Sat, May 26 2012
Kosovo foreign minister Skender Hyseni answers questions from the international media on the steps of the International Court of Justice in The Hague, July 22 2010.
Photo: Reuters
UN Secretary-General Ban said that he planned to closely co-ordinate next steps with the EU, which has offered to facilitate a process of dialogue between Pristina and Belgrade.
Resolution calls on all sides to find a mutually acceptable solution to all disputed issues through peaceful dialogue, with the aim of achieving peace, security and co-operation in the region, but does not call for re-opening of status talks. Serbia’s FM is in New York to meet the UN Secretary-General.
'We expect that Belgrade and Pristina will, through dialogue and in the interests of peace, stability and co-operation in the region, bring their bilateral relations in line with the principles and values on which the EU was founded," Foreign Minister Nikolai Mladenov says.
The United States has hailed the ruling of the International Court of Justice, the ICJ, that Kosovo's independence declaration did not violate international law. US officials are urging other countries including Serbia to recognise the former Serb province.
The International Court of Justice’s ruling on the legality of the declaration of independence by Kosovo is an episode in the narrative, not the final chapter
Pristina calls for further recognitions of an independent Kosovo as its allies welcome the July 22 2010 International Court of Justice opinion finding its independence declaration not illegal; Serbia and its allies, Russia included, vow that they will never recognise Kosovo.
The International Court of Justice was asked to give its opinion, which is not binding, by a United Nations General Assembly resolution approved at the request of Serbia on October 8 2008. The General Assembly resolution asked the court to "render an advisory opinion on the following question: Is the unilateral declaration of independence by the Provisional Institutions of Self-Government of Kosovo in accordance with international law?"
Ahead of the International Court of Justice July 22 2010 announcement of its opinion on the legality of Kosovo’s 2008 unilateral declaration of independence, Pristina’s allies rally to support it while Serbia says it expects a ‘favourable ruling’ from the court.
Governments in Prague and Bucharest could soon join Sofia in instituting temporary moratoriums on shale gas exploration.
Coalition around ruling Democratic Party has largest share of vote in Serbia's parliamentary election, according to exit polls.
Centre-right New Democracy is said by exit polls to have largest share of votes, but diminished even from its 2009 defeat, while socialists Pasok – the 2009 victors – gets somewhere around 14 to 17 per cent.
An agreement reached with the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) will allow voters with dual citizenship in Kosovo to vote in the upcoming parliamentary and presidential elections in Serbia.
Twenty radical Muslims suspected of being members of a terrorist group that has been linked to the murder of five fishermen in early April.