(È almeno dai pogrom panalbanesi del marzo 2004 che la diplomazia
russa sta alzando la voce sulla questione kosovara, con dichiarazioni
molto nette contrarie alla secessione della provincia dalla Serbia e
comunque facendo notare che non è più tollerabile la politica dei
"due pesi due misure" su queste questioni:

KOSOVO: MINISTRO ESTERI RUSSO, INDIPENDENZA DESTABILIZZANTE
(ANSA) - BRUXELLES, 28 APR - Un'eventuale indipendenza del Kosovo
avrebbe ''conseguenze pericolose'' per la regione: e' l'ammonimento
fatto a Sofia, a margine della riunione informale esteri della Nato,
dal ministro degli esteri russo, Serghei Lavrov, secondo quanto
riferiscono fonti diplomatiche. ''Non siamo d'accordo con chi cerca
di convincere i serbi e noi stessi del fatto che non ci siano
alternative all' indipendenza del Kosovo'', ha detto alla stampa il
capo della diplomazia di Mosca. (ANSA) RIG
28/04/2006 17:17

Riportiamo di seguito la documentazione pervenutaci sul tema in
lingua in inglese limitandoci ai soli primi mesi del 2006.)


### The Voice of Russia 2006 ###

(The source of most of the following news was R. Rozoff through
yugoslaviainfo @ yahoogroups.com )


http://en.rian.ru/world/20060130/43247323.html

Russian Information Agency (Novosti) - January 30, 2006

Putin calls for uniformity in Kosovo decisions

MOSCOW - Russian President Vladimir Putin said Monday
that the six-nation Contact Group monitoring
international policy in Kosovo must make universal
decisions as conflicts remain unresolved in the former
socialist camp.
"We must not follow the way of applying some
principles to solve one problem and others to solve
another," Putin said at a government session.
The Contact Group, which includes the United States,
the UK, France, Germany, Italy and Russia, will be in
session at the level of foreign ministers in London in
the coming days.
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that during
preparatory work, certain parties had tried to specify
in the Group's documents that Kosovo, which has been
administered as a UN protectorate since the end of
NATO's military campaign in the region in June 1999,
"is a unique case which cannot serve as a precedent".
Lavrov said the session in London would be an
important stage in the talks to determine Kosovo's
final status.
"We will be seeking a decision that would be
acceptable for both Kosovar leaders and Belgrade. It
is not a simple objective because Albanian leaders in
Kosovo asserted that they would be satisfied with
nothing but independence, which contradicts the
decisions of the UN Security Council," Lavrov said.
He urged the world community to encourage the parties
to seek a mutually acceptable decision.


http://www.civil.ge/eng/article.php?id=11684

Civil Georgia - February 1, 2006

Putin Reiterates to Apply ‘Universal Principles’ to Conflicts

Tbilisi - Russian President Vladimir Putin reiterated
Moscow’s position on January 31 that “universal
principle” should be applied while dealing with
resolution of ‘frozen conflicts.’
Speaking at an annual press conference in Kremlin
Putin said that there is the UN Security Council
resolution, which confirms that Kosovo is part of
Serbia.
“If some one thinks that Kosovo can be granted full
independence, than why should we refuse in this to
Abkhazians, or South Ossetians? I am not now talking
about how Russia will act. But we know, for example,
that Turkey has recognized the Republic of North of
Cyprus. I do not want to say that Russia will
immediately recognize Abkhazia, or South Ossetia as
independent and sovereign states, but precedents of
this kind already exist in the international practice.
I am not now assessing these [precedents], but in
order to act justly with considering interests of
those people living in this or that territory we need
commonly recognized, universal principles for solving
these problems. This is exactly what I meant while
speaking at the meeting with government yesterday,”
Vladimir Putin said.
On January 30 President Putin instructed Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov to exert a policy of
“universality” during talks over Kosovo’s future
status, which, as Putin said, can serve as a model for
other conflicts.


