NSPM in English | |||
Petition Against EULEX Violating Kosova’s Sovereignty |
četvrtak, 17. septembar 2009. | |
In the Republic of Kosova we are encountered with a colonial situation. Essentially, things are not as they appear to be. Independence is based on Ahtisaari’s plan, as its political and legal foundation. By qualifying Kosova as a sui generis case, Ahtisaari’s Plan creates a disabled Kosova. As a result, Kosova was treated as an isolated case, and the hope for other small and repressed nations for their liberation experienced a harsh thump.
The Republic of Kosova stands for a state deprived from its statehood. It stands as substanceless subject. International administration constituted primarily by NATO, EU, UN, WB, IMF, stands as colonial structure. Colonial structures took over essential state apparatuses. They control and govern with them, therefore with the Republic of Kosova. The existing political configuration of the country should be read as the symptom of the spectacles of international relations and not as the will of the people of Kosova. European Union took over the responsibilities for the rule of law and justice in the Republic of Kosova. The biggest EU mission (EULEX) ever says to be only an observing mission. EULEX defines itself as a "crisis management operation," as if the crisis is here to stay and merely has to be managed. "(Re)solution," the traditional vocabulary of international missions, has been replaced by "management." Crisis management means prevention of an explosion of crisis, not elimination of the crisis or its causes. EULEX stands as guardian of the two ongoing processes: ethnically–based decentralization (another name for cantonisation, therefore partition) and neoliberal privatization of everything existing. Given to these political paradigms, EULEX is acting as a sovereign of the country. An agreement with Serbia on police, courts and customs is on the top of their agenda. This is a flagrant violation of Kosova’s (formal) sovereignty. Therefore, we support the demonstration of the coalition of organizations of Kosova against the agreements of EULEX with Serbia. Furthermore, we encourage every individual and organization to act against each and every form of international domination. In solidarity. 1) Slavoj Žižek, Ljubljana 2) Dr. Marina Gržinić, Ljubljana 3) Group Reartikulacija (Marina Gržinić, Staš Kleindienst, Sebastjan Leban, Tanja Passoni), Ljubljana 4) Orgest Azizi, Philosopher, Paris/Tiranë 5) Stéphane Douailler, Profésseur de philosophie à l'Université Paris-8 6) Guillaume Sibertin-Blanc, Profésseur agrégé (PRAG) à l'Université Toulouse II, Le Mirail. 7) Enis Sulstarova, Sociologist, University of Tirana, Tiranë 8) Dr.Suzana Milevska, Professor of Art History, Skopje 9) Besnik Pula, Sociologist, New York 10) Grupa Spomenik (Monument Group), Tuzla, Bosnia 11) Bobby Banerjee, University of Western Sydney, Australia 12) Mladen Dolar, Philosopher, Ljubljana 13) Tihomir Tupuzovski, Philosopher and artist, Skopje 14) Grupi Saktivista, Tiranë 15) Lëvizja MJAFT!, Tiranë 16) Ivo Banac, President, Croatian Helsinki Committee for Human Rights, Zagreb, Croatia 17) Alenka Zupanćić, Philosopher, Ljubljana 18) Peter Hallward, Philosopher, London 19) Krzysztof Czyzewski, President, Borderland Foundation, Poland 20) Ana Bezić, Archeologist, PhD., Rijeka 21) Branimir Stojanović, Philosopher, Belgrade 22) Milica Tomić, Artist/Theoretician, Belgrade 23) Damir Arsenijevic, PhD. në Letërsi, Tuzla 24) Jaakko Juhaani Karhunen, artist, Helsinki 25) Dušan Mandič, artist, Ljubljana, (member of group Irwin) 26) Miran Mohar, artist, Ljubljana, (member of group Irwin) 27) Andrej Savski, artist, Ljubljana, (member of group Irwin) 28) Roman Uranjek, artist, Ljubljana, (member of group Irwin) 29) Borut Vogelnik, artist, Ljubljana, (member of group Irwin) 30) Pavle Levi, Film Theorist, Stanford University, California 31) Jasmina Husanović, Cultural Theorist, Tuzla |