically-divided town of Mitrovica on Monday coincided with the formal end to negotiations that failed to resolve the fate of Serbia's U.N.-run province.
Leaders of Kosovo's ethnic Albanian majority said they would begin talks with their Western backers on a declaration of independence in early 2008. But NATO allies with 16,000 troops in Kosovo are concerned the Serb north could try to break away.
Backed by Russia, Serbia rejects independence for Kosovo. Moscow has blocked the adoption of an independence plan at the U.N. Security Council, but the blueprint's Western backers say they will move ahead with it without a new U.N. resolution after Serb-Albanian negotiations ended in deadlock on Monday.
"The opening of this office is raising the level of the Serbian government presence in Kosovo," U.N. mission spokesman Alexander Ivanko told a news conference. "We consider this a provocative act."
Ivanko said the mission was seeking guidance from U.N. headquarters in New York and would brief diplomats from the Contact Group steering Balkan policy -- the United States, Britain, Germany, France, Italy and Russia - during the week.
"We are very much focused on what is happening in the north," he added.
The north, home to just under half of Kosovo's remaining 120,000 Serbs, has resisted U.N. efforts to integrate it with the rest of the province. The U.N. mission exerts little real control over the region, which adjoins the rest of Serbia and is controlled politically and financially by Belgrade. Continued...





