Kosovo opposition releases tear gas inside parliament – again
PRISTINA, Kosovo (Reuters) – A lawmaker set off tear gas inside Kosovo’s parliament ahead of a vote that might clear the last hurdle to visa-free access to the European Union.
Some deputies rushed out of a committee room when an opposition politician opened the tear gas canister. Others approved a government report on a border demarcation deal with Montenegro while acrid fumes were still in the air.
Other protesters hurled stones at a nearby government building during the violence, the latest outburst against several reforms. They said the deal would require Kosovo to hand over 8,000 hectares (20,000 acres) of territory to Montenegro.
Local media said parliament may vote on the border deal on Thursday. The opposition has threatened to stop it by all means.
Driton Caushi, a member of the largest opposition party, opened the tear gas canister during a meeting of a parliamentary committee reviewing the border proposal. There have been similar acts by other opposition MPs inside parliament in recent months.
“As long as there is a criminal government in Kosovo that betrays the national interests, no one should hope that opposition resistance will be over,” Caushi said as he was handcuffed and led away by police.
A hand grenade was later thrown at a house belonging to the head of the government commission that drew up the border deal, police said. The grenade did not explode until a bomb squad later detonated it in a controlled blast.
Kosovo and its biggest supporters, the United States and the European Union, deny that Pristina would lose land in the deal, as claimed by the opposition. The say the proposed agreement with Montenegro is in line with international and local law.
“I can guarantee that Kosovo is not losing a single centimeter of its land,” Prime Minister Isa Mustafa told a news conference.
Kosovo is well behind its regional neighbors Serbia, Albania, Montenegro, Macedonia and Bosnia, who obtained visa-free access to the EU’s border-free Schengen zone in 2010.
Opposition to the border deal has been fierce in Kosovo. Tensions were exacerbated when an EU-brokered accord with Serbia gave more autonomy to Serb-dominated municipalities in the small state of 1.8 million, located to the north of Kosovo.
Kosovo declared independence in 2008, nearly a decade after NATO air strikes drove out Serbian security forces accused of killing and expelling ethnic Albanian civilians during a counter-insurgency war. Kosovo’s independence is now recognized by more than 110 countries, although not by Serbia.