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May 22, 1999

BELGRADE

Yugoslavs Demand a Role in U.N. Kosovo Settlement


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    By STEVEN ERLANGER

    BELGRADE, Yugoslavia -- Yugoslavia insisted Friday that it must play a central role in negotiations within the United Nations to end the war and bring a political settlement to Kosovo, and that Belgrade would not simply let NATO dictate a solution.

    "Read my lips," the Foreign Ministry spokesman, Nebojsa Vujovic, said in English. "It's not about NATO. It's about the U.N."

    Vujovic, who is an Assistant Foreign Minister, said Yugoslavia was eager for a political agreement that would grant Kosovo "wide autonomy and self-government, based on the principle of equal status for all communities," including the province's minority Serbs.

    But he also said Belgrade must play a role in carrying out a settlement, which he said must respect the sovereignty of both Yugoslavia and Serbia over Kosovo.

    Vujovic praised the efforts of the Russian special envoy, Viktor S. Chernomyrdin, who in difficult talks with Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott has been trying to find a balance between Belgrade's demands and those of the NATO alliance.

    Among Chernomyrdin's great virtues, Vujovic said, is his effort to "reaffirm the vital state interests of Yugoslavia in bringing this crisis to an end," including respect for its "sovereignty and dignity."

    Two of the difficulties in those talks, Yugoslav and American officials say, are Belgrade's desire to be an active negotiating partner and its desire to keep more than a symbolic number of troops and policemen inside Kosovo, along its borders with Macedonia and Albania, and on guard at Serbian holy sites.

    Senior Yugoslav officials have said President Slobodan Milosevic is ready for a settlement in Kosovo and will meet most of NATO's requirements, including the presence of some NATO troops in any United Nations force. But the officials emphasize that he needs to be seen as a serious negotiator from a sovereign country rather than as a vanquished foe capitulating to NATO demands.

    Vujovic insisted Friday, for example, that while Belgrade was ready to accept a United Nations mission in Kosovo as part of a settlement, who takes part in that mission, and "its mandate, modalities and volume" should be negotiated in "direct dialogue" between Secretary General Kofi Annan and the Yugoslav Government.

    "We need a political solution that can fly and can be operable," he said. "It's about a global solution to be discussed within the U.N. Security Council."

    NATO began its air attacks on Yugoslavia without a Security Council resolution, insisting that its actions were legally founded in the right of "humanitarian intervention." But NATO officials knew that they could not get such a Security Council resolution, because Russia and China said they would veto one. The Germans, French and Italians went along, even though they were unhappy about the lack of United Nations authorization.

    Belgrade has said it is fighting to preserve international law and the postwar order as well as its sovereignty. It has demanded that any political solution be cast in a United Nations Security Council resolution and that any international force put into Kosovo be under a United Nations flag.

    NATO has issued a joint statement with the Group of Seven industrial countries and Russia calling for a Security Council resolution. But NATO is reluctant to get into direct negotiations with Milosevic, preferring to use the Russians as a go-between.

    But now fearing that Moscow is too close to Belgrade, NATO has deputized President Martti Ahtisaari of Finland to act on its behalf alongside Chernomyrdin.

    Chernomyrdin spent nearly seven hours in talks with Milosevic this week, then flew back to Moscow for further talks with Talbott and Ahtisaari, which were inclusive. But Talbott said they were making progress and would continue next week in Moscow.

    So it is not clear whether Chernomyrdin will return here for more talks with Milosevic on Monday or Tuesday, as both men originally announced.

    Vujovic Friday emphasized the positive, saying: "We are open to a peaceful solution, open to diplomatic negotiations. We are open to playing a constructive role in reaching a political solution on Kosovo."

    But NATO wants nearly all Serbian forces to be withdrawn from Kosovo and Belgrade's authority to be supplanted in Kosovo by an international authority until new elections can be organized. So there is much left to negotiate.

    Still, senior Yugoslav officials say they believe a settlement is inevitable unless NATO countries -- Britain in particular -- balk and harden the alliance's demands.

    Vujovic repeated Belgrade's demands for a bombing halt and a withdrawal of NATO forces from Yugoslavia's borders as a precondition for any political settlement.

    Earlier Friday, NATO air strikes hit a fuel depot in Belgrade, shattering the windows of the Swiss Ambassador's residence as he was holding a National Day reception.

    Among the guests was the Swedish Ambassador, whose own residence had its doors and windows blown out the previous night when an errant bomb hit a hospital, killing three patients and a security guard. The residences of the Norwegian, Spanish, Indian and Hungarian Ambassadors were also damaged, as was the Libyan Embassy.

    The Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet quoted the Swedish Ambassador, Mats Staffansson, as saying: "We had just come to dessert when a crash came. Four cruise missiles came down on a fuel depot only 300 yards from the Swiss residence. An enormous pressure wave broke a very large picture window in the dining room. I, the Slovak Ambassador and the Vatican Ambassador threw ourselves under the dining room table to get out of the way of the flying glass."

    In Bern, Switzerland, the United States Ambassador to Switzerland, Madeleine M. Kunin, apologized. Switzerland represents American interests in Belgrade.





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