http://www.adnki.com/index_2Level.php?
cat=Politics&loid=8.0.259586226&par=0

ADN Kronos International (Italy) - February 1, 2006

SERBIA: BELGRADE CHEERED BY PUTIN’S KOSOVO REMARKS

Belgrade - Serbian press gave big play on Wednesday to
Russian president Vladimir Putin’s statement that the
international community should apply the same criteria
to all inter-ethnic disputes in the world. Putin said
that allowing independence for Kosovo, a predominantly
ethnic Albanian province of Serbia under United
Nations control since 1999, could set a dangerous
precedent for other countries. In a front page
article, influential daily Politika carried his
statements in Moscow Tuesday, under the headline “When
I say Kosovo, I mean Caucasus”. Other papers also
carried Putin’s statement in front pages.
“The international community should apply unique,
universal principles in solving multi-ethnic
problems,” said Putin, referring to Kosovo province,
where majority ethnic Albanians demand independence.
“If, for example, Kosovo can become independent, why
couldn’t Abkhazia or South Ossetia,” said Putin,
referring to the turbulent Caucus region.
Serbian officials, who oppose Kosovo independence,
interpreted Putin’s pronouncement as a sign that he
would oppose the partitioning of Serbia and stand for
the preservation of its sovereignty over Kosovo.
Russia is, with the United States, Great Britain,
France, Germany and Italy, a member of a powerful
Contact Group for Kosovo, which is expected to
influence Kosovo’s final status.
The talks on the future of Kosovo were set to begin in
January, but have been postponed for the end of
February because of the death of Kosovo president
Ibrahim Rugova. “It is a good message for Serbs, and I
hope that Putin’s views will be respected by the
entire international community,” said a Kosovo Serb
leader Dragisa Krstovic.
Sanda Raskovic Ivic, Serbian government coordinator
for Kosovo, said that Putin has given a “signal and
warning” to those in the international community who
would like to treat Kosovo as an exception and grant
it independence. “Such a quasi-solution would destroy
international law and cause a chain reaction in many
European and non-European countries, including the
post-Soviet states.”
But James Lyon, controversial director of Belgrade
office of the [infamous] International Crisis Group, a
non-governmental [sic] organization that deals with
prevention of conflicts, said that Serbian
interpretations of Putin’s statement were wrong.
“Russia has more or less given up on Kosovo,” Lyon
told Belgrade radio B92.
He said it would be in Serbia’s interest to give up
Kosovo, just as it was in Russia’s interest to give up
some Caucasus republics, like Chechnya.
“Russia sees in Kosovo a sort of a precedent which it
might use in the Caucases and which would be in its
interest,” said Lyon.


http://www.interfax.com/3/127614/news.aspx

Interfax - February 6, 2006

Lavrov urges Kosovo, Cyprus settlements without external pressure

ATHENS - Any attempts to settle the Kosovo and
Cyprus conflicts by means of exerting external
pressure may create dangerous precedents, Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.
"The Kosovo and the Cyprus conflicts are different.
However, they share a common feature in that both
should be settled on the basis of international law
and the resolutions of the UN Security Council," the
minister said.
"What is in common is that both Greece and Russia
consider that only a negotiated resolution, rather
than external pressure, can be long-term as far as
both the Kosovo and the Cypriot settlement is
concerned," he said.
Violating this principle may create a dangerous
precedent," Lavrov said.


