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Minister of Foreign Affairs
of the Republic of Serbia H.E.Vuk Jeremić addresses UN
Security Council,
15 February
2008
“Mr. President,
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
There was a time when the final authority of the United
Nations Security Council was not fully respected, when its
ultimate legitimacy was discounted, and when its capacity to
act was restricted. That time was the Cold War, and that
time has passed.
Today, we no longer view international politics as a
winner-take-all contest.
The Security Council—and the United Nations system as a
whole—is once again the crucible of human hope for peace and
security, the focal point of trust, and the center of our
confidence in the concord to come.
Today, we embrace the global diversity of views. We believe
it makes us stronger as a world community. And we judge that
the world is a better place, full of the possibility that
comes with the secure knowledge that our destiny is
inexorably tied to one another’s.
Mr. President,
Since the democratic overthrow of the regime of Slobodan
Milosevic in October 2000, the citizens of our country have
regained their freedom and started enjoying the benefits of
peace. We have toiled unceasingly to provide a prosperous
future for all, under the roof of a united Europe. And we
have done so while working hard to advance reconciliation
with our neighbors—a cornerstone of our policy to break with
the legacy of the Balkans’ recent past.
For the first time in history, the region is well within
reach of the point of no return.
Our success to date has been a great victory for all who
believe that belonging to Europe is good for Serbia, good
for the Balkans, good for all the nations of the Old
Continent.
And yet, Excellencies, we have been informed of a deliberate
intention to dramatically set back progressive development
throughout the region. If allowed to stand, the adverse
consequences for not only the Western Balkans, but the world
community as a whole, will be grave.
The imminence and scope of this threat brings me here before
you this afternoon, as does the expectation that by working
together, we can avert a disaster of unfathomable
proportions.
Mr. President,
We have received reliable information that the Provisional
Institutions of Self-Government of our southern province of
Kosovo and Metohija, under interim UN administration, intend
to unilaterally and illegally declare independence from the
Republic of Serbia in the coming days.
Such an illegitimate declaration by the authorities in
Priština would brutally violate Security Council Resolution
1244’s reaffirmation of the sovereignty and territorial
integrity of a member-state of the United Nations, in this
case, the Republic of Serbia, which includes—quite
explicitly, according to the text of the resolution and our
own Constitution—our province of Kosovo and Metohija.
Mr. President,
The Security Council, together with each and every
member-state of the United Nations, has a Chapter VII
obligation—a binding obligation—to respect the sovereignty
and territorial integrity of the Republic of Serbia. This is
the plain language of Resolution 1244, and we expect, Mr.
President, the Security Council to honor the demands of
international law, the requirements of international
justice, the principles of the United Nations Charter, and
the very language of this Council’s Resolution, as you
consider how to respond to the hostile intent of the
authorities in Priština.
Mr. President,
The Republic of Serbia shall not tolerate such an illegal
act of secession. If forced to react to events beyond our
control, our Government and National Assembly will declare
the actions of the authorities in Priština null and void.
And we shall undertake all diplomatic, political, and
economic measures designed to impede and reverse this direct
and unprovoked attack on our sovereignty.
I must add, Mr. President, that as a responsible member of
the international community committed to the peaceful and
negotiated resolution of disputes—and as a dedicated
aspirant to membership in the European Union—the Republic of
Serbia will not resort to the use of force. For violence
cannot bring a peaceful settlement to the Kosovo crisis.
That is why even in this troubled hour, we repeat our call
upon the authorities in Priština to publicly and
unambiguously commit to the process of seeking a compromise
solution to the future status of our southern province.
Together, acting with forethought and prudence, Priština and
Belgrade, with the support of this Council, can still avoid
setting a precedent that will do irreparable harm to the
international system. The precise nature of this precedent
must be spelled out.
The unilateral and illegal declaration of independence of
Kosovo from Serbia by the authorities in Priština would
constitute nothing less than the forcible partition of a
sovereign member-state of the United Nations. The direct and
immediate consequence of this act would be the destruction
of the first principle of the United Nations, namely the
sovereign equality of all member-states.
Such a precedent, imposed on the world community, would echo
far, far away, into every corner of our globe. For we would
discover that the rushing river of self-determination has
become an uncontrolled cascade of secession.
We all know that there are dozens of Kosovo-s throughout the
world, just waiting for secession to be legitimized, to be
rendered an acceptable norm. Many existing conflicts would
escalate, frozen conflicts would reignite, and new ones
would be instigated.
Mr. President,
Let me be very clear. The Republic of Serbia shall never
accept any violation of its territorial integrity. We shall
never recognize Kosovo’s independence. We shall not waiver,
we shall not yield, should this cowardly act proceed
unchecked. Not now. Not in a year. Not in a decade. Never.
For Kosovo and Metohija shall remain a part of Serbia
forever.
Make no mistake, Excellencies, the Kosovo Albanians are
about to throw down the gauntlet. They have committed
themselves to a course of action that would constitute an
unprecedented, express and deliberate violation of the
United Nations Charter, international law, and the powers of
the Security Council itself.
Mr. President,
This is what we believe is required.
First, that the Security Council take effective action to
ensure that all provisions of the United Nations Charter and
Resolution 1244 are fully respected. Therefore, the Security
Council must urgently act to condemn the clear intent of the
authorities in Priština to unilaterally, illegally, and
illegitimately declare independence from the Republic of
Serbia. Additionally, the Security Council must reaffirm the
sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Republic of
Serbia, including Kosovo.
