Kosovo heads to the polls amid Serbia tensions

Kosovo heads to the polls amid Serbia tensions

Kosovo is to go to the polls tomorrow in a parliamentary election expected to be a key test for Prime Minister Albin Kurti after his governing party won in a landslide four years ago.

Eligible voters, including those of the diaspora, would cast ballots to elect 120 lawmakers among 26 political groupings and one independent candidate in a vote held from 7am until 7pm. The Serb minority has 10 secured seats while 10 more are for other minorities.

This is the first time since independence in 2008 that Kosovo’s parliament has completed a full four-year mandate. It is the ninth parliamentary vote in Kosovo since the end of the war from 1998 to 1999 between Serbian government forces and ethnic Albanian separatists that pushed Serbian forces out following a 78-day NATO air campaign. Serbia does not recognize Kosovo’s independence, proclaimed in 2008.

Kosovo heads to the polls amid Serbia tensions

Photo: AP

Kurti’s left-wing Vetevendosje! or Self-Determination Movement Party is seen as the front-runner, but is not expected to win the necessary majority to govern alone, leaving open the possibility the other two contenders join ranks if he fails to form a Cabinet.

“On Feb. 9 we vote for the future,” Kurti said. “We vote for Vetevendosje!”

The other contenders are the Democratic Party of Kosovo (PDK), whose main leaders are at The Hague tribunal accused of war crimes, and the Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK), the oldest party in the country that lost much of its support after the death in 2006 of its leader, Ibrahim Rugova.

During the election campaign, the parties made big-ticket pledges to increase public salaries and pensions, improve education and health services, and fight poverty. However, they did not explain where the money would come from, nor how they would attract more foreign investment.

“We have a plan for each city, each family, each persons,” said Bedri Hamza of the PDK.

“We have an alternative to guarantee a better life in Kosovo,” said Lumir Abdixhiku of the LDK.

Kosovo, with a population of 1.6 million, is one of the poorest countries in Europe with an annual gross domestic product of less than 6,000 euros per person.

Kosovo has also been affected by Washington’s imposition of a 90-day freeze on funding for different projects through the US Agency for International Development (USAID), which has been key in promoting the country’s growth. The US has invested US$2 billion in Kosovo since 1999, including investments of more than US$1 billion from USAID.

The vote would determine who would lead the Kosovo side in stalled normalization talks with neighboring Serbia, facilitated by the EU to get both sides closer to joining the bloc.

Kurti has been at odds with Western powers over some Cabinet actions last year, such as a ban on using the Serbian dinar and transfers from Serbia to citizens of Kosovo who depend on social services and payments.

Washington, Brussels and the Kosovo Force (KFOR) — a NATO-led stabilization force — have urged the government in Pristina to refrain from unilateral actions, fearing the revival of inter-ethnic conflict.

The EU and the US have urged the two sides to implement agreements reached two years ago that include a commitment by Kosovo to establish an Association of Serb-Majority Municipalities. Serbia was also expected to deliver on the de facto recognition of Kosovo.

KFOR increased its presence in Kosovo after last years’ tensions and added more for the parliamentary election period.

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