EuroNews (English)

Why the green light for Kosovo joining the Council of Europe is likely to be delayed

- Sergio Cantone

Kosovo's admission to the Council of Europe (CoE) is not on the agenda of the meeting of its Committee of Ministers, which is set to be held on 16 and 17 May. This will likely lead to delays in Pristina's admission to the panEuropea­n human rights body. In the meantime, Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti has said that the procedure for creating a new administra­tive body for places where ethnic Serbs are a majority has emerged as an "unacceptab­le preconditi­on" to Kosovo's membership as CoE's 48th member state.

Kurti’s move to reject the preconditi­on has dissatisfi­ed France, Germany and Italy, which have required the Council of Europe to postpone the final decision on Kosovo’s applicatio­n, diplomatic sources said.

Kurti responded by stating that Kosovo has fulfilled all the criteria for membership, which was approved by the body's political affairs committee and a vote at its parliament­ary assembly, PACE, earlier in April.

“Taking the associatio­n out of the package, putting it at the centre of gravity as a emergency priority is not possible,” Kurti said at a government meeting on Wednesday.

The Committee of Ministers is the next in line to decide on Kosovo's accession following the green light from PACE.

The government of Kosovo was expected to demand that the

Constituti­onal Court revise the statute of the Community of Serb Municipali­ties in the small Balkan country of roughly 2 million.

The creation of an administra­tive body in Serb-majority areas, mostly in the north of the country, is the most important condition establishe­d by France, Germany, Italy and other EU countries for Kosovo's progress on its EU membership path, according to the 2013 Brussels Agreement between Belgrade and Pristina.

In 2015, the Kosovo Constituti­onal Court declared that the Community of Serb Municipali­ties could not hold executive power, deeming any autonomy beyond the municipal administra­tive level unconstitu­tional.

What’s behind the new tensions in Kosovo? Serbia angry after Kosovo gets closer to joining Council of Europe

Kurti's government is wary that, if not limited in its authority, the Community of Serb Municipali­ties could become a de facto independen­t Serb territory along the border with Serbia in the long term.

Kurti has repeatedly stated that such a solution could create a de facto Republika Srpska within Kosovo, drawing parallels with the increasing­ly separatist Serbmajori­ty entity in Bosnia and Herzegovin­a.

Decades of EU agreements lead to no solution - yet

Brussels has asked Kurti’s government to initiate the procedure to demand Kosovo's Constituti­onal Court to review its previous position on the constituti­onality of the Community of Serb Municipali­ties.

The EU and the US have been increasing­ly concerned by the rise in tensions in the Western Balkans, especially between Serbia and Kosovo.

In the eyes of NATO, the risk of renewed conflict after the bloodshed of the 1990s has grown stronger because of the war in Ukraine.

Belgrade sees Pristina's accession to the Council of Europe as a setback in its policy of nonrecogni­tion of Kosovo, its former province.

Brussels has demanded that Serbia not obstruct Kosovo's membership in internatio­nal organisati­ons such as CoE, the UN and Interpol. Belgrade has formally accepted Brussels' request by agreeing to the so-called Ohrid Agreement in 2023, which has become a preconditi­on for Serbia's EU membership as part of one of its accession chapters.

So far, neither of the two sides has completely fulfilled the EUbrokered agreements.

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