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Unease in E.U., NATO over Macedonia
By Batuk Gathani
BRUSSELS, JUNE 25. There is unease in major European Union and
NATO capitals with the developments in the war-torn Macedonia,
where the E.U. foreign and security policy chief, Mr. Javier
Solana, has managed to structure a parley of a sort between the
warring ethnic factions of Christian Serbs and Muslim ethnic
Albanians.
Mr. Solana, whose efforts over the weekend involved intensive and
often arm-twisting diplomacy and political lobbying, says that a
ceasefire has now been in place between the Macedonia government
forces and the ethnic Albanian rebels. The E.U. diplomats are now
applying pressure to commence political dialogue. The Albanians
have consistently argued for a ``separate Muslim'' state as they
once did in other parts of former Yugoslavia. The proposal, which
amounts to altering the post-war boundary of a European state, is
not acceptable to the E.U., NATO and even Russia.
NATO is under pressure to stage another military intervention in
Macedonia if the Albanians persist with their secessionist
demands. At best, NATO and the E.U. can agree to offer Albanians
greater rights within a reformed Macedonian government. The E.U.
has also resolved to deploy a permanent diplomat in the
Macedonian capital Skopje to monitor progress on diplomatic and
military front. Last Thursday, NATO agreed to deploy 3,000 troops
in Macedonia on temporary basis for a ``quick operation'' if the
current ceasefire collapses.
The 19 NATO allies run a large peacekeeping operation in Bosnia
and Kosovo - parts of former Yugoslavia. The feeling at the NATO
headquarters here is that the Macedonian conflict needs urgent
attention before it ``gets out of hand''. According to estimates,
Albanians make up about a quarter or third of Macedonia's two
million population and not all ethnic Albanians are particular
about creating a separate Muslim state. For some time now with
rising tide of ethnic and secessionist violence in the Balkan
region generally and Macedonia particularly, the western world -
the E.U. and NATO - is seen groping for a suitable response.
The vast majority or over 60 six per cent of Macedonia's two
million population are ethnic Slavs and orthodox Christians.
The Russian Foreign Minister, Mr. Igor Ivanov, was also in the
region for talks with the Macedenian and Yugoslav leaders. The
neighbouring Albania is one of Europe's smallest and poorest
countries with a population of some 35 lakhs - 75 per cent Muslim
and 25 per cent orthodox Christians. Albania was the smallest
communist country in the heyday of Soviet empire.
For many post-war years, Albania's only claim to fame was that it
was the first client state of communist China and followed the
directives of Chairman Mao with some fanatical zeal.
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