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Kosovo Assembly election result deepens crisis over independence
By Paul Mitchell
22 November 2007
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The result of Saturdays Kosovo Assembly election has
deepened the crisis over independence. The Democratic Party of
Kosovo (PDK), political successors to the Kosovo Liberation Army
(KLA), secured 34 percent (about 220,000 votes) as against 22
percent for the Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK), in power since
the NATO intervention in 1998. The PDK does not have a majority
and may be forced into a coalition with the LDK.
There was a record low turnout43 percent of the provinces
1.5 million votersdown from 80 percent in elections soon
after the Kosovo war. The slump in votes is mainly due to haemorrhaging
of support for the LDKit received 45 percent in the last
election in 2003a sign of widespread hostility to endemic
poverty and corruption in the province. Doris Pack, head of the
European Parliament team observing the poll, noted that the
worryingly low turn-out reflected the populations disappointment
in the performance of their elected representatives and the uncertainty
regarding their future. In addition, most of the 120,000
members of Kosovos Serb minority followed appeals from Serbia
to boycott the election.
Nevertheless, former KLA leader Hashim Thaci, who is expected
to become prime minister, declared his partys vote of less
than 15 percent of the population as a mandate for independence
from Serbia. The citizens of Kosovo sent the world a message....
The strongest message was that Kosovo is ready [for] independence,
he declared.
Thaci says the Assembly will declare independence immediately
after December 10, the deadline for a troika of mediators
from the United States, the European Union, and Russia to report
to United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon on efforts to
reach a compromise between Serbia and Kosovos 90 percent
ethnic Albanian majority. However, two years of negotiations have
failed to bring about a settlement so far, and the two sides are
said to be as far apart as when they first started talks.
The issue of independence for Kosovo has enraged Serbia, inflamed
tensions between the United States and Russia, split Europe, and
encouraged secessionist movements elsewhere to press for independence.
There is widespread fear of further instability and violence whether
independence goes ahead or not.
Serbias minister for Kosovo, Slobodan Samardzic, warned,
If the independence of Kosovo is recognised, it would not
be the final stage of the disintegration of the former Yugoslavia,
but the first stage of new disintegration and secession in the
Balkans.
Branislav Ristivojevic, spokesman for the Democratic Party
of Serbia (DSS), led by Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica,
said, The whole world order would crumble, everything that
was built in the past 50 years would be meaningless. All the flash
points in the world, not just in the Balkans, would erupt.
If Kosovo declares independence, Serbia could respond by claiming
part of northern Serb-dominated Kosovo, and the remaining half
of Kosovos 120,000 Serbs who live in scattered enclaves
might flee there. Troops serving in NATOs Kosovo stabilisation
force, KFOR, have already drawn up plans to increase patrols,
seize police stations and seal the border with Serbia from December
10.
A raft of other separatist claims could follow, including from
Serbs living in the Republika Srpska region of Bosnia. European
Union foreign ministers this week noted grave concern
about the countrys rising political and ethnic tensions
as a result of the worsening economic situation and were forced
to extend the 2,500-strong troop presence there. The commander
of the EU forces in Bosnia has warned that Europe will have to
send in a lot more troops in the event of another outbreak
of war.
Pressure for secession is also coming from ethnic Albanians
living in the Presovo Valley in southern Serbia and in Macedonia,
where the countrys 25 percent Albanian minority staged a
rebellion in 2001. Further afield, many separatist regionsincluding
the former Soviet regions of Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and Transdniesterare
looking to Kosovo as a model to resolve their own conflicts.
US-Russia rivalries
Kosovo is above all a volatile arena for great power rivalry
between the US, which is asserting its power in former Soviet
republics and spheres of influence, and Russia, which, encouraged
by rising oil revenues and the crisis in Iraq, is seeking to realise
its own aspirations as a regional and world power.
President George W. Bush promised Albanian Prime Minister Sali
Berisha in June that Kosovo would be independent by the end of
2007. The US has already said it will immediately recognise Kosovo
following a declaration of independence. It has pressured the
EU to do the same and carry out its responsibility to appoint
a special representative to oversee the transition to full statehood
along the lines envisaged in the conditional independence
plan published by UN special envoy Martti Ahtisaari earlier in
the year.
Russia claims that independence would be a contravention of
international law and backs Serbia, which is proposing a broad
autonomy for Kosovo instead. It forced the West to put the
Ahtisaari plan on hold after threatening to veto the plan at the
UN Security Council in August.
