Kosovo fails in bid to gain UNESCO membership

PARIS (Reuters) - The United Nations' cultural agency UNESCO narrowly voted against Kosovo getting full membership in a vote on Monday after less than two-thirds of countries voted in favour. The vote had been fiercely opposed by Russia and Serbia, which attempted to get it postponed earlier in the day. Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had warned on Friday against using UNESCO to legitimise what he called Kosovo's self-proclaimed state. Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008 almost a decade after NATO went to war to halt the killing and expulsion of ethnic Albanian civilians by Serbian forces trying to crush a an insurgency. Serbia does not recognise Kosovo as sovereign but signed up to an accord in 2013 designed to settle relations between the two as a condition of Belgrade's further progress towards membership of the EU. The new country is so far recognised by 111 states, but not by Serbia or U.N. Security Council members Russia and China. To win UNESCO membership, Kosovo needed a two-thirds majority. Of the 142 countries that voted, 92 backed the motion, 50 voted against and 29 abstained, meaning the bid fell short by three votes. "The vast majority of the countries in the world have voted for Kosovo," Foreign Minister Hashim Thaci wrote on his Facebook page. "Unfortunately, for only three votes we did not win the needed absolute majority." Kosovo is a member of the World Bank, International Monetary Fund and Olympic Committee, but has been struggling to join other international organisations due to Serbia's objections. "Kosovo’s road is unstoppable and we will apply and join other organisations, including UNESCO once again," Thaci said. With a wealth of centuries-old Orthodox churches and monasteries, Kosovo has long held almost mythical status for Serbs which considers it the cradle of its faith. Serbian President Tomislav Nikolic described Kosovo’s failure to secure UNESCO membership as a diplomatic victory. "This is a just and moral victory in almost impossible conditions," Nikolic said in a statement. "I congratulate the Government of Serbia, which has invested a lot of diplomatic effort and did not give up even when it seemed that all was lost." (Reporting by John Irish, Aleksandar Vasovic and Fatos Bytyci, Editing by Ingrid Melander and Angus MacSwan)