BBC News Online: World: Europe


Front Page | World | UK | UK Politics | Business | Sci/Tech | Health | Education | Sport | Entertainment | Talking Point | High Graphics | Feedback | Help | Noticias | Newyddion |
Wednesday, February 17, 1999 Published at 01:20 GMT

Milosevic: No foreign troops


Milosevic: No foreign troops
Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic has reiterated his refusal to accept foreign troops in Kosovo as part of a peace deal, despite the threat of Nato strikes.

Mr Milosevic was speaking after a chief American mediator in the Kosovo peace talks flew to Belgrade to urge him to accept a settlement in the war-torn province.

United States envoy Christopher Hill is thought to have told the president to agree to the internationally brokered deal or face a Nato bombardment.

Kosovo Section
US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright earlier telephoned Mr Milosevic to brief him on the talks between Serbs and ethnic Albanians being held at a French chateau.

The two sides have until noon on Saturday to agree to a plan aimed at ending a year of bloodshed in Kosovo which has cost around 2,000 lives and driven hundreds of thousands from their homes.


[ image: width=150]

US State Department spokesman James Rubin said the Serb side remained the obstacle to progress, with the ethnic Albanian side now ready to sign an agreement.

He said Mrs Albright's conversation with the Yugoslav president was "businesslike".

The peace deal gives the province substantial autonomy for an interim three-year period while remaining a part of Yugoslavia.

But the Serb side has repeatedly refused to allow foreign troops to police the agreement.

'We can police the terrorists'

The Serbs were counting on Russia to back them, but the Associated Press news agency says it is now clear Moscow is willing to go along with a Nato deployment in the province as part of the agreement.


[ image: width=150]

However, Russia still opposes Nato airstrikes against Yugoslavia in the event the peace talks fail.

At the begining of the week Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov said he believed the two sides would reach a deal before the deadline.

But at the same time, the Serbian President Milan Milutinovic made clear that Belgrade would not accept a foreign peacekeeping force in Kosovo where 90% of the population is ethnic Albanian.

"If the agreement that is reached is good, why impose something people accept, unless [it is] to chase the terrorists, but we can chase the terrorists," he said in reference to ethnic Albanian guerrilla fighters.


Europe Contents

Country profiles

Relevant Stories

Kosovo talks: Half-way to a deal? (13 Feb 99 | Kosovo)
Countdown for Kosovo (14 Feb 99 | Europe)
Clinton approves US troops for Kosovo (13 Feb 99 | Europe)
Analysis: Selling a Kosovo deal to Russia (13 Feb 99 | Europe)
Nato 'losing patience' with Serbs (12 Feb 99 | Europe)
UK troops on Kosovo stand-by (11 Feb 99 | UK Politics)
Kosovo talks: The negotiators (06 Feb 99 | Europe)

Internet Links

Serbia's Ministry of Information
US Senate Republican Committee - Kosovo
French Ministry of Foreign Affairs - Meeting on Kosovo
Kosovo Information Centre

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

In this section

Violence greets Clinton visit
Russian forces pound Grozny
EU fraud: a billion dollar bill
Next steps for peace
Cardinal may face loan-shark charges
Vodafone takeover battle heats up (From Business)
Trans-Turkish pipeline deal signed
French party seeks new leader
Jube tube debut
Athens riots for Clinton visit
UN envoy discusses Chechnya in Moscow
Solana new Western European Union chief
Moldova's PM-designate withdraws
Chechen government welcomes summit
In pictures: Clinton's violent welcome
Georgia protests over Russian 'attack'
UN chief: No Chechen 'catastrophe'
New arms control treaty for Europe
Mannesmann fights back (From Business)
EU fraud -- a billion-dollar bill
New moves in Spain's terror scandal
EU allows labelling of British beef
UN seeks more security in Chechnya
Athens riots for Clinton visit
Russia's media war over Chechnya
Homeless suffer as quake toll rises
Analysis: East-West relations must shift


Front Page | World | UK | UK Politics | Business | Sci/Tech | Health | Education | Sport | Entertainment | Talking Point | High Graphics | Feedback | Help | Noticias | Newyddion |


Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage | ©