The
Case against Kosovo Independence
by
Raju G.C. Thomas
Kosovo’s
march toward independence is gathering pace, with the leaders
of Kosovo’s Albanians – Hashim Thaci and Agim Ceku –
threatening to declare unilateral independence any day now.
This is something that Serbia will undoubtedly reject, with
the backing of Vladimir Putin’s Russia.
Much
of the world seems to think that Serbia’s role in the Balkan
wars of the 1990’s puts it in the wrong, and that that
should be the end of the matter. But Serbia’s point of view
is not without merit, and many other countries with
territorially concentrated ethnic minorities have reason to be
anxious about the precedent that might be set if Kosovo’s
declaration of independence is recognized.
Consider,
first, that Kosovo is the historical heart and religious soul
of Serbia. Hundreds of Serb Orthodox churches, monasteries,
and holy sites in Kosovo attest to this.
Moreover,
Kosovo’s demographic transformation over the last 100 years,
when Albanians overtook the local Serb population, partly
reflects an influx of Albanians from Albania – for decades a
political and economic basket case, owing to Enver Hoxha’s
hermetic communism. At the same time, many Serbs have left
Kosovo before and after NATO’s intervention in 1999, whether
fleeing from Albanian violence against them or simply lured by
better opportunities in Serbia proper.
Serbia’s
claim to Kosovo is, to Serbs, far stronger than Russia’s
claim to Chechnya, China’s to Xinjiang, India’s to Kashmir
(a claim still disputed by Pakistan), and the Philippines’
to the island of Mindanao. All of these are provinces with
Muslim majority populations that are part of non-Muslim
majority states.
But
Russia, China, and India are big states and will not tolerate
any detachment of their territories. So there is no serious
international effort to force them to do so. The Philippines
has effectively lost control of Mindanao, just as Serbia has
lost control of Kosovo, yet no one has recognized Mindanao’s
unilateral declaration of independence. So why should
Kosovo’s declaration be accepted?
Nor
is it only Russia, China, and India that oppose Kosovo’s
independence, but also Muslim-majority Nigeria, which retains
Biafra, where a bloody civil war with Catholic Ibos was fought
in the late 1960’s. Muslim-majority Indonesia lost its
Catholic-majority East Timor through Western political
intervention, but its claims to East Timor were tenuous, as it
only invaded the island a few decades ago.
Even
in Europe, where Catalonia and the Basque region push for
secession from Spain, some in Flanders want an end to Belgium,
and Scotland’s ruling Scottish National Party wants
eventually to break away from Britain, support for Kosovo’s
independence is far from universal.
Worse,
ordinary Serbs see an obvious international double standard.
The territorial integrity and sovereignty of Croatia and
Bosnia were enforced in the 1990’s, despite declarations of
independence by the Serbian “Republic of Krajina” in
Croatia and the Serbian “Republika Srpska” in Bosnia. Why
is Kosovo being treated differently?
Today,
there are roughly 700,000 Serb refugees in Serbia from Croatia
and Bosnia who are unable or unwilling to return to their
homes, including virtually all of Croatia’s Serbs, except
those converted to Catholicism to become Croats. Indeed,
Serbia currently contains the largest refugee population in
Europe. If Kosovo gains independence, these numbers will
swell, as an exodus of all remaining Serbs is likely unless
their territorial bastions – particularly in northern
Kosovo, around Mitrovica – join with Serbia.
More
broadly, to allow Kosovo’s independence would demonstrate
that violent secessionism works. In that case, the world ought
to get used to seeing the Kosovo “strategy” applied
elsewhere. First, faceless ethnic secessionists attack
civilians and police. Not knowing where the enemy is hidden
within the civilian population, security forces retaliate
indiscriminately. Human rights violations elicit an
international outcry and condemnation, followed by
intervention and occupation by foreign military forces. And,
in the denouement, the state loses control of its province as
the secessionists declare independence.
Setting
such a precedent in Kosovo must be avoided to ensure stability
not only in the Balkans, but in all countries with
dissatisfied ethnic minority populations. The territorial
integrity and sovereignty of Serbia must be preserved in
accordance with the United Nations Charter, the 1975 Helsinki
Agreement Final Act guaranteeing the boundaries of Europe, and
UN Resolution 1244 of 1999, which guaranteed Serbia’s
existing borders.
The
former Yugoslavia has had enough destruction and mass killing.
Preserving national integrity is a universal principle of
peace from which Serbia should not be excluded.
Raju
G. C. Thomas, an emeritus professor at Marquette University
and a former US Fulbright professor at the University of
Belgrade, is the contributing editor of Yugoslavia Unraveled.
Copyright:
Project Syndicate, 2007.
www.project-syndicate.org