The
International Institute for Middle East and Balkan Studies (IFIMES), Ljubljana, Slovenia, regularly analyzes events
occurring in the Middle East and the Balkans. The former President of the
Democratic Party of Albanians (PDSH) in Macedonia and member of the Macedonian
Parliament, Arbën Xhaferi, presents his
view on the Kosova Crisis. His article, entitled "Kosova Crisis", which was
written in 1999, is for its actuality published in its entirety.
Arbën Xhaferi
The
former President the Democratic Party of Albanians (PDSH) in
Macedonia
and a member of parliament of the Republic of Macedonia
KOSOVA CRISIS
Introduction
Social
formations are dynamic organisms, which objectively undergo transformations
dependent on factors - economic, ethnic, cultural, linguistic, religious or
cultural - that, in general, affect the society's system of values.
Communism
is an ideology, a world outlook that arrogantly proclaimed the end of history
even as it tried to dominate history and the factors that promote historical
development. Its ideologists concealed unresolved problems in the naïve
belief that they had definitively succeeded in suppressing social antagonisms
that were supposed to hinder the historical process, and allowing them to bring
about the improvement of social formations.
For
its part, post-communism is the revenge of history on that ideology, the tragic
manifestation of those unresolved problems and antagonisms. The implosion of
communist systems has manifested itself in the re-emergence of ethnic,
economic, and social conflicts, the deification of the ethnos, and the
deconstruction of other human and moral values. Tribal mentalities have been
legalized in the creation of ethno-centric States and supplements of
ideological States. These phenomena give this historical period its character
as one of slowing-down, a historical retardation, or outright anachronism.
The
historical retardation, the revenge of history on ideology in the
post-communist states expresses itself in two dimensions: The creation of
ethnic states, and the creation of colonial relations among different ethnic
groups - that is, a sort of neocolonialism. The creation of nation-states was a
phenomenon of the 19th century, when this project could be carried out because
of different levels of national consciousness and national formation. The
process was completed to the advantage of nations with better-formed national
consciousness. The successful establishment of some ethnic states was also
related to the low level of development internationally of mass media, with
weak and fragmentary interaction of the information system.
On
the eve of the 21st century, national consciousness has risen to a level that
makes assimilation impossible. When the whole planet has turned into a
"global village," when global information systems penetrate
everywhere and give every crisis a global character, it is almost impossible
for ethnic states to be set up in multi-ethnic spaces. Human rights cannot be
violated without arousing indignation and reaction on the part of international
opinion, ethnic cleansing cannot be carried out on a given territory, colonial
or apartheid relations cannot be established among different ethnic, religious,
linguistic, or cultural communities without triggering international concern.
In the post-communist states and, in the future, in the Eastern countries in
general there are and there will be problems between the tendency to the
affirmation and cultivation of diversity, on the one hand, and the tendency on
the other to ethnic hegemony and ethnic, religious, ideological of or cultural
domination. The latter tendency embraces the justification of colonialism and a
right of brutal hegemony, and the misuse of Western values such as democracy,
transforming them into an instrument of marginalization of non-dominant ethnic
groups, thereby legalizing the right of domination of the majority over the
minority, and indeed into a procedure of elimination.
These
are global problems and may be explained by the tendency to dominate and the
struggle for liberation and emancipation. In this line, in the sphere of
international law two categories of ideas confront each other: The right to
self-determination, liberation, emancipation, decolonization, and the right of
States to sovereignty and to inviolability of their borders. The former right
is original, inalienable, and natural. The latter does not absolutism the right
to sovereignty, but defines the means and the ways in which borders can or
cannot be changed.
Elimination
of this confusion is difficult because, in both the political and scientific
arena and in the information media, ethnic lobbies and unrestrained ethnic
propaganda are at work so that there is a general disorientation over the
implementation of those two principles of international law.
