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The UN General Assembly has unanimously adopted a resolution calling for dialogue between Serbia and Kosovo. 联合国大会一致通过一项决议,要求塞尔维亚与科索沃展开对话。 It might be the beginning of the end for one of Europe’s most intractable conflicts The resolution opens the way for direct talks between the two sides - the first since Kosovo declared its independence from Serbia in 2008. It also drops earlier Serbian demands to reopen negotiations1 on the status(状态,情形) of its former province. The European Union and the United States have already recognised Kosovo's independence. The resolution replaced an original text in which Serbia rejected Kosovo's secession(脱离,分离) . That demand was removed after Serbia was warned that such a stance(立场,姿态) would endanger its ambition(追求,野心) to join the EU. Looking to the future The BBC's Mark Lowen in Belgrade says the adoption2 of the UN resolution means Serbia has in effect given up its diplomatic fight for Kosovo. Although Belgrade says it will never recognise Kosovo's independence, the first direct talks between the two sides are now likely to follow. Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic finished his speech at the UN by saying his country was "looking to the future". There is now the feeling that this is the beginning of the end of the Kosovo problem, our correspondent says, as all sides are trying to resolve one of Europe's most intractable(棘手的,难治的) conflicts. Any talks between the two will be organised by the EU from Brussels. Both Serbia and Kosovo want to become members of the European Union. In July the International Court of Justice ruled that Kosovo's declaration of independence did not break international law. Serbian troops were driven out of Kosovo in 1999 after a Nato bombing campaign aimed at halting the violent repression3 of the province's ethnic4 Albanians, who constituted 90% of its two million population. 点击收听单词发音
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