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EU warns Serbia, Kosovo against returning to the past

BRUSSELS (AP) – The European Union (EU) warned Serbia and Kosovo on Monday that they are on the edge of a precipice and must resolve their dispute over vehicle licence plates before next week or face the prospect of a return to their violent past.

Long-simmering tensions between Serbia and its former province mounted in recent weeks over the Kosovo government’s decision to ban Serbia-issued licence plates.

On November 5, 10 Serb lawmakers, 10 prosecutors and 576 police officers in Kosovo’s northern Mitrovica region resigned over the move.

After the meeting with representatives of the political parties, Kosovar President Vjosa Osmani set December 18 for holding snap elections for mayors in the four municipalities in the north where posts were abandoned by the ethnic Serb minority representatives.

Osmani said she will ask for international election observers adding that authorities “will undertake all necessary measures in order that citizens, regardless of ethnicity, feel protected, safe and carry out their constitutional rights”.

Kosovo Serbs wave Serbian flags during a protest in Mitrovica, Kosovo. PHOTO: AP

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said their resignations have left police stations and courts unstaffed, and that “in this vacuum the worst can happen. So both parties need to show more flexibility”.

Under the ban, about 6,300 ethnic Serbs owning cars with number plates deemed to be illegal in Kosovo were to be warned until November 21, then fined for the following two months. From April 21, they would only be permitted to drive with temporary local plates.

“We cannot reach this date without having an agreement or we will be on the edge of a dangerous situation,” Borrell told reporters – referring to November 21 – after chairing a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels.

He said that Kosovo negotiators were due in Brussels and that he stood ready to call a meeting of Serbia and Kosovo leaders to get an agreement sealed before next week.

Kosovo unilaterally broke away from Serbia in 2008. Serbia and Kosovo must normalise their relations in order to join the EU.

But EU-mediated talks aimed at helping them have stalled, triggering concerns of more instability more than two decades after the conflict.

“They are at a crossroads now. They have to decide which way they want to go. Towards the EU, or towards the past,” Borrell said.

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