Kuwait Times

Albin Kurti: Kosovo’s ‘Che Guevara’ turned prime minister

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PRISTINA: Albin Kurti has seen prison bars, led street riots and unleashed tear gas in parliament: now the unpredicta­ble politician is Kosovo’s prime minister, heralding a new chapter for the young democracy. Once dubbed ‘Kosovo’s Che Guevara’ for his radical antics, the 44-year-old was named PM on Monday after his leftwing Vetevendos­je party forged a coalition with the centre-right Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK). The two former opposition camps had won October 2018 polls but it took four months of tense horse-trading over government posts to reach a deal to form a government.

Mixing a left-wing agenda with fervent nationalis­m, Kurti has long been an insurgent force in Kosovo politics. His rise to the top marks a historic defeat of the exguerrill­as who have held sway over the former Serbian province since it broke away from Belgrade in 2008. Kurti and other critics have long accused those leaders of spreading corruption and nepotism as ordinary Kosovars suffer in one of Europe’s poorest corners.

Riots, tear gas

The former student activist first gained fame on the streets, organizing protests in the 1990s against the Serbian regime’s repression of Kosovo’s ethnic Albanian majority. The activism landed Kurti in a Serbian jail for two years when he was in his 20s. After the province broke away from Serbia in the 1998-99 war, Kurti became a leading critic of both local leaders and the internatio­nal community for its outsized influence.

Now he needs to convince the West he is no longer the radical whose supporters were rioting in the streets not so long ago. Vetevendos­je, which means “self-determinat­ion” in Albanian, has flexed its muscles over the years with massive rallies that have sometimes veered into violence. Some of the worst incidents around a decade ago saw supporters flip vehicles belonging to EULEX, the European Union’s rule of law mission in Kosovo. On several occasions in 2018, Kurti’s lawmakers protested vote outcomes by unleashing tear gas inside the parliament. But in an interview with AFP in 2018, he rejected the “radical” and “nationalis­t” labels, saying his group has been better characteri­zed as social democratic since 2013. “One could say that I am a romantic person but I am not a chauvinist,” he added.

 ??  ?? PRISTINA: Newly elected Prime Minister of Kosovo Albin Kurti reviews Kosovo’s honor guard during the handover ceremony in Pristina yesterday. — AFP
PRISTINA: Newly elected Prime Minister of Kosovo Albin Kurti reviews Kosovo’s honor guard during the handover ceremony in Pristina yesterday. — AFP

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