Date: Friday, June 5, 2009, 6:09 AM

The flight of Kosovo's minorities (The Guardian)

The EU insists that Kosovo is a tolerant and multi-ethnic society. So why
are its minorities leaving? 

 

 <http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/ianbancroft> Ian Bancroft 

 <http://www.guardian.co.uk/> guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 3 June 2009 20.30 

  

A  <http://www.minorityrights.org/> highly critical report by Minority
Rights Group International (MRG) maintains that members of minority
communities are beginning to leave  <http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/kosovo>
Kosovo over a year after its unilateral declaration of independence, due to
persistent exclusion and discrimination. In contradicting the conclusions of
the EU's general affairs and external relations council, the report once
again demonstrates the emptiness and evasiveness of statements by members of
the international community asserting Kosovo's supposedly multi-ethnic
character. Without urgent measures to improve the position of minorities in
Kosovo, such a discourse will increasingly serve only to parody, not
portray, the reality on the ground. 

  

The
<http://www.minorityrights.org/7856/reports/filling-the-vacuum-ensuring-prot
ection-and-legal-remedies-for-minorities-in-kosovo.html> report, Filling the
Vacuum: Ensuring Protection and Legal Remedies for Minorities in Kosovo,
concludes that Kosovo "lacks effective international protection for
minorities, which is worsening the situation for smaller minorities and
forcing some to leave the country for good". These minorities include not
only Kosovo's Serbs, but also Ashkali, Bosniaks, Croats, Egyptians, Gorani,
Roma and Turks, who together make up around 5% of the population of Kosovo
according to local estimates. 

  

MRG's conclusions clearly
<http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/en/gena/10792
1.pdf> contradict those of the recent meeting of the EU's general affairs
and external relations council, which "noted with satisfaction the initial
results achieved by  <http://www.eulex-kosovo.eu/> EULEX in assisting the
Kosovo authorities in consolidating the rule of law and in contributing to a
safe and secure environment for all inhabitants, regardless of their ethnic
origins". The divergence between such statements and the reports of human
rights organisations such as MRG has become a distinctive feature of the
international community's efforts to provide positive assessments of
Kosovo's institutions. The result is policies that are insufficient to
contend with the substantive problems faced by local communities. 

Though the government of Kosovo have often been commended for its stated
commitment to upholding minority rights, MRG's report goes on to describe
how "a lack of political will among majority Albanians and poor investment
in protection mechanisms have resulted in minority rights being eroded or
compromised in the post-independence period". According to MRG, Kosovo's
unilateral declaration of independence has left "a vacuum in effective
international protection for minorities"; a vacuum that the Kosovo
government seems both unwilling and unable to fill. Without tackling
deficiencies in the area of the rule of law - reconfirmed by a
<http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/main/news/19752/> newly released report by
the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network (BIRN), which describes Kosovo's
courts as being "inefficient, opaque, and hampered by persistent
institutional obstacles" - the plight of minorities will continue to be of
secondary importance to the apparent need to
<http://www.enewspf.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=7643:vi
ce-president-biden-address-to-the-parliament-of-bosnia-and-herzegovina&catid
=88888983:latest-national-news&Itemid=88889930> proclaim Kosovo an example
of a tolerant and multi-ethnic society. 

Indeed, Mark Lattimer, the executive director of MRG,
<http://uk.oneworld.net/article/view/162983/1/> also emphasised how
"restrictions of movement and political, social and economic exclusion are
particularly experienced by smaller minorities". Such conditions are only
likely to be further aggravated by the worsening economic situation in
Kosovo, especially for the Ashkali, Egyptian and Roma communities that
suffer from deeply ingrained poverty and marginalisation. 

MRG has long drawn attention to the many failures to uphold the rights of
minority communities in Kosovo, with a
<http://www.minorityrights.org/664/press-releases/failure-by-international-c
ommunity-to-protect-minorities-in-kosovo-could-lead-to-renewed-conflict.html
> 2006 report, Minority Rights in Kosovo under International Rule,
describing the situation of minorities as the worst in Europe and "little
short of disastrous"; the international community having allowed "a
segregated society to develop and become entrenched". Despite these and
other warnings from human rights organisations, the international community
has continued to not only ignore the difficulties faced by minority
communities in Kosovo, but to regularly proclaim success with respect to
minority rights protection. 

While both the international community and the Kosovo government insist that
minority rights are guaranteed and conform to the highest international
standards, MRG's report instead highlights how the segregation of Kosovo
continues unabated. Indeed, it is increasingly clear that the litany of
failures with respect to minority rights has been further exacerbated and
entrenched by Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence. In sidelining
the imperatives of re-integration, the international community's approach
towards Kosovo is likely to have ramifications elsewhere in the Western
Balkans. Without immediate and substantial steps to tackle minority rights
issues, especially the
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/may/05/kosovo-serbs-return>
return of internally displaced persons (IDPs) and refugees, Kosovo will
remain the most segregated territory in Europe and a constant source of
tension and instability for the entire region.

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/jun/03/kosovo-minorities-eu-gov
ernment

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