Mi komunisti bu vnovsodinit Cyprus i Jugsalvia!
(We communists will reunite Cypus and Yougoslavia)
Peace talks on Cyprus to restart
The Cypriot president and the Turkish Cypriot leader have agreed to resume talks on reunifying the island.
The deal was struck at a meeting between Demetris Christofias and Mehmet Ali Talat in Nicosia - the first such high-profile talks since 2006.
The two men also agreed to reopen a key crossing in the divided capital.
Greek and Turkish Cypriots have been divided since 1974, when Turkey deployed troops after a coup by Greek Cypriots who wanted union with Greece.
"This is a new era we are starting for the solution of the Cyprus problem," Mr Talat said after the meeting in a UN buffer zone near the abandoned Nicosia airport.
"We shall try our utmost in order to come to an agreed solution for the interest of the Cypriot people, both communities, as soon as possible," President Christofias said.
We have a vision that the Turkish Cypriots and the Greek Cypriots are children of the same island
Demetris Christofias
Cypriot President
How do communists decide which former states are worth re-unification and which are not? Will you also try to revive Czechoslovakia, the Soviet Union, French West Africa, the German Reich, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, or the Roman Empire?
But it's interesting that Serbian and Montenegrin communists call themselves Yugoslav ones. But Croatian and Bosnian communists don't.
The Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia proposes the following act of the Czech Republic:
ACT BY MEANS OF WHICH THE CZECH REPUBLIC EXPRESSES THE NECESSITY TO ADHERE TO THE BINDING NORMS OF THE INTERNATIONAL LAW
§ 1
(1) The Czech Republic does not recognise the independence of Kosovo declared unilaterally on 17th February 2008.
(2) The Czech Republic considers the unilateral declaration of independence of Kosovo from 17th February 2008 to be a violation of the binding norms of the international law, namely:
a) the Charter of the United Nations,
b) the Final Act of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe,
c) the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1244 adopted on 10th June 1999.
§ 2
(1) The Czech Republic can recognise the independence of Kosovo only if:
a) it is declared in accordance with the international law, especially the norms given in § 1 section 2, or a new resolution of the United Nations Security Council,
b) Kosovo becomes a member state of the United Nations.
§ 3
(1) The Czech Republic does not recognise the validity of diplomatic passports issued by those authorities of Kosovo that uniletarally declared the independence of Kosovo until the status of Kosovo is resolved in accordance with the international law and the Parliament recognises the independence of Kosovo according to this act.
(2) The Czech Republic does not recognise travel documents issued by those authorities of Kosovo that uniletarally declared the independence of Kosovo until the recognition of the independence of Kosovo by the Czech Republic realised according to this act.