Historical
Tendencies
Proceeding
from the fact that the number of new States is increasing with each passing
day, analyzing the phenomenon of decolonization in its various aspects, finding
a degree of affinity among the calls for secession in Asia, Africa and Europe,
and exploring the factors which brought about the destruction of totalitarian
systems - we may conclude that a characteristic of the historical tendency
today is the affirmation of diversity. We see as a result the disintegration of
ideological totalitarianisms of States - ethnic, religious, linguistic or
cultural amalgams set up on the basis of geo-strategic interests.
Resistance
to this tendency is expressed through the re-creation of low-level
totalitarianisms in partial systems. In this vein, an analysis of the
phenomenon of the recycling of totalitarianism reveals parallels between the
exclusiveness of the new ethno-centric States and the authoritarianism of
patriarchal families or the comparable extreme loyalty of Japanese workers
towards their bosses. In all these cases the right to diversity and to
ideological, cultural, or merely personal individuality is suppressed through
repression or through a will typical of the enslaved mind and suspended
consciousness.
A
dominant characteristic of this mentality and of its accompanying structures
and sub-structures (State, factory, family) in which totalitarianism survives
is, along with authoritarianism, exclusiveness too. These systems exclude the
other, the different. In the former ideological systems, the opponent of the
dominant idea, the communist one of the central planning of the economy, was
excluded from society and deported to various gulags, concentration camps, or
re-education camps. At present, when ideological totalitarianism is being
replaced with ethnic totalitarianism, the same phenomenon of exclusiveness
presents itself: now ethnic opponents and competitors are excluded,
marginalized or condemned. So we have ethnic cleansing in Bosnia, apartheid in
Kosova, and marginalization or ghettoization of the Albanians in the Former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM). This totalitarian, authoritarian and
exclusive mentality is also closely linked with issues of ethics and moral
maturity. A characteristic of moral principles is their universal validity. In
totalitarian exclusive systems, moral principles have only partial validity:
they are valid only for the conformists, the member of the family, gang, tribe,
or ethnos. Hence, the principle that "thou shall not kill" is valid
only for the elements of the system; it is not valid for those who stand
outside the system. In Bosnia and Kosova this moral immaturity brought about
real tragedies for the people who were outside the ethnic and military systems.
This
political immaturity also pervades Russian diplomacy: it does not defend
principles, but its traditional allySerbia. More exactly, it carries out a
Slavophil policy.
Those
manifestations are against the historical tendency to inclusive systems that
affirm diversity, in which the other, the different, is not necessarily an
enemy who should be eliminated. In the cultures, which fit into the historical
tendency and in which moral maturity stands at a high level, not only do the
individual and the system feel responsible for the human "other,"
but, with the emergence of ecological movements, they affirm this
responsibility toward the environment as well.
If
a characteristic of the historical tendency is the affirmation of the right to
individuality, of the right to the cultivation of ethnic, religious,
linguistic, or individual peculiarities, then all those projects that obstruct
this process are anachronistic.
Usually
the obstruction of this process is justified with arguments:
- Of
legality;
- Of the
unchangeability of borders;
- Of
conspiracy, which does not present the problem in its real light, but sets
it in the realm of speculation and imagination which produces the category
of the foreign enemy;
- Of
racist fundamentalist, Nazi, or ethno-centrist theories;
- Of
history, when a glorious historical stage is uncritically chosen or
invented and then attempts are made to change the present-day reality so
as to fit that imagined past;
- Of
globalism, rebutting the problem by generalizing it through creation of
absurd analogies - for instance, between the demands and status of the
Albanians in the former Yugoslavia and those of, variously, the Hispanics
in the United States, the aborigines in Australia, the Basques in Spain,
and the Occitans and Arabs in France (Marseilles); and
- Of cataclysm,
which presents respect for the right to diversity as an agent of planetary
cataclysms.
