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Kosovo, an endless crisis


Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso

9–11 minutes

  _____  

Kosovo parliament - © Ajdin Kamber/Shutterstock

Seven months after the elections, Kosovo does not have a parliament yet: the 
assembly finally elected a president, but then stalled over the choice of a 
Serbian vice president. A situation that remains divisive and uncertain

Kosovo has entered a new phase of institutional uncertainty. The “Vetëvendosje 
Movement”, which won the elections but did not secure a parliamentary majority, 
considers the Assembly constituted, but this is contested by opposition parties 
as well as by jurists.

Six and a half months after the parliamentary elections and following 60 
continuations of the constitutive session of the Assembly, Dimal Basha, 
proposed by “Vetëvendosje”, was finally elected Speaker. He secured this post 
after receiving votes from the “Democratic Party of Kosovo” (PDK) and the 
“Alliance for the Future of Kosovo” (AAK).

Following the election of the Speaker, three deputy speakers from Albanian 
parties were also elected: Albulena Haxhiu, Vlora Çitaku, and Kujtim Shala. 
Emilija Rexhepi was elected deputy speaker from non-Serb minorities, while the 
process stalled for two sessions at the voting of the Serb community’s deputy 
speaker candidate, whose election ultimately failed over the weekend.

All candidates from the Serb List did not receive the support of political 
parties. Neither did another MP from the Serb community, Nenad Rašić, from the 
party For Freedom, Justice and Survival, manage to get elected, as he received 
56 votes in favor—five short of the required 61. “Vetëvendosje” insisted on 
Rašić’s election, which is currently a minister in Albin Kurti’s caretaker 
government, but other parties did not support him, arguing that his election 
would be unlawful.

The failure to elect any of the Serb community MPs put forward for the position 
means the Assembly no longer has anyone from the Serb community to nominate for 
deputy speaker.

In this situation, Speaker Basha declared the constitutive session closed, even 
though the Rules of Procedure of the Assembly state that the constitutive 
session ends with the election of the Speaker and all five deputy speakers.

“As the Assembly, we have no other way forward regarding the deputy speaker 
from the Serb community; therefore, in this case, I consider that we have 
exhausted point four of the agenda, and I declare this constitutive session 
closed,” said Basha, arguing that the failure to elect one of the six members 
of the Assembly Presidency cannot become an obstacle to the constitution of the 
Assembly.


The positions of political parties


Parties that were in opposition in the previous legislature have deemed the 
Assembly’s constitution and the closure of the session by Speaker Dimal Basha 
unconstitutional.

The chairman of the PDK, Memli Krasniqi, accused “Vetëvendosje” leader Albin 
Kurti of blocking the process of forming new institutions. “It is simply the 
continuation of Albin Kurti’s political game, deepening the political crisis we 
are in, continuing his hesitation to enter constitutional deadlines because he 
doesn’t have the numbers to become prime minister, and wanting to continue the 
illegal usurpation of the Prime Minister’s Office as he has been doing for some 
time”, said Krasniqi.

Meanwhile, the chairman of the LDK, Lumir Abdixhiku, criticized not only 
“Vetëvendosje” but also the other two Albanian parties that, according to him, 
helped the Assembly end up with a leader who violates the Constitution.

“At this point, the naivety of the other parties is also apparent, as they are 
not only keeping the Assembly blocked but have also left us with a Speaker like 
Dimal Basha, who not only continued violating the Constitution but also claimed 
the Assembly was constituted, misinterpreting the Constitution of Kosovo,” said 
Abdixhiku.

Following the latest developments, Deputy Speaker from “Vetëvendosje”, Albulena 
Haxhiu, stated that there are two alternatives.

“We cannot remain hostage to those who deny our existence as a state. 
Therefore, it is extremely important that we move forward with the current 
presidency—meaning, in addition to the Speaker of the Assembly, with the 
already elected deputy speakers of the Assembly of Kosovo. We are interested in 
moving forward either with a new government or with elections, because we have 
no other alternative,” Haxhiu declared.


What do the Constitution and the Assembly’s Rules of Procedure say about deputy 
speakers?


Article 67 of the Constitution of the Republic of Kosovo regulates the election 
of the Speaker and the five deputy speakers of the Assembly. Paragraph 4 of 
this article stipulates that two deputy speakers represent communities that are 
not in the majority in the Assembly, and they are elected by the majority of 
all MPs.

“One deputy speaker shall be from among the MPs holding seats reserved or 
guaranteed for the Serb community, and the other deputy speaker from among the 
MPs holding seats reserved or guaranteed for other non-majority communities,” 
this paragraph of the Constitution specifies.

Meanwhile, point 5 of Article 12 of the Rules of Procedure of the Assembly 
provides that the constitutive session ends with the election of the Speaker 
and the deputy speakers of the Assembly.

Point 6.1 further specifies that “the candidate for deputy speaker from the 
Serb community shall be proposed by the majority of MPs from the Serb 
community.”


The case in the Constitutional Court


The voting for deputy speakers from minority communities was held separately, 
unlike in the past when they were voted in as a package.

This move was challenged at the Constitutional Court by the Serb List, which 
holds nine out of the ten reserved seats for Serbs in the Assembly and enjoys 
the support of Serbia.

“Constitutional and democratic principles have been gravely violated, while the 
Serb people have been denied the exercise of their guaranteed rights,” their 
statement reads, referring to the Assembly of the Republic of Kosovo as the 
“Assembly of Pristina,” thus continuing their stance of non-recognition of 
Kosovo’s institutions.


Assessments from Assembly monitors and jurists


The constitutive session cannot be considered concluded without the election of 
all deputy speakers, says Eugen Cakolli, Senior Researcher at the Kosovo 
Democratic Institute. He states that it is becoming increasingly clear that the 
country is being deliberately pushed towards a new constitutional crisis, 
which, in his view, is even deeper than the one over the election of the 
Assembly Speaker.

“There can be no realization of anything—no development of procedures, no 
exercise of parliamentary functions, nor the running of constitutional 
deadlines. The Speaker’s latest conclusions (‘inventions’) have no legal value. 
This entire political nonsense can now only be resolved by the Court—either by 
confirming the failure of the Assembly’s constitution within the 30-day 
deadline, or by declaring the process invalid and requiring a repeat of the 
voting procedure for the community deputy speakers,” Cakolli emphasized.

The same assessment is shared by researcher Albert Krasniqi from the 
organization Democracy Plus.

“The process of constituting the Assembly must return to where it was left: at 
the election of the two deputy speakers from the non-majority communities. Only 
after completing this step can the Assembly be considered constituted, and its 
Presidency legitimate to exercise the functions foreseen by the Constitution 
and the Rules of Procedure,” Krasniqi stated.

Former Deputy President of the Constitutional Court, Kadri Kryeziu, also sees 
dilemmas regarding the completion of the constitution process. He cites point 5 
of Article 12 of the Rules of Procedure of the Assembly. “As this legal 
provision is currently read, there is room to say that the constitutive session 
has not yet ended,” Kryeziu assessed.

The regular parliamentary elections were held on February 9, while the 
constitutive session of the Assembly began on April 15. Since then, dozens of 
session continuations have failed, as “Vetëvendosje” proposed candidates who 
were not supported by other parties, until August 26 when Dimal Basha was 
elected Speaker.

During this period, several cases were submitted to the Constitutional Court 
due to uncertainties over how to continue the process, until August 8 when the 
Court ordered the Assembly to elect a new Speaker within 30 days through open 
voting, with the same candidate to be put forward no more than three times.

 

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