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Monday, April 26, 1999 Published at 17:34 GMT 18:34 UK


World: Europe

Moscow prepares for crisis talks

The funerals were held on Monday of the six Serbian TV staff killed on Friday

High-level talks on the Kosovo crisis have been taking place in Moscow in advance of a US mission to try reduce the tension between Nato and Russia over Kosovo.

Kosovo: Special Report
Russian Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov has been meeting President Boris Yeltsin's special Balkans envoy Viktor Chernomyrdin to discuss a way ahead.

US President Bill Clinton's envoy, Deputy Secretary-of-State Strobe Talbott, arrived in Moscow on Monday. He is expected to underline Nato's view that Moscow has an important role to play in a final peace settlement in the Balkans.

(Click here to see a map of last night's Nato strikes)

A memorial service was held earlier on Monday in Belgrade for six of the dead, who were pulled from the ruins of Serbian television headquarters after a Nato missile strike on Friday.

And the president of the International Committee of the Red Cross, Cornelio Sommaruga, met three US servicemen who were captured by Serb forces in March.

Moscow's important role

Russian concern over the conflict in Kosovo has grown since the alliance announced plans for an oil blockade to intensify economic pressure on Serbian forces.

President Yeltsin and Mr Clinton spent more than an hour on the telephone on Sunday trying to overcome their differences.

But a Russia presidential spokesman said on Monday that none of the tasks Nato had set itself had been accomplished.


[ image: Aid agencies expect another big exodus of refugees]
Aid agencies expect another big exodus of refugees
The Russian spokesman said a resolution was impossible without Russian involvement, and Mr Talbott would discuss that involvement, rather than joint initiatives.

Mr Talbott will meet Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov, Mr Chernomyrdin, but the official said he was not expected to meet President Boris Yeltsin or Prime Minister Primakov.

Annan to appoint envoy

United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, who is on a visit to Germany, says he will appoint an envoy to work on a political solution to the crisis in Kosovo.


BBC's Jonathan Beale: Smaller EU countries have misgivings
Mr Annan did not name the envoy, but reports say it is likely to be the former Austrian Chancellor, Franz Vranitzky, or the former Swedish Prime Minister, Carl Bildt.

In Luxembourg, European Union foreign ministers discussed tightening sanctions against Yugoslavia, including a ban on EU oil exports to it.

ICRC chief meets POWs

ICRC President Cornelio Sommaruga visited the three American soldiers who have been held as prisoners of war since 31 March.


BBC's Jacky Rowland: ICRC said Milosevic reponded positively
A spokeswoman in Geneva said further details would be released later on Monday, after a meeting in Belgrade between the Mr Sommaruga and Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic.

The ICRC is trying to secure the return of Red Cross aid workers to Kosovo, to assist the hundreds of thousands of internally displaced people thought to be on the move in the territory.


[ image: Sommaruga saw POWs before Milosevic meeting]
Sommaruga saw POWs before Milosevic meeting
The office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees says it is increasingly concerned about the fate of ethnic Albanians inside Kosovo, following repeated accounts of rape, murder and extortion.

Refugees reaching northern Albania from Kosovo say women and children are being held hostage at a Serb ammunition dump in the town of Prizren.

Nato attacks

Nato planes destroyed Serbia's last remaining bridge over the river Danube, in the northern Yugoslavian city of Novi Sad, after several direct hits during the night.

Hundreds of Yugoslav mourners in Belgrade attended the memorial ceremony for six employees at Serbian TV headquarters, after Nato missiles Friday struck it on Friday.

The attack collapsed two floors of the building, trapping employees inside. Yugoslav officials say 16 died in the attack.

The attack was criticised by, among others, the International Federation of Journalists. But Nato said it was a legitimate target because it spread propaganda.

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