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Kosovo state still in doubt

PRISTINA, Kosovo -- Kosovo's hope for widespread international recognition of its newly declared independence is facing tense days of negotiations and posturing in the diplomatic corridors of Europe and at the United Nations, where Russia intends to defend the rights of Serbia and its territorial integrity.

Official recognition from much of Europe for the tiny Balkan territory could come as early as Monday in Brussels, where European foreign ministers were to meet for talks to resolve internal divisions over recognizing Kosovo's statehood. Also on the agenda: how to ensure stability in the aftermath of Kosovo's decision Sunday to proclaim its independence from Serbia.

"We are involved in trying to secure the stability of a very volatile region at a critical period in time," Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said on the eve of the talks. "We have to do it with care."

Most Western countries and the United States for months have been signaling that they would back an independent Kosovo, but the support in Europe was short of unanimous.

While all 27 European Union members endorse an unprecedented aid plan to bolster Kosovo, some countries -- including Greece, Romania, Spain, Cyprus and Slovakia -- have said they will not recognize Kosovo as a separate country.

Some of the opponents have strong sympathies toward Russia or the Orthodox religion, while others fear that allowing a new European state would only give encouragement to other separatist movements in various corners of the continent.

Serbia itself called Kosovo's independence declaration illegal and Russia immediately denounced it, saying it threatened to touch off a new conflict in the Balkans.

The U.N. Security Council held an emergency session Sunday at Russia and Serbia's request. On Tuesday afternoon, a more formal and open debate is planned by the Security Council.

But whatever the diplomatic anxiety Kosovo faces, there was little evidence of it on the streets of Pristina after the parliament unanimously made its independence declaration early Sunday. Instead, thousands of jubilant ethnic Albanians poured into the streets, firing guns in the air and waving red-and-black Albanian flags with their distinctive double-headed eagles.

Revelers braved subfreezing temperatures to ride on the roofs of their cars, singing patriotic songs and chanting: "KLA! KLA!" the acronym for the now-disbanded rebel Kosovo Liberation Army. They waved American flags alongside the Albanian banner.

Many dressed in traditional costumes and played trumpets and drums, and an ethnic Albanian couple named their newborn daughter Pavarsie -- Albanian for "independence."

"This is the happiest day in my life," said Mehdi Shehu, 68. "Now we're free and we can celebrate without fear."

By contrast, police in the Serbian capital Belgrade fired tear gas and rubber bullets in skirmishes with protesters who opposed the declaration. Groups of masked thugs ran through downtown Belgrade smashing windows and ransacking tobacco stands. At least 30 people were injured, about half of them police officers, hospital officials said.

Hundreds of protesters rallied outside the U.S. Embassy in Belgrade. Others broke windows at McDonald's restaurants and at the embassy of Slovenia -- which holds the European Union's rotating presidency. Later in the evening, police kept a group of protesters from approaching the Albanian Embassy.

Kosovo had formally remained a part of Serbia even though it has been administered by the U.N. and NATO since 1999, when NATO airstrikes ended former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic's crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatists. The bloody 1998-99 war claimed 10,000 lives.

Ninety percent of Kosovo's 2 million people are ethnic Albanian -- most of them secular Muslims -- and they see no reason to stay joined to the rest of Christian Orthodox Serbia.

President Bush said the United States "will continue to work with our allies to the very best we can to make sure there's no violence."

"We are heartened by the fact that the Kosovo government has clearly proclaimed its willingness and its desire to support Serbian rights in Kosovo," Bush said while on a visit to Africa. "We also believe it's in Serbia's interest to be aligned with Europe and the Serbian people can know that they have a friend in America."

Underscoring fears of renewed unrest, an explosion lightly damaged a U.N. building housing a courthouse and a jail in Kosovo's tense north, home to most of its roughly 100,000 minority Serbs. No one was injured. An unexploded grenade was found near a motel that houses EU officials.

In the ethnically divided northern city of Kosovska Mitrovica, Serbs vowed never to let Kosovo go.

"The Albanians can celebrate all they want, but this stillborn baby of theirs will never be an independent country as long as we Serbs are here and alive," said Djordje Jovanovic.

Kosovo is still protected by 16,000 NATO-led peacekeepers, and the alliance boosted its patrols over the weekend in hopes of discouraging violence. International police, meanwhile, deployed to back up local forces in the tense north.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has argued that independence without U.N. approval would set a dangerous precedent for "frozen conflicts" across the former Soviet Union, where separatists in Chechnya and Georgia are agitating for independence.

Serbia's government ruled out a military response as part of a secret "action plan" drafted earlier this week, but warned that it would downgrade relations with any foreign government that recognizes Kosovo's independence.

Meanwhile, Serbia's government minister for Kosovo, Slobodan Samardzic, said Serbia would increase its presence in the roughly 15 percent of Kosovo that is Serb-controlled in an apparent attempt to partition the province.

Kosovo President Fatmir Sejdiu sought to allay Serbs' concerns, telling them: "I understand today is a fearful day for you all, but your rights and your property will be protected today as it will be always."

At a special session of parliament boycotted by 10 minority Serb lawmakers and televised live nationwide, sustained applause erupted after the rest of the chamber unanimously adopted the declaration of independence, which was scripted on parchment.

They also unveiled a new national crest and a flag: a bright blue banner featuring a golden map of Kosovo and six stars, one for each of its main ethnic groups. Few of the new flags were seen Sunday on Kosovo's streets, where the old Albanian banner still dominated.

"We, the democratically elected leaders of our people, hereby declare Kosovo to be an independent and sovereign state," the proclamation read.

"From today onwards, Kosovo is proud, independent and free," said Prime Minister Hashim Thaci, a former KLA leader. "We never lost faith in the dream that one day we would stand among the free nations of the world, and today we do."

Like Sejdiu, Thaci reached out to ordinary Serbs, but he had stern words for the Serbian government.

"Kosovo will never be ruled by Belgrade again," he warned.

Thaci also signed 192 separate letters to nations around the world -- including Serbia -- asking them to recognize Kosovo as a state.

Kosovo's leaders signed their names on a giant iron sculpture spelling out "NEWBORN" before heading to a sports hall for a performance of Beethoven's "Ode to Joy" by the Kosovo Philharmonic Orchestra.

"I feel stronger," said Ymer Govori, 36, carrying his daughter on his shoulders to celebrations downtown. "I have my own state and my own post code," he said, "and it won't say Serbia any longer."