http://www.itar-tass.com/eng/level2.html?NewsID=3069082&PageNum=0

Itar-Tass - February 10, 2006

Russia opposes double standards in Kosovo

UNITED NATIONS - Russian Ambassador to the United
Nations Andrei Denisov called on Thursday to avoid
double standards in settling the situation in Kosovo.
He told a press conference the solution should be
found jointly by Serbia and Montenegro, Kosovo, and
Albania.
At present the variants of resolving the situation in
the province “are moving towards granting independence
to the territory under international supervision”.
“Our partners in the contact group for Kosovo claim
the situation with the status of the province creates
no precedent,” Denisov said. However, it would be
impossible to explain to residents of other regions
with a similar situation that there is no coincidence
with Kosovo.
He refrained from comparing the situation with Kosovo
with that in the breakaway Georgian regions of South
Ossetia and Abkhazia. Commenting on the intention of
the Georgian parliament to stop Russian peacekeeping
mission in South Ossetia Denisov said “such a decision
can be passed only by the executive authority, by the
president. However the head of the Georgian state has
not yet declared his position on the issue”.
If Georgia makes Russian peacekeepers withdraw from
the two breakaway regions “serious problems will
emerge for both sides, including for Russia”, as most
residents of Abkhazia and South Ossetia are Russian
citizens.
Denisov said that despite constant accusations from
Tbilisi Russia “respects the territorial integrity and
sovereignty of Georgia”. “Unfortunately, we hear a lot
of hysteria, of accusations, but such is the reality,
such are Russian partners in Georgia”, the ambassador
said.


http://www.interfax.com/3/137040/news.aspx

Interfax - March 9, 2006

Russian lawmaker says issue of independence for Kosovo premature

MOSCOW - Russian lawmakers think it would be
premature to refer the issue of Kosovo's independence
to the international community, head of the Russian
State Duma international relations committee
Konstantin Kosachyov announced Thursday.
"Last May, a delegation from our committee visited the
Balkans and concluded that problem of standards was
completely unsolved, that's why it would be premature
to proceed to Kosovo's status. Attempts by the
international community to speed up this question
appear to be politicized and can only make things
worse," Kosachyov said during a meeting in Moscow
with head of Coordinating Center for Kosovo, Serbia
and Montenegro Sanda Raskovic-Ivic.
"We are convinced that no decisions on Kosovo could be
adopted by-passing Serbia and Montenegro," Kosachyov
said, adding that Russia had always played an active
role in the Balkan settlement.
The Russian and Serbian positions on the issue
coincide, he said.
Raskovic-Ivic, for her part, said that Serbia was
ready to grant Kosovo broad autonomy, but nothing
beyond that.
The Serbian government and people want Kosovo to
remain part of Serbia, she said.
"We are ready to grant Kosovo more than autonomy, but
less than independence. We will not agree to allow
Kosovo become a subject of international law," she
said.
Despite aggressive sorties on the part of ethnic
Albanian extremists, the Serbian authorities are ready
to continue talks with the Albanian side,
Raskovic-Ivic said.


http://www.interfax.ru/e/B/politics/28.html?id_issue=11484838

Interfax - March 24, 2006

Russia to support Serbia in talks on Kosovo status

MOSCOW - Russia will support Serbia in talks on the
status of Kosovo, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
Lavrov said.
"We are convinced that any decision [on Kosovo's
future] should be negotiated and not forced. However,
unfortunately, Serbia is not playing a particularly
active role in these talks," Lavrov said at a State
Duma session devoted to the European Council's
convention on the prevention of terrorism on Friday.
Serbia's stance "could have been firmer and were it to
become so we would support it," he said.


http://en.rian.ru/russia/20060324/44758139.html

Russian Information Agency (Novosti) - March 24, 2006

Russian FM urges Serbs to be proactive in Kosovo status talks

MOSCOW - Russia's foreign minister called Friday for
Serbia to be more proactive in talks over the status
of Kosovo.
"Kosovo's fate will depend precisely on how proactive
the Serbs are," Sergey Lavrov said. "So far,
unfortunately, the Serb side has been taking a
hands-off approach to the negotiations."
He said Moscow wanted the status of Kosovo, a Serbian
province with a predominantly Albanian population, to
be determined through negotiations rather than
imposed, and pledged support for the Serb negotiators.
A third round of talks between Kosovo Albanians and
the Serbian government is scheduled to begin April 3,
and will be mediated by former Finnish President
Martti Ahtisaari.
Formally part of Serbia, Kosovo has been a UN
protectorate since 1999, following a NATO military
campaign to drive out Yugoslav forces....


