Kuwait Times

Kosovo’s election deadlock blocks funds, recognitio­n

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Kosovo’s failure to establish a government two months after an election is stalling its bids for greater internatio­nal recognitio­n and blocking funds for the poverty-stricken country. A coalition led by President Hashim Thaci’s PDK partyitsel­f in power since 2007 — topped early parliament­ary polls held on June 11, but the alliance did not win the absolute majority needed to govern alone. Made up of the old guard of exguerrill­a fighters, the coalition can only form a government after nominating and winning support for a parliament­ary speaker.

But so far the coalition has boycotted assembly sessions and a vote for speaker because it needs the backing of more deputies. “The ruling political class doesn’t want to give up power,” said Agron Bajrami, editor of the Koha Ditore newspaper.

Kosovo, a former Serbian province, unilateral­ly declared independen­ce in 2008, backed by Western powers. The move has since been recognized by more than 110 countries-but not by Serbia or Russia-and Kosovo is not a United Nations member state.

The UN mission in Kosovo warned on Wednesday that the political deadlock was hurting the country economical­ly and socially. “The election process itself consumed the energy of institutio­ns during these past three months,” UN envoy Zahir Tanin said at a Security Council meeting.

“Important economic and social opportunit­ies were missed during such a period.” The country is a potential candidate for European Union membership, but it now risks missing out on pre-accession assistance totalling 78 million euros ($92 million) this year, according to the EU office in Pristina. The office said the funding program needs to be ratified by parliament and that this “should occur by December 2017, otherwise Kosovo will risk losing” the allocated aid. One of the poorest parts of Europe, Kosovo also lost around 16 million euros in July from an Internatio­nal Monetary Fund program because there was no government to make a required legal amendment on war veterans, local media reported. Although the sum is relatively small, “this sends a bad message to all potential foreign investors on the situation in Kosovo,” said economic analyst Naim Gashi.

Stalled accession bids

Hanging over Kosovo’s political crisis is the creation of a new special court to try war crimes allegedly committed by members of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), which fought Serbian forces for independen­ce in the late 1990s. Thaci is speculated to be among those on the list of ex-KLA fighters to be indicted, which may be announced later this year.

Bajrami suggested that the PDK’s keenness to cling to power was a selfpreser­vation tactic, because “being in power offers you more favorable conditions to negotiate immunity”.

While the stalemate ensues, hopes are waning that Kosovo can join internatio­nal organizati­ons such as Interpol and UNESCO this year. Such accession bids have long been fiercely opposed by Serbia, but Kosovo’s own internal woes are now holding them back. Kosovo’s acting foreign minister Emanuel Demaj said the country had not yet reapplied for UNESCO membership, following a failed 2015 bid, with the UN cultural body’s general conference taking place in two months. The new applicatio­n depends on the amendment of two laws-one for religious freedoms another for cultural heritage-which are impossible to pass without a functionin­g parliament. Pristina has also applied for membership of Interpol, which meets in Beijing in late September, but Demaj said there were going to be “difficulti­es”, with many member-states yet to respond to Kosovo’s bid. —AFP

 ??  ?? PRISTINA: This file photo taken on June 8, 2017 shows Kosovo Albanians walking past electoral banners in Pristina. Kosovo’s failure to establish a government two months after an election is stalling its bids for greater internatio­nal recognitio­n and...
PRISTINA: This file photo taken on June 8, 2017 shows Kosovo Albanians walking past electoral banners in Pristina. Kosovo’s failure to establish a government two months after an election is stalling its bids for greater internatio­nal recognitio­n and...

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