Feb 22, 2008 12:30 pm US/Eastern
U.S. Orders Diplomats To Leave Serbia
Alert Follows Attack On Belgrade Embassy
KOSOVSKA MITROVICA, Kosovo (AP) ―
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Serbs protesting Kosovo's independence for a fifth straight day Friday attacked U.N. police guarding a key bridge in northern Kosovo with stones, glass bottles and firecrackers on Friday. (File)
MILAN RADULOVIC/AFP/Getty Images
The State Department on Friday ordered nonessential
diplomats and the families of all American personnel at the U.S. Embassy in Belgrade to leave Serbia, following an attack on the
compound.
The move, made at the request of U.S. Ambassador to Serbia Cameron
Munter, came as U.S. diplomats across the Balkans went on alert,
girding for more anti-American violence after Serb rioters stormed and
torched the Belgrade embassy Thursday, causing as-yet undetermined
damage and drawing fierce condemnation from Washington.
"We are not sufficiently confident that they are safe here," Munter said in an interview in Belgrade.
A
State Department official said 14 embassy employees were on the site
when a mob attacked but that all American and local staff are safe. The
charred body of one person found in the compound is believed to be that
of a protester, spokesman Sean McCormack said.
Protests over
the declaration of independence by the former Serbian province of
Kosovo have increased tensions across the region. And new mass
demonstrations are expected following recognition of Kosovo by the
United States and other Western countries.
At the same time,
third-ranking U.S. diplomat Nicholas Burns called on Serbia's main ally
Russia to repudiate a suggestion by one of its officials that it may
need to use military force to earn respect after the U.S. and other
countries recognized the independence of Kosovo, which is mainly ethnic
Albanian, over strong Serb and Russian protests.
"We strongly
advise Russia to be more responsible in its public comments toward
Kosovo," Burns said, responding to questions in an online written
discussion. "Russia is isolated this week-very few countries are
supporting its position."
Earlier, Russia's envoy to NATO
Dmitry Rogozin said the move to recognize was Kosovo a "strategic
mistake" and suggested that Moscow might "have to use brute military
force" if the alliance expands its current peacekeeping operation in
the territory.
The decision to implement what is known as an
"ordered departure" at the Belgrade embassy will affect some of the
between 80 and 100 Americans who work at the embassy, but it was not
clear how many of them or how many family members would be affected by
the order.
White House spokesman Scott Stanzel said that the
Bush administration believes the attack on the embassy in Belgrade was
"conducted by hooligans and thugs."
"We don't believe that
this is the face that Serbia wants to present to the world, and we
quite frankly don't believe that this is the face of Serbia," Stanzel
said. "We want to continue to work to integrate Serbia into European
institutions."
American embassies in Serbia and at least three
other former Yugoslav republics stepped up security, ordering diplomats
to stay home or limit their movements and warning Americans to use
extreme caution outside.
"American citizens are urged to avoid
the areas of demonstrations and to exercise extreme caution," the
embassy said in a notice to Americans in Serbia.
Several other
embassies in Belgrade as well as a McDonald's restaurant were attacked
by mobs on Thursday after a massive protest against Kosovo
independence, and the warning noted that private businesses and
organizations affiliated with the United States might also become
targets for protesters.
"U.S. citizens are urged to avoid
large crowds, maintain a low profile and review their personal
protective measures," the embassy said, adding that it would also be
closed on Monday.
In Podgorica, the capital of neighboring
Montenegro, which was once joined with Serbia, the U.S. Embassy and
international school shut down ahead of a mass protest that it is
feared could lead to violence, and the embassy warned of vandalism
against U.S. citizens and their property.
In Bosnia, the U.S.
Embassy in Sarajevo told diplomats to defer travel until further notice
to the city of Banja Luka, where protesters on Thursday hurled rocks
and stones at the U.S. Embassy branch.
In Kosovo itself, the
State Department advised U.S. citizens against any travel to the
northern part of the new country, where ethnic Serbs predominate.
In
Greece and Austria, both of which have significant Serb populations,
the U.S. embassies in Athens and Vienna warned of potential violence
during planned weekend demonstrations against Kosovo's declaration of
independence.
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