http://www.adnki.com/index_2Level_English.php?
cat=Politics&loid=8.0.279756052&par=0

ADN Kronos International (Italy) - March 24, 2006

KOSOVO: LAVROV PLEDGES SUPPORT TO SERBS IN STATUS TALKS

Belgrade - Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov has
denied Western press reports that Russia and China
would not oppose Kosovo independence in the United
Nations Security Council if the issue was put on the
UN agenda, and said that the solution should be a
negotiated one, resulting from direct talks between
Pristina and Belgrade.
Russia and China have promised the United States
secretary of state Condoleezza Rice that they would
not oppose independence of the UN-administered Serbian
province - Western media reported recently. But Lavrov
on Friday told Belgrade weekly NIN that such claims
were “an ordinary lie.”
According to Lavrov, “the future status of Kosovo must
be a result of direct talks between the Serb and
Kosovan authorities. An imposed solution would be
neither stable nor long lasting and would be a
constant cause of destabilisation in the region,” he
said.
Lavrov also reiterated this position when he addressed
the Russian parliament in Moscow on Friday.
He regretted that Serbian side wasn’t sufficiently
active in the Kosovo talks at the moment. “They
(Serbs) should be more determined and we shall support
them,” Lavrov said.
“We can’t be bigger Serbs than the Serbs themselves,”
he pointed out. He emphasised, however, that Moscow
would protect its own interests in Kosovo,
“pragmatically and without needless confrontations”.
Serb and Kosovan officials have this year held two
rounds of talks on the future status of Kosovo, under
the auspices of UN special envoy Martti Ahtisaari.
These have focused on ssed on practical issues such as
policing with the aim of decentralising more power to
local authorities.
The ultimate issue of Kosovo's independence - opposed
by Serbs but sought by its overwhelmingly Muslim, 90
percent ethnic Albanian majority - will be conditional
on satisfactory reform of local government and respect
for minorities in the province - where ethnic tensions
persist, according to experts.
The troubled, 90 percent ethnic Albanian majority
province of Kosovo, while still legally part of
Serbia, has been under UN administration since 1999,
when NATO airstrikes and an ethnic Albanian separatist
uprising forced Serb troops to withdraw.
Ethnic riots in Kosovo in March, 2004 left 19 people
dead and 900 injured, 800 homes, 34 churches and
monasteries were damaged, several thousand Serbs were
forced to flee their homes, and a mosque was burned
down.
The riots, in which members of the international
peacekeeping and Kosovo police forces died, broke out
after two ethnic Albanian boys were found drowned in
the Ibar river, near the village of Cabra.

Metropolitan Kirill: Recognition of the independence of Kosovo to
incite a new conflict in the region

Interfax - 30 March 2006, 14:52

Moscow, March 30, Interfax - The independence of Kosovo implies negative
consequences for Europe for many decades and leads to new developments
around the so called ‘unrecognized states’ on the post-Soviet territory,
chairman of the Moscow Patriarchate Department for External Church
Relations Metropolitan Kirill of Smolensk and Kaliningrad said.
‘I believe that if Kosovo gets independence, the consequences would be
disastrous. Kosovo and Serbia will bleed constantly, and the region will
retain its potential for enmity, hatred and thus for conflict’, the
metropolitan said at a news conference in Interfax central office in
Moscow on Thursday.
He referred to the Mid-East conflict as an example, which is an
incessant source of threatening stability in the region. ‘We know about
the developments in the Middle East. The region with its potential of
hatred and confrontation has threatened not only human life in the
region, but peace in the world for over half a century’, the
metropolitan noted.
According to him, it is quite obvious that ‘an unjust solution of the
Kosovo problem would bring about something similar to Europe for long
decades’.
‘I agree with those who think that the independence of Kosovo would lead
to new developments around the so-called ‘unrecognized states’ on the
post-Soviet territory. Europe would encounter multiple problems related
to the attempts of such ‘independent states’ at self-determination,
Metropolitan Kirill stated.
He is convinced that it is necessary ‘to weigh the possible consequences
of an action’. ‘I believe that settlement of the Kosovo problem should
go together with Serbia within the framework of a single state’ a
representative of the Russian Church noted.
He continued that the independence of Kosovo would have a very negative
impact on the Orthodox population and the Orthodox shrines of the
region. ‘Even now, in the presence of international forces in Kosovo,
the shrines continue to be sacrileged, and churches and monasteries of
great cultural significance destroyed’, the metropolitan underscored.
‘If this happens regardless of the presence of the armed forced that are
able to protect Serbian cultural heritage and the Orthodox people, what
would happen after thee forces leave the country and Kosovo becomes
independent? I am afraid the consequences would be tragic’, he said.
According to the hierarch, a stable state and a stable political system
are impossible to build under these circumstances.’