The future status of Kosovo has created divisions among EU
members on the issue seen as key to the credibility of Europes
foreign policy.
We are doing all we can to persuade the Kosovars not
to make a unilateral declaration, Luxembourg Foreign Minister
Jean Asselborn said. A unilateral declaration would be quite,
quite bad. Theres a certain explosiveness in this region.
Reports suggest 22 of the EUs 27 member states are prepared
to recognise Kosovo without waiting to secure everyones
consent. Britain and France are most prepared to recognise Kosovan
independence, but Spain, Hungary, Greece, Cyprus and Romania are
reluctant because of ties to Serbia or fears that it could encourage
a wave of separatism in their own countries.
Germanys position is less certain, as there is more pressure
domestically not to become involved in an independent Kosovo without
a new UN mandate. Die Welt said that these elections
are not the end of the Kosovo crisis, but only a passage toward
heavy conflict that can also be bloody, and whose consequences
will not be limited to the Balkans.
Frankfurter Rundschau complained, Kosovo is not
a democracy at all. The power is not with the people but with
international diplomats and characterised Thacis DPK
as a client party with mafia overtones.
Wolfgang Ischinger, the German diplomat leading the troika
negotiations for the EU, has tried to float a so-called status-neutral
proposal to try and delay a decision on Kosovos final status.
But Serbian Prime Minister Kostunica rejected it as just another
name for independence, which had already masqueraded as supervised
independence, limited independence, confederation and different
variations of the model of two German states.
For most Kosovans, life has become unbearable and is a major
reason for the low election turnout.
A Kosovo Poverty Assessment report published by the
World Bank last month states that agriculture remains at subsistence
level and industrial output has stagnated. Although the province
has some of Europes biggest mineral reserves, they lay untouched,
beset by pollution problems, ownership arguments and ethnic rivalries.
Brown coal deposits are the fifth largest in the world, and there
are substantial deposits of lead, zinc, gold, silver and rare
metals worth billions of dollars. The largest company and exporter
in Kosovo before the Kosovo war, the Trepca mining complex, was
taken into a form of receivership in August to protect it from
creditors (including, it is said, the British company that owned
it before its nationalisation in 1945-1946) and pave the way for
its privatisation. The situation is further complicated by the
mines locationin the north of the province stretching
from the Kosovo Albanian area through the Serb enclave into Serbia
proper.
Some 45 percent of the population in Kosovo is poorsurviving
on less than 43 euros per adult per monthand another 18
percent are vulnerable. Those that are better off are so mainly
because of remittances from relatives working abroad. Nearly 80
percent of the population have experienced a decline in living
standards since 2003. Poverty is so widespread and all encompassing
that the province has the lowest levels of inequality in Europe,
but the gap between the richest and poorest is growing. About
30 percent of workers are unemployed and real wages are stagnant.
Social assistance programmes have had little impact on improving
the welfare of the population.
To make matters worse, the price of food has soared recently.
A standard loaf of bread, for example, now costs 0.5 euros, up
from 0.25 euros in August, and could rise to 0.7 euros next year.
The government has no storage facilities for wheat and other vital
commodities, and only 3 million euros in its emergency fund. It
blames the problems on the rise in world wheat prices and the
Serbian government for putting pressure on companies in Serbia
to stop trading with Kosovo.
The magazine Balkan Insight quoted one foodstore owner
in the capital Pristina, who said, With the steep rise in
prices, people cant afford to pay for the goods they buy,
and I am forced to let them buy things on credit, so they can
pay me later. The magazine also quoted Alma Gjekaj, a young
woman from Pristina, who said she had to leave a lot of items
off her usual shopping list because prices have soared. I
just dont know how I will manage.... We cant cope
with these prices.
I dont trust anybody anymore, the government keeps
lying all the time, and I am tired of living like this,
she added.
See Also:
US and Russia at loggerheads
over Kosovo independence
[23 July 2007]
US leads push for Kosovo independence
[13 June 2007]
Seven years after
US-led war on Yugoslavia Deadlocks continue at Kosovo final status
talks: Part Two
[1 April 2006]
Seven years after
US-led war on Yugoslavia Deadlocks continue at Kosovo final status
talks: Part One
[31 March 2006]
After the Slaughter:
Political Lessons of the Balkan War
[14 June 1999]
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