Bush says Kosovo to be independent, delights Albania
By Tabassum Zakaria and Ellie Tzortzi
TIRANA (Reuters) - U.S. President George W. Bush said on Sunday the United Nations should grant independence quickly to the breakaway Serbian province of Kosovo, and if Russia continued to block it then the West would act.
Bush's insistence on a deadline for a U.N. Security Council resolution to give independence to Kosovo was the latest sign of heightened tensions between Moscow and Washington. Russia has threatened to veto the Kosovo proposal.
"At some point in time, sooner rather than later, you've got to say enough is enough, Kosovo is independent," he told a news conference in the first visit by a U.S. president to Albania.
Bush added he was "worried about expectations not being met" in Kosovo, where 90 percent of the population are ethnic Albanians demanding independence from Serbia and where NATO leads a peacekeeping force of 17,000 troops.
But a Kremlin official said Bush's comments in Albania had not altered Russian opposition.
Making the penultimate stop of an 8-day European tour, Bush was warmly welcomed in Albania, once the world's only officially atheist state under the late Stalinist dictator Enver Hoxha. Bush later arrived in his final stop in Bulgaria.
After the collapse of communism in 1990, Albania embraced Western values. Bush paid tribute to a society which had "known tyranny" and overcome it.
Smiling broadly on a quick trip outside the capital, Bush dived into a throng of waiting Albanian fans to enjoy an ecstatic rock-star reception very different from the hostile protests he encountered earlier in Italy and Germany. Continued...