http://eng.primenewsonline.com/?c=121&a=7245

Prime News (Georgia) March 31, 2006

Kosovo Precedent Threatens Russia’s Territorial Integrity, Results Of
Poll

Tbilisi – Most of questioned people by radio station
‘Ekho Moskvi” reckon that the Kosovo precedent
threatens the territorial integrity of the Russian
Federation.
Express-poll held with the frameworks of the
‘Ricochet’ program, revealed that 62% of questioned
people support the abovementioned opinion, 38% reckon
that precedent in Kosovo does not threaten territorial
integrity of the Russian Federation
In total 905 people were interrogated.
On March 30 the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Serbia
and Montenegro stated that Serbia agrees to
acknowledge Kosovo’s independence and does not object
to Kosovo’s representation in the international
structures excluding the U.N. [lies]


http://www.slobodan-milosevic.org/news/rtr041306.htm

SENIOR RUSSIAN MP KOSACHEV WARNS OF DANGERS OF KOSOVO INDEPENDENCE

BBC Monitoring International Reports - April 13, 2006 Thursday

Text of report by Russia TV on 13 April
Source: RTR Russia TV, Moscow, in Russian 1400 gmt 13 Apr 06
Copyright 2006 Financial Times Information
All Rights Reserved
Global News Wire - Asia Africa Intelligence Wire
Copyright 2006 BBC Monitoring/BBC Source: Financial Times Information
Limited
Posted for Fair Use only.

[Presenter] Moscow thinks it is inappropriate artificially to set any
deadlines for a change in the status of Kosovo. What is more, any
resolution of the Kosovo problem will inevitably become an
international legal precedent, which will influence the resolution of
other conflicts, including within the CIS.
[Konstantin Kosachev, chairman of State Duma Committee on
International Affairs] If Kosovo is recognized as independent without
Belgrade's agreement, for the first time in the history of post-war
Europe a precedent will have been set of dismembering, dissociating
an autonomous area from an integral state without the agreement of
that state to do this. This will mean that other unrecognized
republics will certainly go down the same road, Abkhazia, South
Ossetia, Nagornyy Karabakh, the Dniester Region, North Cyprus,
possibly certain other regions of Europe. This is very well
understood in the West. They are now attempting to put pressure on
Belgrade to achieve in one form or another the agreement of the
Belgrade authorities to independence for Kosovo.


http://www.interfax.com/3/153622/news.aspx
http://www.defensenews.com/story.php?F=1739116&C=europe

