Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Kosovo, Denmark ironing out prison rent agreement

- By Sylejman Kllokoqi and Llazar Semini

PRISTINA, Kosovo — Kosovo is hopeful that a deal with Denmark to rent 300 prison cells to help the Scandinavi­an country cope with its overpopula­ted prison system would help upgrade its correction­al service and also cope with the energy crisis.

The Justice Ministry has said the small Balkan country would be paid $236 million from Denmark for a 10-year agreement, which will fund Kosovo’s justice system and renewable energy projects.

Last week, Danish Justice Minister Nick Haekkerup said the agreement with Kosovo would help “expand the prison capacity in Denmark by several hundred places.”

Eris Hana, a senior legal adviser with Kosovo’s Justice Ministry and also part of the negotiatin­g team, said the deal also included a donation of “more than $68 million for 10 years” to help Kosovo build green energy.

Kosovo’s energy system, totally based on coal production, is in crisis, producing only 60% of daily consumptio­n, which has resulted in daily cuts.

The Danes have conducted a research study from that concluded that Kosovo’s correction­al institutio­ns “have the best infrastruc­ture in the region and also have the capacity to take 300 inmates,” Hana said.

Haekkerup, the Danish minister, said Friday that “it will be a groundbrea­king and historic agreement that will both create space in our prisons and ease the pressure on our prison officers,” Denmark will expand the capacity of Danish prisons by creating 326 new places in existing jails.

Kosovo’s prison system has a capacity of up to 2,000, from which about 400 are still free.

The plan is for the 300-cell prison in Gjilan, 30 miles southeast of the capital, Pristina, to be used to house the inmates from Denmark, according to Hana.

A Danish warden will run the new 300-cell facility, accompanie­d by an Albanian one and other local staff.

Fatmira Haliti of the Kosovo Rehabilita­tion Center for Torture Victims, a nonprofit organizati­on that monitors the system, said that transferri­ng about 200 inmates from Gjilan prison to make way for Danish prisoners would naturally overpopula­te other prisons.

Despite systemic improvemen­ts and some new facilities in recent years, “Kosovo’s correction­al service leaves much to desire and can hardly be compared to those in Denmark,” Haliti said.

Hana said they aren’t speeding up negotiatio­ns, which are considerin­g every detail. The Danish delegation is requesting investment in infrastruc­ture.

“We want to create the same standard for them and we will achieve it,” he said, referring to Denmark’s prison standards.

Following the letter of intent to be signed next week, the agreement is expected to be signed early next year and then both countries’ parliament­s should ratify it.

 ?? AP/STR ?? Kosovo prison guards inspect the fence of the 300-cell prison in Gjilan, southeast of the capital of Pristina, Kosovo, where Denmark would run the new facility.
AP/STR Kosovo prison guards inspect the fence of the 300-cell prison in Gjilan, southeast of the capital of Pristina, Kosovo, where Denmark would run the new facility.

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