Interview with Tony Lloyd, Foreign office Minister.




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 ON THE RECORD
                                 TONY LLOYD INTERVIEW               
                           
 
RECORDED FROM TRANSMISSION: BBC ONE                          DATE:    2.5.99

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JOHN HUMPHRYS:                Well I spoke to the Foreign Office Minister 
Tony Lloyd a little earlier this morning and I began by asking him whether there would be a 
diplomatic response from NATO to today�s release of the three American servicemen.


TONY LLOYD:                That�s a very welcome development but actually 
it�s not that positive a development, I mean, how do I explain for example to all the Kosovo 
Albanian refugees in Macedonia and Albania and in different parts of the world that it was 
only on the basis of these three individuals that NATO had to respond.  Milosevic knows 
what he has to do.  He has to make sure there�s a secure environment for the Kosovo 
Albanians to return to and that means withdrawal of his troops and it means an international 
peace keeping force and when he comes to negotiate on that basis then that will be progress.


HUMPHRYS:                    So nothing in response to that and nothing in 
response to what the Russians have been trying to sort out themselves, they�ve been 
beavering away trying to get some sort of diplomatic solution that hasn�t been acceptable to 
us.  It seems that we�re not actually interested in negotiations, all we want effectively, is a 
total surrender from Milosevic on those five points that have been made to him.


LLOYD:                    Well I think terms like whether this is total 
surrender, not interested in negotiation, are rather loaded.  Of course ��


HUMPHRYS:                    �.But this is reality, isn�t it?


LLOYD:                    Well, we are interested in negotiation because in 
the end Mr. Milosevic knows he will have to negotiate a proper solution, but there can�t 
seriously be any compromise on the Kosovo Albanians returning home with enough security 
to guarantee they don�t get killed.  That�s not something anybody would negotiate on.  I mean, 
I must put it to all of your listeners, would anybody seriously go back to Kosovo at the 
moment with Milosevic�s army there, without a proper NATO led force to guarantee long 
term security because I am certain I wouldn�t.


HUMPHRYS:                    So to return to my basic point, that is it.  Unless 
he concedes those five points no negotiations clearly and we just keep bombing and bombing 
and bombing.


LLOYD:                    Well most certainly until Milosevic understands 
he must concede on those five points then there can�t be any end to the conflict that he�s 
started because of course let�s also be realistic, he still continues to do enormous damage to the 
ordinary people in Kosovo.  That�s why those five demands are not matters of NATO being 
unreasonable autocratic, it�s actually what are the very basic reasons for NATO taking action 
in the first place, not just military action, it�s why for a year we tried a diplomatic solution.  
Milosevic at no stage has been prepared to create a framework that gives the Kosovo 
Albanians the opportunity to live in peace and without the kind of fear of death that they 
have lived with over recent weeks or months.


HUMPHRYS:                    So Kofi Annan  of the United Nations and Victor 
Chernomyrdin  from Russia,  Jesse Jackson for that matter, all of whom have been talking to 
him in one way or another, they might as well all pack up and go home?



LLOYD:                    No, we very much welcome the role of all 
credible mediators and certainly both the Secretary General of the United Nations and Mr. 
Chernomyrdin on behalf of the Russians are very welcome as mediators.  In the end there will 
have to be mediation, but Milosevic has got to understand that mediation is possible but only 
if he�s prepared to give basic and well understood pre-conditions and that is the five demands 
that NATO has already put forward.  We have got to see the Albanian refugees return to their 
homes.  We�ve got to see them return with long term and short term security.  Not so 
unreasonable.


HUMPHRYS:                    So the only mediation to use your word comes 
after he has surrendered.  You don�t like the word surrender but that�s what it amounts to 
isn�t it?



LLOYD:                    Well I am not sure the word is relevant in this 
context.  Mr. Milosevic knows that he can�t continue to make war against his own people if 
he�s got to surrender to the Kosovo Albanians and say that I won�t make war against my 
people any more, then that�s surrender but these are ��..



HUMPHRYS:                    �..He�s got to do more than that hasn�t he?  
He�s got to pull all of his forces out of his own country, he�s got to allow armed forces into 
his country, if that isn�t surrender, heaven knows what is.


LLOYD:                    But those are the necessary preconditions for us 
and most importantly the refugees to know that they can return to their homes from which 
they were driven at gunpoint by Milosevic.  Now, the terminology really doesn�t matter as 
long as we are all very clear that Milosevic has got to conform to those demands.