Agence France-Press - April 28, 2006

Kosovo Independence Would Destabilize the Balkans: Russian Official

SOFIA, Bulgaria - Independence for Kosovo would
destabilize the Balkans, Russian Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov warned April 28 after talks with NATO
counterparts in the Bulgarian capital Sofia.
”We don’t agree with those trying to persuade us...
that there is no alternative to Kosovo independence,”
he told reporters.
”That is a fairly dangerous path that could lead to
dangerous consequences for the region and create a
precedent for other conflict situations,” he said.
Still technically a province of Serbia, Kosovo has
been administered by the United Nations since Serb
forces were forced out by NATO-led air war in 1999.
The international community hopes to settle Kosovo’s
status by the end of this year, and talks have begun
between Belgrade and the ethnic Albanian government in
Pristina on the territory’s future status.
Lavrov called on Pristina to respect U.N. Security
Council “standards” and “to create conditions in
Kosovo to guarantee the return of refugees” — Kosovar
Serbs forced out of the territory.
Russia has long sided with Serbia in challenging moves
to proclaim Kosovo independence.
The foreign minister of Serbia-Montenegro, Vuk
Draskovic, said in Paris Wednesday that Kosovar
independence would pose a major obstacle to Serbian-EU
relations.
”It would seen as a humiliation ... Kosovo is the
spiritual cradle of the Serbs,” he said, though he
added that Belgrade was willing to offer “internal
independence.”
But on April 27, Prime Minister Sali Berisha of
neighboring Albania told France’s Le Figaro newspaper
that “no plan other than the independence of Kosovo
can bring peace and stability.”


Interfax-Military - May 4, 2006

Independent Kosovo would aggravate regional conflicts - Kokoshin

MOSCOW - Granting independence to Kosovo will
have very serious consequences, Chairman of the State
Duma's CIS Affairs Committee and former Security
Council secretary Andrei Kokoshin told Interfax-AVN on
Thursday.
"Any decision granting independence to Kosovo will
shake the modern world order," he said.
This is the opinion of many politicians in Russia, the
West and the East, Kokoshin said.
Not only will a precedent be created, but suspicions
about the West's policies regarding sovereignty and
territorial integrity and double standards will
intensify, Kokoshin said.
"An independent Kosovo will naturally exacerbate many
conflicts on the territory of the former Soviet Union
and in other regions, including Asia, Africa and
Europe," he said.
"The situation is made yet more complicated by the
fact that Kosovo is an autonomous region within a
former constituent part of the former federation. Any
evidence Western statesman may produce in support of
the 'uniqueness' of the Kosovo situation cannot
prevent exacerbation," he said.


http://en.rian.ru/world/20060519/48365461.html

Russian Information Agency (Novosti) - May 19, 2006

Prishtina's stance on Kosovo is unconstructive - Russian FM

STRASBOURG - The Kosovan leadership's intransigent
attitude is delaying a solution over the status of the
troubled Balkan territory, Russia's foreign minister
said Friday.
Sergei Lavrov, speaking at a news conference in
Strasbourg, said: "The position of Prishtina's
leadership, which is insisting on the unequivocal
independence of Kosovo, is very unconstructive."
Lavrov said a unilateral approach should not be taken
to talks on Kosovo, and that negotiations must be held
through the UN and the Contact Group.
Talks on the UN-administered territory's status should
be concluded by the end of the year, a view that is
shared by the six-nation Contact Group - the U.S.,
Russia, Britain, France, Germany and Italy - Lavrov
said.
Earlier, some Russian politicians expressed concern
that independence for Kosovo would create a precedent
for recognition of breakaway regions in the former
Soviet Union.
Moldova is dealing with a separatist regime in
Transdnestr, while Georgia has two breakaway regions
in Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Nagorny Karabakh, a
largely ethnic Armenian enclave inside Azerbaijan, has
long been a source of friction between the two
Caucasus states.
Formally part of Serbia, Kosovo has been a UN
protectorate since 1999, following a NATO military
campaign to drive out Yugoslav forces....


http://www.focus-fen.net/index.php?catid=144&newsid=88665&ch=0

Focus News Agency (Bulgaria) - May 19, 2006

Balkans’ Fate Depends on Outcome of Kosovo Issue

Moscow - The fate of the Balkans depends on the
outcome of the Kosovo issue and the stake for the
region’s stability is finding a solution that would
fulfill the common international norms and will be a
result from the talks between Pristina and Belgrade.
This is what Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Vladimir
Titov stated today cited by Serbian agency TANJUG.
According to him there are some tendencies that bring
hope to the stabilization process, to the
strengthening of trust and to the regional cooperation
but he added that there are also “many risks
concentrated in Kosovo”.


