The prime minister of the
Republic of Kosovo,
Hashim Thaçi (above), appears to be aiming to become the Balkan
Kanye West when it comes to tweeting and Facebooking before he thinks and then having to apologize for it. First (
as reported a couple days ago in this blog), he announced on his Facebook page that the
Kingdom of Tonga had granted the tiny breakaway former province of
Serbia diplomatic recognition—then, after a statement from the palace, had to backpedal and admit it had just been a rumor. His Majesty
Tupou VI was not amused.
Then, on January 24th, media began reporting
an announcement by Kosovo’s ministry for foreign affairs that the government of
Myanmar (a.k.a.
Burma) had recognized the country. The statement from the ministry quoted the missive from Myanmar as reading, “The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Union of Myanmar has the honor to inform you that the Government of Myanmar decided to recognize Kosovo as a sovereign and an independent state.” Details included reports that Kosovo’s deputy prime minister,
Behgjet Isa Pacolli, had visited Burma last month and “provided convincing argumentation as to why Kosovo should be independent.” Seemed pretty straightforward.
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Kosovo’s relationship status: It’s Complicated.
(Prime Minister Hashim Thaçi’s Facebook page.) |
Within hours, though, further statements, from Pacolli himself and from Kosovo’s foreign minister,
Enver Hoxhaj,
said no such recognition had in fact taken place.
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Kosovars should know better than to expect sympathy from these chaps. |
In retrospect, it does seem damn unlikely. A slight majority of
United Nations member states recognize Kosovo’s independence from the Republic of Serbia, which was secured in 1999 under the sponsorship of the
United States and western European allies after a
NATO bombing campaign and then formally declared in 2008. But for the foreseeable future its entry to the
U.N. General Assembly is effectively blocked by the
Security Council veto powers of the
Russian Federation and the
People’s Republic of China. Russia is a Serbian ally, and China, like Russia, takes a principled stand against separatism of any kind, facing as it does serious separatist insurgencies in
Tibet and in the
Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. (See
a recent article from this blog about Russian laws against supporting separatism.) The Republic of the Union of Myanmar—as the ruling military
junta calls the country whose pro-democracy forces call by its original name
Burma—is still a strong ally of China’s, even though it is half-heartedly reforming in order to end its diplomatic isolation. Furthermore, Myanmar faces perhaps more separatist movements than any other country on earth—its only rivals being perhaps
Italy,
Spain,
Nigeria, or
Somalia—and
easily the most violent, armed separatist insurgencies. Some of its secessionist ethnic groups, such as the
Karen,
Karenni,
Shan,
Chin,
Arakanese,
Mon,
Rohingya, and
Wa, have been waging what are some of the longest-running conflicts in the world today. Other than Russia and China, it is hard to imagine a state
less likely to extend diplomatic recognition to Kosovo.
No one quite knows how this particular rumor started. Kosovars were giddy last month when
Facebook recognized their country as separate from Serbia (for purposes, for example, of identifying “check-ins” and hometowns etc.). Now Prime Minister Thaçi and his foreign minister need to call tech support and have someone come in and show them how to install some bullshit filters.
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South Koreans embrace Kosovo. Burma, not so much. |
[For those who are wondering, yes, this blog is tied in with a forthcoming book, a sort of encyclopedic atlas to be published by Auslander and Fox under the title Let’s Split! A Complete Guide to Separatist Movements, Independence Struggles, Breakaway Republics, Rebel Provinces, Pseudostates, Puppet States, Tribal Fiefdoms, Micronations, and Do-It-Yourself Countries, from Chiapas to Chechnya and Tibet to Texas. Look for it sometime in 2014. I will be keeping readers posted of further publication news.]
Apparently this was a prank by a group of students. The "Declaration of recognition" document looks official, and reads reasonably for the first couple of paragraphs, but then turns into several hundred words of Borat-style satire ("congratulations to the Serb people for freeing themselves from Albanian oppression", "recipient of the Kim Il Sung Award for Liberty", etc.)
ReplyDeleteA lot of people in Kosovo fell for it, so there was a lot of snickering about it afterwards.
Doug M.