Second, that the Secretary-General and his Special
Representative in Kosovo exercise their authority in this
matter. Special Representative Joachim Ruecker must receive
clear and unambiguous instructions to make swift use of his
reserved powers, as enumerated in the Constitutional
Framework for Provisional Self-Government in Kosovo, and, in
the event of a declaration of independence by the province’s
Assembly, proclaim this act to be null and void. He must
also be instructed to dissolve the Kosovo Assembly, on the
grounds that declaring independence is not in conformity
with Resolution 1244. He has this power. It has been used
before. He must be make full use of it once more.
Third, that the international security presence in Kosovo,
identified by the acronym KFOR, continue to abide by the
legal framework for its operation, in conformity with
paragraph 9 of Resolution 1244, and remain status-neutral.
Continuing to adopt this approach ensures that all residents
of our southern province will remain receptive to its
mission to safeguard their lives and property.
KFOR must, Mr. President, demonstrate particular sensitivity
toward the Kosovo Serb community, as well as to the clerics
of the Serbian Orthodox Church and their monasteries, some
of which have been placed on UNESCO’s List of World Heritage
Sites, and alarmingly, on its List of World Heritage in
Danger. These holy sites stand at the foundation of Serbian
identity. They are not simply buildings or mere monuments.
They constitute an essential link to the living tradition of
Serbia today.
The Republic of Serbia is confident that KFOR has the
capacity to prevent a repeat of the ethnic cleansing against
the Serb population that took place in the latter half of
1999 and in March 2004, and to protect my nation’s religious
heritage against further destruction and cultural cleansing.
Fourth, Mr. President, that the European Union too continue
to fully respect all the provisions of Resolution 1244—in
particular those related to the authority vested in the
Security Council (paragraphs 5 and 19).
Let there be no doubt: the Republic of Serbia welcomes as a
matter of principle any demonstration of Europe’s deepening
commitment to the Western Balkans. And for that reason, we
welcome the EU’s desire to increase its presence in our
southern province.
But in order for the EU-led mission to Kosovo to acquire the
full international legitimacy so crucial to the fulfillment
of its mission, it must first seek a mandate from the
Security Council.
Excellencies,
We do not believe opportunities for negotiations are
exhausted, because we believe it is never too late to work
towards a solution that leads to regional peace and
stability.
We do not believe it is ever too late to negotiate about the
future—especially when it’s a future we all share.
Is it too late to talk of peace in the Middle East, in
Africa, or anywhere else in the world for that matter?
Should we just give up—and in the process resign ourselves
to the defeat of principles that form the core of what binds
us together?
Walking away is not a legitimate option, for it means that
we, as a world community relegate ourselves to the fatalism
of the past. It means that we are ready and willing to
sacrifice geo-strategic priorities on the altar of the
communal aspirations of Kosovo Albanians. And it means that
we would consciously avert our gaze from the main goal: a
European future for all the Western Balkans.
Mr. President,
We have gathered today primarily to address the question of
the status of Kosovo. I am here to advise you clearly, and
before history, of the status of the whole of Serbia as
well.
I intend on setting the record straight, and I intend on
being both blunt and undiplomatic.
My nation has suffered enough by being demonized for the
1990s. We are tired of seeing people hide behind the past to
justify the abuse of our country today.
That is why we cannot allow a series of lies to be
perpetuated into the history books that Serbia has been
obstructionist, that Serbia never really negotiated, that
Serbia is still a nationalistic country trying to oppress
minorities. That Serbia is the cause of the present
troubles.
Yes, Mr. President, I have heard these and many more such
accusations. And I have heard them from people who should
know better. Much better.
In back rooms and hallways, Excellencies, you have been told
that every avenue has been exhausted. That a solution must
be imposed, for negotiations have not born fruit.
What has transpired in the last two years has not been a
negotiation. It has been an exercise in which the end result
was made known to all in advance.
The last two years is a record of failure of those who
wanted to impose solutions with callous disregard for the
most elementary precepts of international law and democratic
values.
The record of the last two years is also an indictment of a
process that ought to have brought peoples together, but
instead forced them apart.
Excellencies, Serbia will not accept responsibility for this
abject failure. History will judge those who substituted
polemics for principles, and diplomatic theatre for
visionary statesmanship.
Mr. President,
I appeal to all the members of the Security Council, as well
as all the member-states of the United Nations, to continue
to respect, in this time of crisis, the sovereignty and
territorial integrity of the Republic of Serbia.
We say to you, with the certainty and fortitude of a unified
nation: Serbia will never forget.
The preservation of a Serbia whole and free, integrated into
Europe and engaged with the world, is the basic tenet of our
national interest. This will not change.
We have made our choice. Now is the time for the Security
Council to choose, and for the member-states to choose—to
choose whether to join us in a defense of the principles we
all revere.
For that is the issue before you: whether to destroy or to
preserve the sacrosanct character of basic solidarity
between sovereign states, the common denominator of the
world community.
A moment such as this defines paths of nations. We are a
nation, Mr. President, that has struggled over the course of
many centuries to defend its freedom, to establish its
democracy, and to build its just society.
So it has been, so it is, and so it will be. And so will be
Kosovo. Ours to the end. Kosovo will remain a part of Serbia
forever.
Thank you, Mr. President, for having given me the
opportunity to address this Council at a time of great
consequence for us all.”
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