In
this line, the policy of the staff around Serb President Slobodan Milošević
is utterly transparent, as, to defend its anachronistic project, it resorts to
all arguments, apparently very weighty, when it mentions the factors, which led
to the disintegration of Yugoslavia. Initially it mentions four foreign agents,
Western in general, and more concretely Hans-Dieter Genscher, former German
minister of foreign affairs, or the well-known US senator, Robert Dole, as
responsible for the disintegration of their country. It then presents itself,
that is Serbia, in the context of vulgar Nazi theories, as the bastion of
Orthodoxy, which stands up against the penetration of Catholicism into the
East, of Islam into the West, or the restoration of the Fourth Reich to the
north.
Just
as transparent are other all-encompassing theories that often resort to bizarre
and even grotesque analogies, such as that drawn between the Former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) and the United States. When the Albanians from
FYROM called for more extensive use of the Albanian language or the official
recognition of the Albanian University of Tetova in the framework of the FYROM
educational system, the ideologists of ethnocentrism resorted to the argument
of global conditioning: If these rights are given to Albanians, then they
should also be given to the Hispanics in Texas and the Arabs in Marseilles.
Historical
arguments are just as shallow. In order to justify their hegemony, the Serbian
ideologists sometimes resort to the ethnic argument (as they did in Bosnia and
Herzegovina, saying the Serb ethnic group had the right to separate) - while at
other times they resort to the wholly contrary historical argument (regardless
of who lives there, Kosova was anciently Serb). They want to annex Kosova by
proclaiming it the "Jerusalem" of Serbia, although this assertion is
a complete invention and anyway, nobody in the Christian world uses an
argument of this kind to claim a right to occupy Bethlehem, the holy place of
Jesus' birth. This mentality belongs to the era of the Crusades. Is Serbia
going through that period today? Such confusion appears to be intentionally
created in order to hamper the unstoppable historical tendency. To avoid this
confusion it is necessary to analyze the individual historical contexts in
which these problems emerge.
THE HISTORICAL CONTEXT
To
understand the phenomenon properly, avoiding sterile analogies and pretentious
globalizations, the crises that emerge in the world's various social formations
should be analyzed in the context of their time and space. The present crisis
takes place in the systems of the former so-called "socialist camp"
because of the failure of the communist concept of social formation and the
State.
Communism
emerged on the historical arena with major pretensions. It offered the utopian
project of extinguishing social, economic, ethnic, and cultural antagonisms in
general. It came out with the method of manipulating the social factors that
would accelerate the historical process, that is, the development of history
itself. It stated that property should belong to nobody but should be
everybody's, should not be private but belong to the people. Consequently
territories should not belong to an individual ethnos, or ethnic group, but to
the whole people, to the proletarians emancipated from bourgeois leftovers, form
the mentality of private ownership, religion or cultural identity.
This
new definition emerged at the time when the large multi-ethnic empires -
Austro-Hungarian, Turkish-Ottoman and Russian-Czarist - were crumbling.
National amalgams disintegrated, magmatic compositions pulled apart, and
constituent elements separated. At this time the historical process of the
destruction of empires and the creation of national (i.e., ethnically based)
States that had started in the 19th century ought to have come to an end. But
this did not happen.
The
historical process was interrupted with the creation of some unnatural
federations - the Soviet Union and the Yugoslav Federation, which had initially
presented itself as the Serb-Croatian-Slovenian Kingdom. Cynics claimed that
communism was a smokescreen for Pan-Slavism, as initially the territories of a
particular nation became property of all nations, of the proletarians divested
of all identity. However, at the end of the process, when communist ideology
was replaced by nationalist ideology, the common territory, factory, or army of
"everybody" becomes inevitably the property of somebody - the ruling
class in society, be it an ethnic group or a political nomenclature. For
instance Kosova, which had always been a separate entity as Dardania, the
Vilayet of Kosova, and the like, becomes part of Serbia (under the
constitutional change of 1989), and the People's Army comes under Serb control.
Meanwhile, the Socialist Republic of Macedonia, a common republic of the
Macedonians, Albanians and others, becomes the independent State of the
Macedonians (see Amendments 24-56 of 1989 and the Constitution of 1991).
