Kosovo gets an army and a special court

With the kind permission of Belgrade daily Danas, here is the report on its interview, published  Monday under the headline “Prishtina is creating an army and is not afraid of a special court,” with Kosovo Deputy Foreign Minister Petrit Selimi.  I have made minor editorial changes to the English version, supplied by Petrit:

Our international partners have already met key Kosovo demands regarding the investigations of Special Prosecutor Clint Williamson into the Dick Marty Report. Unfortunately, Serbia has tried all propaganda means to use Dick Marty to re-write the history of Kosovo war and also to return the issue of Kosovo under the UN. There were more than 10 formal requests by Serbia to the UN to deal with allegations from the Dick Marty Report, but now it’s clear that these allegations will be investigated by a Kosovo court, within Kosovo’s law and Constitution, with international legal staff supporting our Special Court – stated today for Danas Petrit Selimi, Kosovo’s Deputy Foreign Minister, who Pristina media regard as the person who is leading public relations efforts in the cabinet of PM Hashim Thaci.

Selimi says that “because Kosovo wants a credible and transparent process that will close once and for all this chapter,” a special chamber will be set up in a European country, with a bilateral agreement between Kosovo and that country, in order to enable international judges and prosecutors to conclude any process that might arise from the EULEX investigation.

“Now it’s clear that no UN court but rather a Kosovo court with international staff will work to deal with any accusations made against any Kosovo citizen. Kosovo setting up a Special Court will also ensure to distance the liberation and independence movement in Kosovo from any individuals that might have engaged in criminal activities.” – stated Selimi for the Danas interview.

Danas: Will the allegations made against senior members of the Kosovo government have an impact on the election agenda in Kosovo? It’s known that Marty also accused Prime Minister Thaci of organ harvesting?

Selimi:  A major part of the allegations are science fiction and this will be proven by the investigations. But some allegations are very serious, and Kosovo will open a Special Court to deal with these.  As we will apply for membership tothe  Council of Europe in near future, it’s also important for Kosovo’s society and state to show it can deal with it’s own rotten apples. We know that even Nelson Mandela’s ANC had its own criminals. Unfortunately any guerrilla resistance can attract bad people with bad intentions. That is why it’s important that Kosovo parliament approves the creation of Special Court and the President extends the EULEX mandate for the final two years:  to silence once and for all those keen to systematically attack Kosovo’s reputation. NATO intervention in Kosovo and the KLA uprising marked the single most successful Western intervention, which helped both Serbia and Kosovo move towards European future.  The Special Court dealing with the Dick Marty allegations will cement Kosovo’s legitimacy as a modern, European state. We should not fear but rather fully embrace the creation of the court, knowing that the families of civilian victims on both sides, not only Albanian, need answers about their beloved ones.

Danas:  Do you expect that the principle of the “reserved places” in the Parliament will be preserved?

Selimi:  The Ahtisaari Plan asked for Kosovo to have “reserved seats” for two mandates for minorities, which gave them up to 1/4 of all seats in Kosovo Parliament, despite having only 5% of the population. This type of positive discrimination was needed to ensure Kosovo Serb leaders would join Kosovo institutions after independence. This formula is now automatically transformed into “guaranteed seats” which enable Serbs to have minimum 10 MP seats. The extension of the old formula is possible and is being supported by Prime Minister Thaci and the  international community, but right now there is simply no 2/3 majority in the Parliament to support this extension of “reserved seats.”

Danas:  Do you think it is feasible to form the Kosovo’s armed forces soon?

Selimi:  The Kosovo Armed Foces have already been formed, as a result of recent National Security Strategy, written with the support of the US and other NATO allies. Parliament will confirm this decision soon, but during the next year we will see creation of dynamic, defensive force that will provide Kosovo with an important element of the security architecture in the Balkans.  The Kosovo Parliament was also been accepted as an observer in the NATO Parliamentary Assembly, hence we will move firmly towards NATO integration. So Kosovo’s multi-ethnic army is not only feasible, but it’s a reality of a fundamental and irreversible state-building project that is unfolding every day.

Danas:  The President of Serbia Tomislav Nikolic mentioned the possibility of the creation of a new resolution on Kosovo that would be adopted by the Serbian Parliament. In your opinion, what would be the significance of such a document?

Selimi:  Any documents, resolutions, constitutions approved by Serbian institutions since 1999 have no bearing on Kosovo. The Serbian Parliament can declare that Mars is part of Serbia, but the reality on the ground and the historic Brussels Agreement between Kosovo and Serbia prove that there is a state called Kosovo, it’s a neighbor of Serbia, and we both must normalize relations if we want to become members of EU.

