KOSOVO-SERBIA/EU
FEBRUARY 22 2008 09:33h
Costa Cruises: We are very sorry and deeply saddened
Text
`The embassies have to be protected, and that is the obligation of the country,` Javier Solana said.
European Union officials called on Serbia on Friday to do more to protect foreign embassies targeted in protests against Kosovo's secession, warning the violence could have an impact on EU-Serbian ties.
"The embassies have to be protected, and that is the obligation of the country," EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana told reporters at an EU event in Slovenia after the storming of a U.S. embassy in Belgrade on Thursday.
"Things will have to calm down before we can recuperate the climate that would allow for any contact to move on the SAA (Stabilisation and Association Agreement)," he said of a preliminary deal on ties with the European Union.
The pact was initialled last year but the EU has said it will not sign it until Belgrade fully cooperates with the U.N. war crimes tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. The EU was ready to sign an interim trade deal but Belgrade's nationalist prime minister Vojislav Kostunica blocked the move earlier this month.
Serbian rioters enraged by Kosovo's secession stormed the U.S. embassy in Belgrade on Thursday and set it on fire, leaving one protester dead. Germany and Britain also said their missions were vandalised.
"I only wish the Serbian police had intervened more quickly," said German Defence Minister Franz Josef Jung, echoing U.S. complaints of a lack of protection for foreign missions.
Solana praised a statement by Serbia's pro-European President Boris Tadic trying to calm the situation but said the authorities' response as a whole had been insufficient.
"I don't think that in other places the behaviour of the authorities was of the same manner (as Tadic's)," he said.
Some 200,000 people attended the state-backed rally and officials said police were overwhelmed by the biggest march since protesters stormed the old Yugoslav parliament building in 2000 to oust nationalist leader Slobodan Milosevic.
But police were nowhere to be seen when just a few score rioters -- many wearing balaclavas -- attacked the U.S. embassy for the second time in a week.
Comment
Emperor Akihito to have heart surgery


Diana Ross attends the annual Clive Davis pre-Gram
Jill Stuart Fall 2012 Collections
33rd anniversary of the Islamic Revolution in Tehr
General strike in Athens, Greece
"HAYABUSA : The long voyage home" openni
Protests continue in Syria
Giffords and Kelly in the Oval Office of the White
will.i.am attends the TRANS4M Boyle Heights benefi
"Seiji:Fish on Land" premiere in Tokyo
Gov. Bob McDonnell (R-VA) speaks at CPAC in Washin
WORLD REPORT
WORLD REPORT
WORLD REPORT