The
phenomena have nothing to do with the virtual world of international
conventions regulating relations between States. These are valid in normal
conditions, but do not apply to our case. Instead, we are at the beginning
phase of the creation of States and confronted with unique historical reality:
the dissolution of federations, the secession of their elements, and the emergence
in the historical arena of the right to self-determination.
In
this context the rights to self-determination, liberation, and de-colonization
should have priority over the principle of the inviolability of borders.
Likewise, changes of borders in this crisis-ridden zone do not mean changes of
borders everywhere in the world, in zones unaffected by crises. Many people may
be sick, but the doctor only cures those who come to him. Hence, the Albanian
question has nothing in common with the condition of the aborigines in
Australia, the Hispanics in the United States, the Arabs in France, or,
structurally the Basques in Spain, the Irish in the United Kingdom, the
Bretons, and others. Time and space determine the context, whereas the global
argument only complicates things and serves as a smokescreen for local
colonialism and hegemony.
In
this historical context the axiological phenomenon, the system of values in the
new social formations, should be taken into account. The question should be
asked whether the new political entities guarantee the incontestable human
values - freedom, equality, peace and democracy - or merely invoke the former
exclusivist principles, recycling the crisis which led the former systems to
their destruction. If the new entitles do not guarantee these values right from
the beginning, the international institutions should not contest them. New
States must be set up only if they respect the new system of values.
YUGOSLAVIA
Yugoslavia
in both its first and second incarnations was the product of agreements and
contracts concluded among the nations that constituted it as well as of the
international context. These contracts were ruptured mainly because of Serb
hegemonic tendencies, which periodically manifested themselves in changes to
the constitution or in dramatic alterations to ethnic demographics through
ethnic cleansing or colonization. Non-Slavs - Albanians, Hungarians,
Volksdeutsch Germans - were expelled from their territories, while Lika,
Herzegovina or Montenegro were colonized by Serbs. These phenomena represented
only the tip of the iceberg of brutal Serb hegemony. Usually Serb methods had
an influence in weakening the loyalty of citizens toward the Yugoslav state,
which they now considered a Serb Lebensraum.
The results of this lack of loyalty were evident when situations of crisis
arose. Nobody wished to defend this Serb Yugoslavia when it was attacked by
Nazi Germany. Indeed, in 1941 the Germans were welcomed in many regions of
Yugoslavia as liberators, initially much as NATO troops in Bosnia are welcomed
now (although this analogy is not completely correct).
The
second Yugoslavia, that of Tito was built on principles, which were supposed to
prevent Serb hegemony forever. Eight federal units - six republics and two
autonomous regions - were formed, respecting the ethnic structure and
historical legacy of all. With this structure, Tito built a system that made
hegemony and domination of a greater people over a smaller one impossible. The
secret of this system was the mechanism of consensus. This mechanism worked
perfectly when the system was monist and led by communists; in that time, all
rights were merely formal. Problems cropped up when the communists turned
nationalist. The first person to manifest this phenomenon in all its brutality
was the former bureaucrat of the communist nomenclature, the present President
Slobodan Milošević. In political semantics he represents an
abnormality - the transformation of the communist, not into a democrat, but
into a nationalist. The mentality he created in general destroyed the chance
for the democratization of these regions.
His
project started with an attempt to remove the consensus mechanism in
decision-making, replacing it - always on the line of the affirmation of Serb
hegemony - with principle "one man-one vote." The principle of
majority rule would give the Serbs, who were the majority in Yugoslavia, the
legal right to decide for themselves and others. Of course, the other peoples
of Yugoslavia did not accept this principle and thus ethnic conflict and the
definitive disintegration of Yugoslavia began. Pursuing their internal national
aims, the Serb nationalists brought about the degeneration of democracy and its
cultural values, debasing it into a process for the subjugation or elimination
of the lesser peoples by the greater people. (In this dimension there is no
difference between the policy of Milošević and that, which seems to
be a milder one - the policy of Gligorov in Macedonia. Both those policies rest
on the principle "one man-one vote.") So Yugoslavia disintegrated
because Milošević wanted to extend Serb hegemony and, what is most
important, he did not limit himself to the conventional means of vulgar
propaganda to carry out this policy. Worse, he resorted to all means that run
counter to the most minimum standards of human rights.
