UNITED NATIONS, Feb. 14 (Xinhua) -- Serbia urged the
UN Security Council Thursday to reject a unilateral declaration of independence
of its breakaway province of Kosovo.
At the request of Serbia and Russia, the 15 council
members, along with dozens of other delegates permitted, held a meeting on
Thursday afternoon to discuss the situation in Kosovo. Serbian Foreign Minister
Vuk Jeremic also attended the meeting.
Speaking to reporters after the session, Jeremic said
he had told the council that there was "an imminent threat to the territorial
integrity and sovereignty" of Serbia.
"We asked the Security Council to join us in defense
of the UN Charter, of Security Council resolution 1244, of all the basic
principles of international law and ... to make null and void any potential,
illegal declaration of independence" on behalf of Kosovo's ethnic Albanians,
Jeremic said.
He said the meeting gave him "great comfort" because
a majority of the council members were supportive of continued talks between
Belgrade and Pristina.
"They believe that it is only through peaceful
negotiation that we can find solutions to the difficult problems," Jeremic said.
"Serbia is prepared to continue its peaceful
engagement of the process of finding a compromise solution to future status of
our sovereign province of Kosovo," he said.
"We believe it is never too late to call the
negotiations off, to call off the efforts to find a peaceful solution," he
added.
The foreign minister warned that Serbia will not
hesitate from using "all political, all diplomatic, and all economic measures"
to reverse any seceding moves from the ethnic Albanians.
But "Serbia is not going to use force, and this is
the commitment that Serbia has had," he added.