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Why we should be worried about the fall of Kosovo’s government? - European 
Western Balkans


Isidora Stakić

9-11 minutes

  _____  

The government of Kosovo, led by Albin Kurti, was toppled on 25 March 2020, 
less than two months after it was formed. The vote of no confidence was 
initiated by the Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK), a junior partner in Kurti’s 
Self-Determination-led government after the prime minister sacked the interior 
minister, Agim Veliu, an LDK member. The COVID-19 pandemic served as a 
smokescreen to obscure proper analysis of the government’s collapse. The 
coalition partners came to loggerheads when Veliu contradicted the government 
by supporting the declaration of a national state of emergency, which was 
suggested as a response to the pandemic by the country’s president, Hashim 
Thaçi. While the pandemic was used as a pretext, the real reason the government 
was toppled lies in the conflict between Kurti and Thaçi.

Kurti’s announcement of a war on corruption and organised crime and his 
insistence on a new approach to the dialogue with Serbia threatened the 
position of Kosovo’s president, who was described by Slovenian think-tank 
IFIMES as “a symbol of the political-criminal octopus 
<https://www.ifimes.org/en/9685> ”. With no significant support of the 
electorate, Thaçi was forced to seek allies beyond Kosovo’s borders. He found 
them in the US administration, in the form of president Trump’s special envoy 
for the Serbia and Kosovo negotiations, Richard Grenell, and also in the form 
of Serbian president, Aleksandar Vučić. Even though the dialogue between Kosovo 
and Serbia has been officially suspended for some time, these three politicians 
have been meeting in secret and negotiating a new, final agreement, with a view 
to it being signed as soon as possible. Kurti was little more than an obstacle 
to this plan, which is why Grenell decided to help topple the recently formed 
government of Kosovo. So why should the collapse of Kurti’s government be cause 
for concern?


Land Swap


One of the reasons is that the Kurti government was the last obstacle to the 
quick deal being negotiated by Vučić, Thaçi and Grenell. Even though Grenell 
has officially denied that any exchange of territory between Kosovo and Serbia 
has been discussed in his presence, this is an idea Vučić and Thaçi have been 
pushing since 2018. Let us first take a look at why a land swap might suit the 
interests of these three men and why they are in a hurry. As many have been 
quick to point out, Grenell is in a hurry to broker a “historic agreement” 
between Serbia and Kosovo, which could be shown off to the American public as a 
Trump administration’s foreign policy victory in the run-up to the presidential 
election. It is also not beyond the realms of possibility that Grenell is 
motivated by personal ambition and the acquiring credibility as an 
international negotiator. Thaçi, meanwhile, is eager to conclude any kind of 
deal that will guarantee him immunity from criminal prosecution, that is, any 
deal that will prevent the Specialist Prosecutor’s Office in The Hague from 
indicting him for war crimes. Lastly, Vučić is keen to strike a deal that he 
will be able to present to the Serbian electorate – through rigorously 
controlled media – as a personal victory. An exchange of territory would, after 
all, be less harmful to Vučić’s ratings than an unconditional recognition of 
Kosovo’s independence.

And why would a land swap be bad for everyone else? Firstly, this 
quasi-solution would be a defeat for the idea of the state as a political 
community of its citizens, regardless of their ethnicity. Drawing new borders 
along the lines of “ethnic demarcation” would reinforce the dominance of 
ethno-nationalism in the region and would normalise the dangerous idea that 
ethnically homogenous communities are “natural”. Secondly, a territorial 
exchange would be difficult to implement in the real world without causing 
enormous human suffering – above all for those who would find themselves on the 
“wrong” side of the border – and there would be many of them. People would be 
forced to leave their homes in fear, while those who choose to stay would live 
their lives in segregation. Finally, the drawing of new borders in the Balkans 
would legitimise existing aspirations to create new, ethnically clean states. 
In the past, such aspirations have mostly ended in bloodshed.


Soft Coup D’état


Another reason why the overthrow of the Kosovo government is a cause for 
concern is that it is the start of a soft coup. This coup is supported by the 
Trump administration following unsuccessful attempts to exert pressure on the 
government of Kosovo. In late February, when Kurti announced the gradual 
removal of tariffs on Serbian goods and the establishment of reciprocity in 
bilateral relations between Kosovo and Serbia, Grenell threatened to suspend US 
financial aid to Kosovo and even to withdraw US troops unless the tariffs were 
revoked immediately and unconditionally. This strikingly disproportionate 
punishment was ultimately not needed as the COVID-19 crisis erupted – right on 
time for Thaçi and Grenell.

Disagreements over management of the crisis served as a convenient pretext for 
the overthrow of the Kurti government. It did not take long for the junior 
coalition partner, LDK, to take Thaçi’s side. This defection should be 
understood in light of the fact that the war on corruption announced by the 
prime minister would not be a problem only for Thaçi, but also for the LDK 
leadership. With the collapse of the Kosovo government, each of the parties 
involved in the coup got something they needed: Grenell cleared the way for the 
so-called comprehensive agreement between Belgrade and Prishtina; Thaçi got a 
chance to sign the agreement as a peacemaker and, in so doing, avoid being 
indicted for war crimes; while the LDK leadership got protection from 
anti-corruption measures and potential prosecutions. It should also be 
remembered that the collapse of Kosovo’s government is also a boon for 
Aleksandar Vučić, who would certainly prefer not to have Kurti as his opposite 
number in the negotiations.

On 22 April, once the Self-Determination party had not appointed a candidate 
for new prime minister and instead called for fresh elections after the 
pandemic, the president of Kosovo officially offered the mandate to form a new 
government to any party that can secure a parliamentary majority. Many have 
classed this act by Thaçi as unconstitutional, since Kosovo’s constitution 
provides no deadline by which the largest party has to put forward a new prime 
minister. In the meantime, support for Self-Determination among the electorate 
continues to grow. Since the parliamentary elections in October 2019, when 
Kurti’s party won just over 26 percent of the vote, polls indicate that the 
party’s rating has improved by as much as 50 percent 
<https://www.dw.com/sr/kurti-pod-bara%C5%BEnom-paljbom-zbog-saradnje-sa-srbima-tokom-pandemije/a-53093516>
 . It is important to note here that the chairperson of the Kosovo assembly who 
headed the LDK party list in this election, Vjosa Osmani, opposed the vote of 
no confidence during the pandemic and also opposed the formation of a new 
government in which the LDK would be partnered with the so-called “war 
fraction” (PDK, AAK and NISMA). In spite of all of this, Thaçi and Grenell seek 
to present the coup as a victory for democracy, highlighting the legitimacy of 
a future government without Self-Determination 
<https://twitter.com/RichardGrenell/status/1251880416253886468> . This attempt 
to redefine democratic legitimacy and to separate the concept of democracy from 
the will of the people is dangerous not only for Kosovo but also further abroad.


The End for the EU in the Balkans?


A third aspect of this that should be of concern is the reaction of the 
European Union to events in Kosovo – or rather, the failure of the EU to react. 
Although some European officials have voiced support for Kurti’s plan to 
gradually remove tariffs against Serbia or opposed the vote of no confidence 
during the pandemic, the European Union has proved to be unready – or unwilling 
– to prevent the collapse of Kosovo’s government. It remains to be seen whether 
it will be able to prevent the agreement on a land swap between Kosovo and 
Serbia. In fairness, the idea to redraw borders has first appeared within the 
Brussels dialogue between Belgrade and Prishtina, which indicates that the 
European Union may not be wholly opposed to such a notion. Thus far, the EU-led 
dialogue has not yielded the expected results and has come to represent a 
source of frustration among citizens, both in Serbia and in Kosovo.

Why then should the EU’s waning interest in the Balkans be a cause for concern? 
Above all because a withdrawal by the EU would leave room for other, 
potentially very dangerous external influences – as evidenced by recent events 
in Kosovo and as discussed in this article. Second, in spite of the undeniable 
structural problems it has faced for years, the European Union still has the 
potential to become, through fundamental and radical reform, a genuine 
community of peoples. In this process, it is important not to leave the Balkans 
by the wayside. Part of these reforms should be the EU’s reengagement with the 
dialogue between Serbia and Kosovo, founded on new principles and focused on 
the wellbeing of ordinary citizens rather than political elites.

This op-ed is part of a series of a policy commentaries entitled, “Serbia 
during the coronavirus pandemic” produced by the Belgrade Centre for Security 
Policy.

 

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