http://www.interfax.ru/e/B/politics/28.html?id_issue=11519342

Interfax - May 19, 2006

Kosovo resolution will form precedent for conflict settlement - Russia

MOSCOW - The approach to the settlement of the Kosovo
conflict should not be unique, Deputy Foreign Minister
Vladimir Titov has said.
"We are resolutely opposed to any policy of double
standards on matters concerning sovereignty or
territorial integrity and are therefore set on seeking
a well-balanced solution," he said in an interview
published in Vremya Novostei on Friday.
"The resolution on Kosovo will create a precedent in
international law that will later be applied to other
frozen conflicts," he said.
"We disagree with the concept that the case of Kosovo
is unique, because such an approach runs counter to
the norms of international law. It is wrought with the
arbitrary application of different rules to the
settlement of each particular crisis undermining
confidence in the international community and creating
the impression of a selective approach to conflicts in
different parts of the world," Titov said.
"Specific as situations may be, the approaches and
rules of settlement should be universal," he said.


http://en.rian.ru/world/20060522/48424329.html

Russian Information Agency (Novosti) - May 22, 2006

Kosovo talks to step up gear after Montenegro vote - Russian MP

MOSCOW - Discussions over the status of Kosovo will
become more intense after Sunday's referendum on the
independence of Montenegro, a senior member of the
lower chamber of Russia's parliament said Monday.
The elections commission has said that 55.4% (with 55%
required) of votes were cast in favor of Montenegro
seceding from its union with Serbia, which on paper
still includes the province of Kosovo, even though it
has been a UN protectorate since 1999.
Konstantin Kosachev, the chairman of the State Duma's
international affairs committee, said the discussions
on Kosovo's controversial status - ethnic Albanians
are pushing for independence from Belgrade - would
inevitably be taken to a new level, though he warned
against making any decision without taking into
account the interests of the minority Serbs.
If this were to happen, he said it would "set a
far-reaching precedent for other situations (northern
Cyprus and the Basque country)."
Kosachev said the status of Kosovo, which NATO troops
first entered after Serbian forces were accused of
committing atrocities against ethnic Albanians, should
be considered as part of a UN Security Council
resolution.
....
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said May 19
that talks Kosovo's status should be concluded by the
end of the year, a view that is shared by the other
members of the six-nation Contact Group: the United
States, Britain, France, Germany and Italy.
Earlier, some Russian politicians expressed concern
that independence for Kosovo in what was once
Yugoslavia would create a precedent for recognizing
breakaway regions in the former Soviet Union.
Moldova is dealing with a separatist regime in
Transdnestr and Georgia has two breakaway regions in
Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Nagorny Karabakh, a
largely ethnic Armenian enclave inside Azerbaijan, has
long been a source of friction between the two
Caucasus states.


http://www.itar-tass.com/eng/level2.html?NewsID=8692564&PageNum=0

Itar-Tass - May 23, 2006

Kosovo independence to become universal precedent – official

MOSCOW - Kosovo independence will become a universal
precedent, head of the Kremlin department for
inter-regional and cultural relations with foreign
states Modes Kolerov told Moscow University students
on Tuesday.
“Not only us will have to recognize the universality
of the Kosovo precedent,” he said.
The Kosovo situation may be applied to unrecognized
republics on the former Soviet territory. “Obviously,
Kosovo will be a precedent for the CIS,” he said.
However, it would not be easy to make independent
Abkhazia, the Dniester region and South Ossetia, he
said.
“For instance, a referendum in Abkhazia will not be
accepted by the European Union as quickly and clearly
as the recent referendum in Montenegro,” he said.


