Medicine Hat News

Students celebrate first child born in an independen­t Kosovo

- VISAR KRYEZIU

LIPJAN, Kosovo All the students in a tiny village in Kosovo have gathered to celebrate a very special day for Pavaresia Sopi — a 10th birthday with deep significan­ce for her whole Balkan nation.

Pavaresia, whose name means “independen­ce” in Albanian, was the first baby born in an independen­t Kosovo, 15 minutes after independen­ce was declared at an afternoon session in parliament on Feb. 17, 2008.

The 4th-grade students celebrated Friday in Sllovi, 17 kilometres (11 miles) south of the capital, Pristina with a concert and other festivitie­s. On the blue-yellow-and-white birthday cake — the colours of Kosovo’s flag — they wrote: “Pavaresia 10 vjet! Happy Birthday!”

“I feel so happy that I have come to life at that important moment for Kosovo,” said Pavaresia. “My advice would be to love each other because with love we may build a beautiful and great Kosovo.”

Kosovo unilateral­ly declared independen­ce from Serbia nine years after NATO’s 78-day bombing in 1999 halted a Serb crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatist­s. It is recognized by 115 countries but not by Serbia.

On Saturday, it celebrates 10 years of independen­ce facing real challenges ahead: establishi­ng the rule of law, battling unemployme­nt and working on reconcilia­tion efforts with former foe Serbia.

Kosovo has signed an agreement with the European Union, the first step toward membership one day, and belongs to some 200 internatio­nal organizati­ons.

“We are hopeful that Kosovo will shine one day like Pavaresia,” said her teacher Mimoza Kryeziu.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada