(This measure has not been amended since it was introduced. The summary has been expanded because action occurred on the measure.)
Expresses the sense of the Senate: (1) that the unresolved status of Kosovo is neither sustainable nor beneficial to the progress toward stability and peace in Southeast Europe and its integration with Europe; (2) that the leaders of Kosovo and Serbia and Montenegro and the representatives of the United Nations should work toward a Kosovo agreement on the future status of Kosovo and a plan for transformation in Kosovo; (3) with respect to what such agreement and plan should do; (4) that the discussions of the long-term status of Kosovo should result in a plan for implementing the Standards for Kosovo; and (5) concerning Kosovo, Serbia and Montenegro, and the United Nations respecting requirements during the negotiations related to the long-term status of Kosovo.
[Congressional Bills 109th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. Res. 237 Introduced in Senate (IS)]
109th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. RES. 237
Expressing the sense of the Senate on reaching an agreement on the
future status of Kosovo.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
September 14, 2005
Mr. Voinovich (for himself, Mr. Lugar, and Mr. Biden) submitted the
following resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Foreign
Relations
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Expressing the sense of the Senate on reaching an agreement on the
future status of Kosovo.
Whereas, on June 10, 1999, the United Nations Security Council adopted
Resolution 1244 which authorized the Secretary-General of the United
Nations to establish an interim administration for Kosovo to assume the
supreme legal authority in Kosovo with the task of promoting
``substantial autonomy and self-governance'' in Kosovo and facilitating
a political process to determine the future status of Kosovo;
Whereas, on December 10, 2003, the United Nations interim administration, known
as the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo,
presented the Standards for Kosovo document which set out the
requirements to be met to advance stability in Kosovo;
Whereas the Standards for Kosovo require the establishment of functioning
democratic institutions in Kosovo, including providing for the holding
of elections, establishing the Provisional Institutions of Self-
Government, and establishing media and civil society, the establishment
of rule of law to ensure equal access to justice and to implement
mechanisms to suppress economic and financial crime, and the
establishment of freedom of movement in Kosovo, including the free use
of language;
Whereas the Standards for Kosovo further require sustainable returns and the
rights of communities and their members, improvements in economic and
financial institutions, including the prevention of money laundering and
the establishment of an attractive environment for investors, the
establishment of property rights, including the preservation of cultural
heritage, and the development of a sustained dialogue, including a
Pristina-Belgrade dialogue and a regional dialogue;
Whereas the ethnic violence that occurred in Kosovo from March 17, 2004 through
March 19, 2004, represented a severe setback to the progress the people
of Kosovo achieved in implementing the Standards for Kosovo and resulted
in 20 deaths and damage to or destruction of approximately 900 homes and
30 Serbian Orthodox churches and other religious sites;
Whereas the bomb attacks against the people and international institutions in
Kosovo that occurred from July 2, 2005 through July 4, 2005, were
unacceptable events that work counter to the interests and efforts of
the majority of the people of Kosovo and signal that more work must be
done to promote the implementation of the Standards for Kosovo;
Whereas the status of Kosovo, which is neither stable nor sustainable, is a
critical issue affecting the aspirations of Southeast Europe for
stability, peace, and eventual membership in the European Union;
Whereas the authorities and institutions of Kosovo must be empowered to act
independently to achieve the Standards for Kosovo so that such
authorities and institutions may assume responsibility for any progress
or setbacks;
Whereas 2005 must be a year of decision for representatives of Kosovo, Serbia
and Montenegro, and the United Nations to move forward on the status of
Kosovo;
Whereas the basic values of multi-ethnicity, democracy, and market-orientation
must remain at the heart of any effort to resolve the question of the
future status of Kosovo; and
Whereas the support of all of the people of Kosovo is required to achieve a
successful outcome that addresses those basic values: Now, therefore, be
it
Resolved, That it is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the unresolved status of Kosovo is neither sustainable
nor beneficial to the progress toward stability and peace in
Southeast Europe and its integration with Europe;
(2) the leaders of Kosovo and Serbia and Montenegro and the
representatives of the United Nations should work toward an
agreement on the future status of Kosovo and a plan for
transformation in Kosovo;
(3) such agreement and plan should--
(A) address the claims and satisfy the key concerns
of the people of Kosovo and the people of Serbia and
Montenegro;
(B) seek compromises from both Kosovo and Serbia
and Montenegro to reach an agreement;
(C) promote the integration of Southeast Europe
with the European Union and the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization;
(D) reinforce efforts to encourage full cooperation
by the governments of Kosovo and of Serbia and
Montenegro with the International Crimes Tribunal for
the Former Yugoslavia;
(E) promote stability in the region and take into
consideration the stability of democracy in Kosovo and
in Serbia and Montenegro;
(F) promote the active participation of Serbians in
Kosovo in elections and in the government of Kosovo;
and
(G) require the fulfillment of the Standards for
Kosovo, the requirements that the United Nations
Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo established to
advance stability in Kosovo, in accordance with prior
commitments and in support of the initiation of
discussions on status with particular emphasis on the
problem of human rights in minority communities;
(4) the anticipated discussions of the long-term status of
Kosovo should result in a plan for implementing the Standards
for Kosovo, particularly with regard to minority protections,
return of property, and the development of rule of law as it
relates to the improvement of protection of minorities, the
return of internally displaced persons, the return of property,
and the prosecution of human rights violations; and
(5) Kosovo, Serbia and Montenegro, and the United Nations,
during the negotiations related to the long-term status of
Kosovo, should require--
(A) increased monitoring and reporting of the
progress on the implementation of the Standards for
Kosovo and any incidents of human rights violations,
and should broaden the involvement of minorities and
community-level representatives in monitoring,
reporting, and publicizing that progress;
(B) that the authorities and institutions of Kosovo
be given greater authority and independence in
fulfilling the Standards for Kosovo, including assuming
the responsibility for any setbacks and progress and
acquiring experience in assuming greater autonomy; and
(C) a broad public awareness campaign to raise
awareness of both the plan to resolve the question of
the status of Kosovo and the requirements for the
transition of Kosovo to a permanent status, including
the importance of the progress in implementing the
Standards for Kosovo and the necessity of ensuring
peace and suppressing all forms of discrimination and
violence so that the region may move forward toward a
future of greater prosperity, stability, and lasting
peace.
<all>
Introduced in Senate
Referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. (text of measure as introduced: CR S10047-10048)
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations discharged by Unanimous Consent.(consideration: CR S11331-11332)
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations discharged by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S11331-11332)
Passed/agreed to in Senate: Resolution agreed to in Senate without amendment by Unanimous Consent.(text: CR S11331-11332)
Resolution agreed to in Senate without amendment by Unanimous Consent. (text: CR S11331-11332)
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