http://www.regnum.ru/english/648217.html

Regnum (Russia) - May 29, 2006

Natalia Narochnitskaya: Russia should welcome refugees from Kosovo

The situation in the newly founded independent state
of Montenegro and the outlook for the situation in the
Balkans was discussed at a round-table conference held
in Moscow on May 29, 2006.
Yelitsa Kuryak, Minister-Counselor at the Embassy of
Serbia and Montenegro to the Russian Federation, told
REGNUM correspondent that Serbia has already admitted
about 250,000 refugees from Kosovo.
They “have neither jobs, nor housing, nor subsistence
means.”
“Serbia cannot handle this,” the Minister-Counselor
stated.
Natalia Narochnitskaya, deputy speaker on the State
Duma Foreign Affairs Committee and head of the
Historical Perspective foundation, commented that her
foundation “advocates welcoming Serbian refugees from
Kosovo in Russia and giving them an opportunity to
survive and fit in. I am inclined to raise this issue
in the concerned governmental agencies of the Russian
Federation. Russia should initiate accepting refugees
from Kosovo.
"This is a real opportunity to help Serbia solve at
least part of her problems. I am convinced that Russia
is quite capable of receiving even hundreds of
thousands of Serbian refugees.”

http://www.interfax.com/3/161051/news.aspx

Interfax - May 30, 2006

Kosovo settlement should be based on UN resolution - Lavrov

MOSCOW - The decision settling the status of
Kosovo should be made only on the basis of a UN
resolution, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
said at a Tuesday meeting with Martti Ahtisaari,
Special Envoy of the Secretary-General of the United
Nations for the future status process for Kosovo.
"The decision must rely on a UN mandate in compliance
with UN Security Council resolution #1244," Lavrov
said.
As in any conflict, any decision on Kosovo must be
reached through talks and understandings acceptable to
both sides, he said.
A settlement for Kosovo should stem from long-standing
practices of the United Nations and the international
community and "deviation from these principles would
create a bad precedent," he said.
Ahtisaari thanked Lavrov for the possibility of
continuing dialogue on the future status of Kosovo,
saying an agreement had been reached on launching
talks on Kosovo in Vienna.
The purpose of these talks will be to find out whether
a solution suiting all sides can be found, he said

http://www.interfax.ru/e/B/politics/28.html?id_issue=11524725

Interfax - May 29, 2006

Lavrov sees EU double standard in Transdnestria customs dispute

MOSCOW - Russia Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
believes that the European Union applies different
standards to Transdniestria, on the one hand, and to
Kosovo and Northern Cyprus, on the other.
He told a Monday meeting of the bureau of the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE)
in Moscow that Russia cannot support the blockade of
Transdniestria.
He said Europe would hardly agree to Kosovo trading
with the rest of the world according to the rules of
Serbia.
He added that the EU actively supports the customs
openness of Northern Cyprus.
"I think one can notice double standards in these
actions by European politicians," he said.


http://en.rian.ru/world/20060601/48929638.html

Russian Information Agency (Novosti) - June 1, 2006

Kosovo decision to set precedent - Russian CE representative

STRASBOURG, (France) - A decision on the status of
the Serbian province of Kosovo will set a precedent in
Europe, Russia's official representative at the
Council of Europe said Thursday.
Alexander Orlov said the decision on granting it
independence "could become universal for the rest of
Europe."
Kosovo has been under the administration of the UN
since 1999 but it is widely assumed the
Albanian-majority population will be granted
independence from Serbia, which should mark the final
carving up of the old Yugoslavia following
Montenegro's May 21 vote to secede from Serbia.
Orlov said this could set an example for
decision-making on the status of other provinces,
including Transdnestr, a breakaway region in Moldova,
and South Ossetia and Abkhazia, self-proclaimed
republics in Georgia.
Orlov said the United Nations was playing the key role
in talks on the status of Kosovo but added that the
Council of Europe could help the province determine
its constitutional system, control the observation of
human rights and the rights of ethnic minorities.
Russia has consistently advocated the rights of Serbs
living in Kosovo, many of whom have been driven out of
the province, and highlighted the plight of the
Orthodox Church, whose buildings have often been
attacked.