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Belgrade asks UN to send another delegation to Kosovo

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Belgrade said it intends to ask UN officials, due to arrive in Serbia late Wednesday, to send yet another delegation to Kosovo, at a lower level.
BELGRADE, April 25 (RIA Novosti) - Belgrade said it intends to ask UN officials, due to arrive in Serbia late Wednesday, to send yet another delegation to Kosovo, at a lower level.

A special mission of the UN Security Council will arrive in Belgrade Wednesday night to monitor the situation around Serbia's breakaway province at Russia's insistence.

"The mission should become a first step in assessing the situation in Kosovo," said Slobodan Samardzic, coordinator of the Serbian delegation at the Kosovo negotiations, adding that another delegation should be sent to the Serbian province to study the situation in more detail.

Russia, an ally of Serbia, proposed sending UN observers to the area as an alternative to a plan proposed by UN special envoy for Kosovo Martti Ahtisaari, which calls for internationally supervised sovereignty for the province dominated by ethnic Albanians.

The UN delegation, led by Johan C. Verbeke, Belgium's permanent representative to the UN, will meet Thursday with the Serbian president and prime minister, parliamentarians, members of the Serbian government's Coordination Center for Kosovo, and representatives of Kosovo refugees.

The mission will move on to Pristina, Kosovo, where the UN experts will meet with senior officials of the province Thursday and then travel to Vienna to meet with Ahtisaari.

As a veto-wielding member of the UN Security Council, Russia has shared Serbia's opposition to Ahtisaari's plan, saying it would set a dangerous precedent for other self-proclaimed republics all over the world.

Kosovo's Prime Minister Agim Ceku said Tuesday Russia's refusal to back the plan challenged the entire international community, including the United States and Britain.

"Kosovo Albanians are not alone in this process, and Russia's 'No' to Ahtisaari's proposals is not only addressed to Kosovo but the international community as a whole," Ceku told western reporters in Pristina after Russia threatened to veto the UN Kosovo plan at the UN Security Council.

Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Vladimir Titov said Tuesday in Moscow that "the veto threat is designed to encourage a search for other options." He also dismissed Western concerns that violence would be inevitable if Kosovo failed to secure independence.

Kosovo, which has a population of two million, has been a UN protectorate since NATO's 78-day bombing campaign against the former Yugoslavia ended a war between Serb forces and Albanian separatists in 1999.

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