YUGOSLAVIA: U.S. AMBASSADOR TO THE UNITED NATIONS, RICHARD HOLBROOKE, ON A TOUR IN KOSOVO
Record ID:
336876
YUGOSLAVIA: U.S. AMBASSADOR TO THE UNITED NATIONS, RICHARD HOLBROOKE, ON A TOUR IN KOSOVO
- Title: YUGOSLAVIA: U.S. AMBASSADOR TO THE UNITED NATIONS, RICHARD HOLBROOKE, ON A TOUR IN KOSOVO
- Date: 30th August 1999
- Summary: PRISTINA, YUGOSLAVIA (AUGUST 29, 1999) (REUTERS) 1. SLV U.S. AMBASSADOR TO THE UNITED NATIONS, RICHARD HOLBROOKE AND COMMANDER OF THE KFOR PEACEKEEPING FORCE, BRITISH LIEUTENANT-GENERAL SIR MICHAEL JACKSON ARRIVE AT NEWS BRIEFING 0.08 2. MCU (English) HOLBROOKE SAYING: "An issue of concern, the Russians are an important part of the process here. We
- Embargoed: 14th September 1999 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: PRISTINA, KOSOVO, YUGOSLAVIA
- City:
- Country: Yugoslavia
- Reuters ID: LVA9LAMKZPK1BOOIB7UHBDM7VNPT
- Story Text: Richard Holbrooke, on a Balkan tour after being
appointed U.S.ambassador to the United Nations, has urged a
swift end to a dispute in which Kosovo Albanians have barred
Russian peacekeepers from their town.
He has met Hasim Thaci, the civilian leader of the KLA,
and Ibrahim Rugova, the ethnic Albanian leader, and said that
The U.S.government is interested in keeping an open mind
about the growth of new parties in a reconstructed Kosovo.
Holbrook has praised Bernard Kouchner, the U.N.special
envoy to Kosovo for his work in the province throwing the
whole weight of U.S.diplomacy behind him.
Washington's former Balkans troubleshooter, Richard
Holbrooke, who met the commander of Kosovo's peacekeeping
force on Sunday (August 29), stressed the importance of
Russia's role in the international force in Kosovo.
"The Russians are an important part of the process here.
We work closely with them here and in the United Nations,"
said Holbrooke, who brokered the Dayton peace accords that
ended the 1992-1995 Bosnia war.
"They were an important part of the process that ended the
war and they have a legitimate role here," he said.
Holbrooke, on his first foreign visit since being sworn in
as U.N.ambassador on Wednesday, was commenting on the
situation in the southwestern town of Orahovac, where
Albanians have set up roadblocks to keep out Russian troops.
"The details of that particular point of tension have to
be resolved," he said.
Lieutenant General Mike Jackson, commander of the KFOR
peacekeepers in Kosovo, said his officers would continue
efforts to resolve the standoff.
Jackson added that anti-Russian feeling among ethnic
Albanians may be based more on rumour than hard facts.
The Albanians, who distrust Russians as traditional allies
of the Serbs, say Russian mercenaries fought alongside Serb
forces who committed atrocities in their area.
"Yes, passions do run high," Jackson said after meeting
Holbrooke.
But he added: "As ever, I fear we may have a situation
where beliefs are rather more awful than the actual facts."
He said he suspected Russian involvement with the Serbs
was less than the Albanians believed, if it had existed at
all.
About 3,600 Russians form part of the NATO-led Kosovo
force, KFOR, which has more than 40,000 troops in Kosovo.
Holbrooke said he had been struck by the depth of
animosity towards Russians when speaking to villagers at a
mass grave site at Cikatovo, west of Pristina, the previous
day.
An agreement reached in Helsinki in June between the
United States and Russia, and accepted by NATO, sets out the
details of the Russian deployment within KFOR.
It specifies a region inside Kosovo's German military zone
around the town of Malisevo, which includes Orahovac, as one
of the Russians' areas.
Russian troops tried to begin taking over from Dutch
troops in Orahovac on Monday but turned back after
encountering the largest of seven roadblocks set up by local
Albanians on winding roads around the hillside town.
KFOR has not said how it plans to overcome the Albanians'
resistance, although it has stressed the dispute will be
solved peacefully.Dutch soldiers have suggested allowing some
of them to remain in the town with the Russians might be one
solution.
Holbrooke went on to meet Hasim Thaci, leader of the KLA troops.
Following their meeting, Thaci said, "We truly believe
that the date of the 19th September will be an important date
for Kosovo." He did not elaborate.
Holbrooke said "We see progress and problems.Here it's a
very difficult situation but at least now we are in a free
Pristina, free of intimidation and thats the most important
thing because with NATO to provide security it provides an
opportunity for the creation of a pluralistic democracy."
Holbrooke then met ethnic Albanian leader Ibrahim Rugova.
Talking to reporters afterwards, Rugova said, "We
appreciate all the support and aid the United States people
have given to Kosovo during the tragedy and we hope that
cooperation will continue."
Holbrooke replied saying "The war is over but forging a
viable democracy under peacetime conditions peace is not easy.
The growth of different political parties here is a useful
process but it needs to be conducted in a democratic
atmosphere.That is why we are visiting so many Albanian
leaders today.That is the message we are hoping to convey so
I am awfully glad to see you (meaning Rugova) again, and I
look forward to seeing you again."
Talking to reporters in Pristina after meeting Bernard
Kouchner, U.N.special envoy in Kosovo, on Sunday afternoon,
Holbrooke said the Frenchman was the right choice to deal with
the issues facing the war-torn Yugoslav province.
"He's the right person at the right time in the right
place," Holbrooke told reporters.
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