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World - Europe

Focus on Kosovo
Peace Plan Highlights | Photo Gallery | Strike Assessment | News Video Archive | Strike at a Glance | Who's Who | Roots of the Conflict | Story Archive | Links | Discussion

Primakov says Milosevic ready in principle to talk peace

Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic meets the Russian delegation Tuesday

related videoRELATED VIDEO
CNN's Brent Sadler reports on the Russian delegation meeting in Belgrade Tuesday - March 30.
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InteractiveIMAGE GALLERY:
Flight from Kosovo: A humanitarian crisis unfolds
 ALSO:
NATO targets Yugoslav army, Serb police as Kosovo refugees flee

Pentagon: NATO making progress, but campaign will take time

Desperate refugees flee Kosovo, accuse Serbs of atrocities

 MESSAGE BOARD
Crisis in Kosovo
 

Precondition is end to NATO bombing

March 30, 1999
Web posted at: 12:14 p.m. EST (1714 GMT)

BONN, Germany (CNN) -- Russian Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov said Tuesday that Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic was willing to hold new Kosovo peace talks, but only if NATO ends its bombardment of Yugoslavia.

Primakov made the statement on arrival in Bonn from Belgrade, where he had met with Milosovic for several hours.

Russian President Boris Yeltsin had asked Primakov to try to negotiate an end to the Kosovo conflict.

"The crisis in the Balkans demands not emotional evaluations, but well-balanced and decisive actions," Yeltsin said Tuesday.

Russia, a traditional ally of the Serbs, has been a firm opponent of NATO airstrikes and has repeatedly condemned the bombardments.

The mission by Primakov, who is accompanied by Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov and Defense Minister Igor Sergeyev, is the most high-level mediation effort since the NATO strikes began.

Russia is a member of the Balkan Contact Group, which also includes the United States, Britain, Germany, France and Italy. The Contact Group presented an international peace proposal for Kosovo at recent peace talks in France.

When only the ethnic Albanian leaders signed the document, NATO and all group members except Russia favored airstrikes against Yugoslavia. Moscow demanded further negotiations.

NATO steps up strikes amid terror claims

At a NATO news conference in Brussels earlier Tuesday, spokesman Jamie Shea described the Kosovo situation as "a humanitarian disaster of enormous proportion." And British Air Commodore David Wilby, a NATO military spokesman, told journalists that "Serbian ethnic cleansing has reached new heights."

Defense Minister Rudolf Scharping of Germany -- which holds the rotating presidency of the European Union -- said Tuesday that Milosevic "will try over the next two to three weeks to turn Kosovo into a region of destroyed villages, where the adult male population will have been interned or killed and the rest driven out or fleeing."

International aid agencies have increased emergency aid efforts for the tens of thousands of ethnic Albanian refugees who have fled to Albania, Macedonia and Montenegro.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair said Tuesday that NATO plans to intensify its air attacks. Blair said he spoke with U.S. President Bill Clinton and NATO Secretary-General Javier Solana and "we are absolutely at one on this: The answer to what is happening is to intensify the attacks."

Yugoslavia insists that ethnic Albanians in Kosovo are not being persecuted or targeted but are getting caught in fighting between government forces and ethnic Albanian separatists.

State-controlled Serb radio said Yugoslav gunners shot down two NATO planes early Tuesday, one south of the Montenegro capital Podgorica and another over the southern Serbian town of Vranje. Western military spokesmen denied any planes had been lost.

NATO has acknowledged only the crash of a U.S. F-117 stealth fighter Saturday.


RELATED STORIES:
Primakov in Belgrade, meets with Milosevic
March 30, 1999
Russia sends Primakov, others to Yugoslavia
March 29, 1999
Primakov to try to halt NATO bombings
March 29, 1999
KLA leader: Serbs executing, rounding up civilians
March 28, 1999
Russia: NATO strikes hurting relations with U.S.
March 28, 1999
Thousands of ethnic Albanians said to be fleeing Kosovo
March 28, 1999

RELATED SITES:
Extensive list of Kosovo related sites
  • Kosovo
Yugoslavia:
  • Federal Republic of Yugoslavia official site
      • Kesovo and Metohija facts
  • Serbia Ministry of Information
  • Serbia Now! News

Kosovo:
  • Kosova Crisis Center
  • Kosovo - from Albanian.com

Military:
  • F-117s arrive at Aviano to support possible NATO operations
  • NATO official site
  • BosniaLINK - U.S. Dept. of Defense
  • U.S. Navy images from Operation Allied Force
  • U.K. Ministry of Defence - Kosovo news
  • U.K. Royal Air Force - Kosovo news
  • Jane's Defence - Kosovo Crisis


Relief:
  • InterAction
  • International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
  • International Committee of the Red Cross
  • Kosovo Humanitarian Disaster Forces Hundreds of Thousands from their Homes
  • Catholic Relief Services
  • Kosovo Relief
  • ReliefWeb: Home page


Media:
  • Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  • Independent Yugoslav radio stations B92
  • Institute for War and Peace Reporting
  • United States Information Agency - Kosovo Crisis

Other:
  • 1997 view of Kosovo from space - Eurimage
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