Serb
nationalism was the factor in the destruction of Yugoslavia. It squandered and
misused all investments, the chances the international community offered the
first and second Yugoslavia, and even the third one for a reasonable solution
of its inter-ethnic problems. Hence the right entrusted to the Serb people to
include others in a shared state - given in the belief that they would resolve
ethnic conflicts in a civilized manner - should definitely be taken away from
them, as they have showed themselves incapable of creating conditions for equal
coexistence. They have showed no readiness to build inclusive systems; on the
contrary, they have manifested all their rigidity and their entire propensity
to national exclusivity with their concrete projects of ethnic cleansing and of
unrestrained domination by Serbs over others.
In
this context the works of the Serb "scientists" - Garašanin,
Čubrilović and the Nobel-prize winner Andrić - are interesting,
also from the scientific viewpoint. They may rightly be called genocidal in
regard to the Albanians, along with the Memorandum of the Serb Academy of Arts
and Sciences that accelerated the disintegration of the second Yugoslavia. This
demonstrates that Serb responsibility for the Yugoslav tragedy cannot fall on
only one person, Milošević, nor on his team, but on the whole Serb society,
political class, scientists, mass media, and even writers and artists. Their
guilt made itself manifest throughout the whole period of co-existence. No
legal, or moral, or geostrategic arguments can convince the Albanians to
accept, nor are they allowed to accept, any suggestion of remaining under Serb
domination. After all this bitter experience, the international community
should give the Albanians the historical chance, which the Serbs were unable to
use, to create their own State and to govern in a tolerant, inclusive and
democratic society that will respect civilized values.
KOSOVA
Kosova
has always been and remains an entity of its own, both as regards its
geographical and ethnic as well as administrative content. In ancient times it
was called Dardania, which had its own geographical and administrative
definition, then it was called the Vilayet of Kosova and lately the Autonomous
Region of Kosova.
Autonomy
was granted to Kosova because the Albanians, not the Serbs, wanted it. Kosova
was a constituent element of the former Yugoslavia, had the right of veto and,
with the disintegration of Yugoslavia, it automatically won the right to
secession, just as the other constituent parts of the federation did.
The
following facts argue in favor of the independence of Kosova:
- The
former system of a federated Yugoslavia disintegrated because the formula
of coexistence did not work; all its other constituent elements achieved
the right to self-determination;
- Kosova
was a constituent element of the Yugoslav Federation;
- Kosova
has its own administrative borders;
- Kosova
is a compact entity ethnically, geographically, economically, and
infrastructurally - it is an organism on its own;
- More
than 90 percent of the Kosovars expressed themselves for independence in a
referendum;
- Kosova
has been occupied by a foreign power that established a system of
apartheid there and exploited it as a colony, so it must be decolonized;
- Kosova
has the right to secession also on the basis of precedents.
The
independence of Kosova will create stability and peace in the region. Its
occupation, or its remaining within the framework of Yugoslavia, destabilizes
the region and will pose an ongoing threat to peace and civilized values. The
independence of Kosova is supported by a whole range of arguments - legal,
historical, economic, geostrategic, and cultural. No argument can justify
Kosova's remaining within the framework of Serbia, or Yugoslavia, apart from
those customarily used to justify domination, hegemony, expansionism, colonialism
and apartheid.
Ljubljana,
20 January 2008
International
Institute for Middle East
and
Balkan Studies (IFIMES) - Ljubljana
Directors: Bakhtyar Aljaf
Zijad
Bećirović, M.Sc.