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Barricades Ready on Kosovo's Flashpoint Bridges

Reuters
Feb 16, 2008

France soldiers of the Kosovo Force (KFOR) patrol in the northern part of the ethnically divided Kosovo town of Mitrovica on February 16, 2008. (Robert Atanasovski/AFP/Getty Images)
France soldiers of the Kosovo Force (KFOR) patrol in the northern part of the ethnically divided Kosovo town of Mitrovica on February 16, 2008. (Robert Atanasovski/AFP/Getty Images)


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MITROVICA, Serbia—French troops prepared concrete and razor-wire barriers on Saturday to separate Serbs from Albanians in the Kosovo flashpoint of Mitrovica, less than 24 hours before the province proclaims independence.

The commander of NATO peacekeepers in Kosovo, French Lieutenant-General Xavier de Marnhac, said his troops "will react and oppose any provocation that may happen during these days, whether from the Albanian or the Serb side."

North of the River Ibar, Serbs held a day of prayer and protest to demonstrate they will never accept the secession of cherished land where a 90 percent Albanian majority has struggled for its own state for almost two decades.

"We are all expecting something difficult and horrible," Bishop Artemije, the head of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Kosovo, told hundreds of Serbs at the St Dimitrije church.

"Our message to you, all Serbs in Kosovo, is to remain in your homes and around your monasteries, regardless of what God allows or our enemies do."

Pre-cast concrete sections three metres (10 feet) high and tall metal barriers wound with razor wire were lined up on the East Bridge over the river. Barricades were also ready on the main bridge to close both off quickly if clashes erupt.

Special Forces of the Serbian army demonstrate their capabilities during a public exercise in Nis, 200km south of capital Belgrade, on February 15, 2008. (Sasa Djordjevic/AFP/Getty Images)
Special Forces of the Serbian army demonstrate their capabilities during a public exercise in Nis, 200km south of capital Belgrade, on February 15, 2008. (Sasa Djordjevic/AFP/Getty Images)

Kosovo's parliament will declare independence on Sunday, almost nine years since NATO went to war to save the Albanians from killings and ethnic cleansing by Serb forces trying to crush a rebel insurgency.

The declaration will be made during a parliamentary session in the capital Pristina due to begin at 3.00 p.m. (1400 GMT), according to the schedule of events leaked to media on Saturday.

In Belgrade, more than 1,000 people gathered with banners, flags and religious icons to protest against the loss of land many consider their religious heartland, steeped in history and the site of dozens of centuries-old Orthodox monasteries.

A billboard which reads 'Independence' stands at the entrance of Pristina. (Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP/Getty Images)
A billboard which reads "Independence" stands at the entrance of Pristina. (Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP/Getty Images)

"We're ready to fight for Kosovo," said protester Ivan Ivanovic. "Kosovo will be returned to us, we'll never accept its independence."

They delivered a petition to the embassy of European Union president Slovenia, condemning EU support for Kosovo's "illegal" secession.

A full-page advertisement in Serbian dailies called for more demonstrations against this "punishment and humiliation".

Provocation

In Kosovo, Prime Minister Hashim Thaci prayed at the graves of the Jashari family in the village of Prekaz, remembering the March 1998 massacre of more than 50 people by Serb forces that swelled Albanian support for guerrilla war.

More than a thousand Serb nationalists protest against the decision of European Union to send a mission aimed at helping Kosovo's transition to independence on February 16, 2008 in front of the Slovenian embassy in Begrade. (Andrej Isakovic/AFP/Getty Images)
More than a thousand Serb nationalists protest against the decision of European Union to send a mission aimed at helping Kosovo's transition to independence on February 16, 2008 in front of the Slovenian embassy in Begrade. (Andrej Isakovic/AFP/Getty Images)

"We are on the brink of making official the independence of Kosovo," he said on the snow-swept hillside.

Albanian and U.S. flags flew from cars and shops across the U.N.-run territory as its 2 million Albanians prepared to celebrate the realisation of their independence dream.

Despite the backing of Russia, Belgrade can do nothing to stop independence or Kosovo's recognition by the West. Serbia's uneasy coalition government is split over whether to reject ties with the European Union over the bloc's backing for Kosovo.

A day ahead of the proclamation, Brussels approved the launch of a 2,000-strong police and justice mission for Kosovo that will take over from the U.N. administration after a 120-day transition.

The American flag, the European Union flag, and the Albanian flag fly side by side from a window February 16, 2008 in Pristina, Serbia. (Chris Hondros/Getty Images)
The American flag, the European Union flag, and the Albanian flag fly side by side from a window February 16, 2008 in Pristina, Serbia. (Chris Hondros/Getty Images)

Commenting on the mission, Minister for Kosovo Slobodan Samardzic, an ally of nationalist Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica, said Serbia would "have to question its ties" with the EU and states that recognise Kosovo's independence.

The United States and most EU members will recognise the new state, the last to be carved from Yugoslavia. They say Serbia relinquished the moral right to rule its people because of the brutality against them under the late Slobodan Milosevic.

Serbia has told Kosovo's 120,000 remaining Serbs to reject the secession. Many of them live in the north adjacent to Serbia proper and look set to cement a de facto partition that would weigh on the new state for years.



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