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Kosovo – Consequences of the ICJ Opinion |
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петак, 23. јул 2010. | |
(Stratfor, July 22, 2010)
A July 22 ruling from the U.N. International Court of Justice affirmed the legality of Kosovo’s declaration of independence from Serbia. The Kosovar government will use the ruling as a mandate to strengthen its sovereignty over the whole of the country, while the government in Belgrade will attempt to continue its diplomatic fight for Kosovo in the United Nations as a way of winning over nationalists in the country’s electorate. These moves will lead to increased tensions — and possibly violence — in the region. Analysis The International Court of Justice (ICJ), the highest U.N. court, has issued a nonbinding opinion July 22 stating that Kosovo’s February 2008 unilateral declaration of independence from Serbia “did not violate general international law.” The court’s interpretation of the question was narrow, only addressing the legality of the declaration and not of Kosovo’s perceived status as an independent country.
The West remains unconcerned about Belgrade’s complaints on Kosovo because of Serbia’s stated goal of joining the European Union. As long as Serbia seeks EU membership, its continued indignation on the matter will have no real repercussions and will be something the West can continue to ignore.
Thus, whether or not Belgrade’s efforts at continuing the discussion on Kosovo are successful, Serbia’s government has a domestic political logic for continuing the fight, as Serbian leaders see the continuous diplomatic effort on Kosovo as a way to establish credentials with the nationalist side of the electorate. For Kosovo, the ruling is a sign that it can begin exerting its sovereignty more forcefully over the whole of the country. Pristina has had to temper its attempts to press its sovereignty north of the river Ibar, where a substantial Serbian minority — roughly 70,000 — remains. Even very limited efforts by Pristina — such as cutting Serbian lines of telecommunication or establishing a government office in the Serbian part of the divided town of Mitrovica — have elicited violence.
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