Abstract
Status of Kosovo's independence, stability factor: the Declaration of Independence of Serbia has turned to the International Court of Justice, but this court in this context does not have a mandate to deal with political issues, because the Declaration of Independence was - is a matter of exclusive political and not legal. In other words, the court normally does not deal with this category, and therefore gave respectively opposing opinion on this declaration Declaration of Independence of the Republic of Kosovo is in accordance with international law ... in one way or another, Peversise statement was treated and acclaimed as the Kosovo case sui generis. The case of Kosovo is sui generis, and the arguments of opponents of independence against the Declaration of Independence by the surface. If we refer exclusively to the declaration of independence, it entails anyway its harmony with international law as a natural right and positive right. As a rule, the Declaration of Independence has support in positive international law, ie in accordance with the UN Charter in 1945, the UN Universal Declaration of 1948, international covenants on Economic Social and Cultural Social and International Pact Economic and Political Rights, all of which were adopted by the General Assembly of the UN in 1966, Article 1 of these treaties, the Helsinki Document 1975 and the Charter of Paris Re 1990 for a New Europe and the UK, we have do with the New World Order. Kosovo citizenship is not a gift for someone to give to someone, but something that comes from the people and that should serve him. It is natural flair! International Court of Justice in the case of the evaluation of the Declaration of Independence was considered historical facts and current in which they have and are going through. Kosovo's independence is an imperative of historical and current issue to coincide with the new world order. In the current circumstances in which is it, the UN or the Security Council should take into account the new premises and be accepted as ma first ranks of members equal to the United Nations Organization. Kosovo's declaration of independence has proven to be necessary and politically stabilizing. Declaration of independence in 2008 and the subsequent recognition of Kosovo by many countries, brought much needed stability to the Balkans and closed the books on the protracted break what was once Yugoslavia. Declaration of independence sprang forth from a process supervised by the United Nations, through Resolution 1244 and the institutions it established, was deeply involved in the past and present of Kosovo. And the declaration has now made possible a future in which Kosovo is independent not only politically, but also economically and administratively. While Serbia, acting through the General Assembly, has asked this Court to give an advisory opinion to which she hopes will reopen status negotiations to re-define the future of Kosovo, it has not provided this Court no reason to upend what has become a stable equilibrium. Because Kosovo is now independent. Both Kosovo and Serbia are part of the future of Europe. At a time when Kosovo's independence has finally closed one of the most painful chapters of modern European history.
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