HUMPHRYS:                    That�s the point.  And we can never now, can 
we, sit down at a table with him, because we have so demonised him - we�ve called him a 
genocidal murderer and so on, so talking to Milosevic, I mean, you for instance, or one of your 
colleagues, Tony Blair or anybody else for that matter sitting down at the table and talking 
with Milosevic simply isn�t on is it?  Can�t be done.


LLOYD:                    Well Mr. Milosevic I understand said yesterday 
he would like to meet President Bill Clinton.


HUMPHRYS:                    Is that on the cards?


LLOYD:                    Well that�s Mr. Milosevic who issued that 
comment and of course in the end Milosevic himself has demonised himself, it�s Milosevic 
who has turned his murder machine against innocent people in Kosovo, it wasn�t NATO, it 
wasn�t Britain.  Within that context of course, we will talk to Mr. Milosevic, but on the basis 
that he wants to make a proper and long term arrangement for the return of the refugees and 
their security when they return to their homes.


HUMPHRYS:                    It�s a bit obvious isn�t it?  I mean, people like 
your own Foreign Secretary, Secretary of State for Defence come onto programmes like this 
and talk about him as a genocidal killer.  You can say no worse of any man than that can you?  
The idea that you would actually sit down with a genocidal killer and talk about anything is 
bizarre, isn�t it.


LLOYD:                    Well this is rather, damned if we don�t, damned if 
we do isn�t it?  We are intransigence  if we refuse to talk.  We are compromisers if we do talk.  
But the simple reality is ���


HUMPHRYS:                    I�m saying you�ve painted yourselves into a 
corner, that�s my point.


LLOYD:                    No, there�s no corner into which we are painted.  
Mr Milosevic continues to push himself into that corner but our objectives are very very 
clear:  We want to see the refugees return.  Now in the end of course Milosevic, I suppose, 
does know that he has to accept NATO�s preconditions, the question for us is how long is it 
going to be before he accepts that as the basis on which he operates?  Within that of course we 
will arrange for talks to take place that allow the refugees to return, there�s no compromise in 
doing that, no compromise with a recognition that Milosevic has turned what is a machine of 
murder on civilians of Kosovo.


HUMPHRYS:                    So if�. When you say�. If he does accept all 
this and the refuges go back to Kosovo it is inconceivable isn�t it that he could still be in charge 
of Kosovo, after all they would hardly go back with a genocidal killer in charge of the country, 
you wouldn�t want them to go back with a genocidal killer in charge of the country so that�s 
out isn�t it?


LLOYD:                    Well I think that is the practical reality where 
Milosevic now has driven things but that�s been his choice and that�s been the result of his 
actions.


HUMPHRYS:                    So we have to unseat him?


LLOYD:                    Well what we�ve begun to talk about of course is 
the idea that there should be some form of international control of Kosovo to allow a political 
structure to exist when the refuges are beginning to return and have returned so that that can 
move forward the ordinary day to day life, to rebuild the police force, to rebuild the school 
system, to rebuild the economy.  All that�s going to need some form of civil authority but it is 
true to say that Mr Milosevic has made it almost impossible now for the Kosovan Albanians 
and maybe even the Serbs to accept his long term control in Kosovo.


HUMPHRYS:                    So de facto independence for Kosovo, that�s 
what we�re talking about?


LLOYD:                    I think we�re talking about some form of 
internationalisation of the civilian control for Kosovo with a view obviously that the long term 
future, as we always said, can be defined once we�ve got to a more stable Kosovo and refuges 
returned and are able once again to play the part of citizens of Kosovo and not refuges in 
different parts of the world.


HUMPHRYS:                    We are fighting this war we are always told, we 
were told right from the very beginning for moral reasons.  Doesn�t morality demand that we 
increase the diplomatic efforts one way or the other, seriously negotiate one way or the other 
even if it means a bit of compromise because the longer this goes on every single day it goes on 
innocent people are being hurt, they are being killed, you say they are being raped.  Terrible
 things are happening to an awful lot of innocent people every day this war goes on.  We�re 
seeing more NATO bombs going astray and killing people in a �bus.  We can�t just carry on 
like this can we?


LLOYD:                    No.  I think there is nobody on the NATO side 
who wouldn�t want to see the military phase come to an end forthwith but the control of that 
d does rest I�m afraid with Mr Milosevic.


HUMPHRYS:                    That was the Foreign Office Minister Tony 
Lloyd. 





                



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