Kosovo - no return?

In light of recent protests, the international community and the Kosovo 
authorities must do more to ensure the sustainable return of Serbs and other 
non-Albanian minorities to Kosovo.

By Ian Bancroft

Protests by ethnic Albanians over the Easter period against the return of 
twenty-six Serb families to the village of Zac, near Istok in the Pec district 
of north-western Kosovo, have once again shed light on the problems affecting 
internally displaced persons (IDPs). The lacklustre return of Serbs and other 
non-Albanian minorities to Kosovo has long constituted a major failure of the 
international presence in Kosovo; one that undermines assertions of Kosovo's 
supposedly multi-ethnic character. Without further steps to ensure the 
sustainable return of Serbs and other non-Albanian minorities, the prospects 
for conflict transformation in Kosovo look bleak. 

Eduardo Arboleda, the head of UNHCR (the UN High Commissioner for Refugees) in 
Serbia, insists that “the return of displaced persons literally stopped” 
following Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence. According to UNHCR 
statistics, only 631 persons returned to Kosovo last year, leaving some 205,835 
registered Serb IDPs from Kosovo; with some estimates suggesting that a further 
20,000 Serbs remain IDPs inside Kosovo itself. In response to these protests, 
Serbia's secretary of state for Kosovo and Metohija, Oliver Ivanovic, has 
called upon the international community to “send a clear message to Albanians 
about their position over this, if their statements about supporting the return 
of Serbs are in fact sincere”.

A highly-critical report published last summer by Minority Rights Group 
International (MRG) detailed how members of minority communities were leaving 
Kosovo due to persistent exclusion and discrimination. Entitled 'Filling the 
Vacuum: Ensuring Protection and Legal Remedies for Minorities in Kosovo', the 
report concluded 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 report also 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” 
and that Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence has left “a vacuum in 
effective international protection for minorities”.

A spate of recent incidents have highlighted the lack of security guarantees 
that only provide a further disincentive for potential returnees. KFOR, for 
instance, recently condemned the desecration of several tombs in the village of 
Rabovce, near Lipljan in central Kosovo, emphasizing that “such incidents 
jeopardize productive and decent coexistence”. The grave of an ethnic Serb 
woman, meanwhile, the first to be buried in Gnjilane cemetery since 1999, was 
also vandalized. The on-going failure to tackle deficiencies in the area of the 
rule of law has further contributed to the plight of Kosovo's minorities.  

Mark Lattimer, the executive director of MRG, also emphasised how “restrictions 
of movement and political, social and economic exclusion are particularly 
experienced by smaller minorities”. Such conditions have been 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.

Arboleda, however, criticised some displaced persons for not accepting the 
conditions offered and for demanding “really new houses and cable TV with Serb 
channels”. Arboleda added that, “we are under obligation to offer assistance to 
each returnee, but there are conditions – UNHCR is not a development agency, we 
can only repair houses that were damaged slightly”.

The OSCE Mission in Kosovo recently issued a report, entitled “In Pursuit of 
Durable Solutions for those Displaced in the Collective Centres in 
Strpce/Shterpce Municipality”, which described the conditions of some 700 
displaced Kosovo Serbs and Serb refugees from Croatia living in collective 
centres and social housing as “appalling”. The report called upon the local 
authorities – who “have done little to encourage displaced persons to return” – 
to provide sustainable solutions, including the provision of better housing 
conditions and electricity.

The situation is such that the Council of Europe's commissioner for human 
rights, Thomas Hammarberg, has called on European countries to halt the forced 
return of refugees – primarily Roma – until the Kosovo authorities provide 
adequate living conditions, social services, employment and health care. 
Hammarberg insisted that, “a quick deportation from European countries now to 
Kosovo is irresponsible...the majority of those who are sent back are leaving 
Kosovo again and trying to reach other parts of Europe”.

This latest series of protests has refocused attention on the insufficient 
political will to ensure the sustainable return of Serbs and other non-Albanian 
minorities to Kosovo. In the absence of basic security guarantees and adequate 
living conditions, the prospect for future returns continues to diminish, 
despite statements to the contrary from both domestic and and international 
actors. The litany of failures with respect to minority rights have only been 
further exacerbated and entrenched by Kosovo's unilateral declaration of 
independence. Contending with the problems faced by IDPs, however, is key to 
alleviating a persistent source of tension and instability throughout the 
entire Western Balkans.  

Ian Bancroft is the co-founder of TransConflict and a regular columnist for The 
Guardian on Western Balkan affairs.

http://www.transconflict.com/News/2010/April/Kosovo_No_Return.php

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