Danas: What should be the main topics in the next phase of the Brussels dialogue?

Selimi:  We must implement all agreements, including complete closure of all justice and police institutions of Serbia in north Kosovo and full integration into the Kosovo constitutional system. All new agreements will slowly but surely cement the separate roads of Kosovo and Serbia towards EU membership, which in the end will only be possible when both countries recognize each other’s existence.  This will be sine qua non of our future political dialogue.

 

Tags : , ,

8 thoughts on “Kosovo gets an army and a special court”

  1. Ukraine, on the other hand, is getting visa-free travel to the Schengen Zone by early next year? How long have they made Kosovo wait for this? An army is all very well and good, but doesn’t do much to end the inconvenience of having to get a visa to go see the kids working in Germany.

    The newspaper worked in the claim that Marty said Thaçi was directly involved in the organ business – as usual- but Marty clarified later that he specifically was not accusing him of that, only that “he must have known about it.” http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/article/marty-thaci-not-directly-involved-in-organ-harvesting

    It’s time to get this mess sorted out and move on. Will the prosecutors dare to put on the stand the person who claims he operated (on a living person – something Marty also denied happened) with a bayonet that happened to be lying around when there were no surgical tools in the kit to open up the chest? That’s what I’m waiting for – the Serbian prosecutors had high hopes for him at one time, although he smells fishier than Curveball ever did. My guess – there were crimes, but the majority of the victims were Albanian.

    1. Amer, do you mean majority of organ harvesting victims were Albanians?

      Setting up the court is just another farce directed by international community. They will setup the court, and show that nothing happened. It seems their views is if you are a Serb you can not be a victim just agresor.

      According to sources obtained by Helsinki Sanomat (in general Finnish media tend to be biased against Serbs), Clint Williamson was one of those who opposed investigation into Operation Storm in Croatia as “according to Pentagon, no war crimes had been committed by Croatian forces”.

      Also what Helsinki Sanomat states “Clint Williamson, who later became the US Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes, had close relations with the administration of Croatian President Tudjman”.

      Therefore, from beginning I had a doubts about Clint Williamson and how impartial can he get when investigating those claims where Serb were victims as he did not show much empathy towards Serb suffering in the past. Later when I read article from Helsinki Sanomat, it confirmed my doubts and I knew that is another farce (like negotiations about Kosovo’s status when was directed by Ahtisaari and US).

      I am deeply disgusted and disappointed.

      1. It remains to be shown that there were any organ-harvesting victims, remember. And even Marty talked about only “a handful” of cases. In fact, one of the human-rights activists in Belgrade said there were only potentially four or five possible victims (based on knowing when the various Serbs of an appropriate age and sex still unaccounted for disappeared).

        I only vaguely recall an article in Finnish, but as I remember it sounded like a rehash of the usual Serbian positions. (There must have been a translation into something other than Finnish, which I looked at more carefully to see if I could spot any obvious resemblances to Hungarian. A preposition or so was all I spotted, but then you wouldn’t expect too much at the surface level.)

        The prosecutors in Belgrade have been positive about Clint Williamson and his professionalism so far, we’ll have to wait and see what their position is after the indictments come out.

        1. @Amer – that thing was going on Balkan for years. Based on personal experience I can tell you this: If there was one case there were many cases. To setup the damned thing it required the time, money and the logistics. Contrary to the things one could find in the newspaper like killing a conscious man to harvest a heart etc… Anyway, no one there really has a heart.

        2. Joe, English translation of Helsinki Sanomat article http://files.snstatic.fi/HS/2013/4/jugoslavia/en.html It explains how J. Clint Williamson and other Americans influenced the Tribunal in Hague in Gotovina’s case.

          It is nice piece of investigative journalism.

          Just wonder why the same guy (J. Clint W.) was chosen to investigate allegations of organ trafficking in Kosovo when he never expressed any empathy towards Serbs victims in Croatia and Kosovo? It would have been more appropriate to chose someone completely independent to investigate those horrific allegations.

          Not much of similarities between Finnish and Hungarian, Joe, just few very old words.

  2. What’s wrong with having the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) deal with the Kosovar war crimes? Why special court for Kosovo, when all other former Yugoslav criminals (read nations) were tried in the Hague Court?

    What makes Kosovo so special again?!

    This question was already posed by former Chief Prosecutor of the ICTY, Carla del Ponte.

    1. In accordance with its “completion strategy” endorsed by the Security Council (http://www.icty.org/sid/10016) all ICTY investigations were completed by the end of 2004. It has initiated no new cases since then.

      1. It should have, but it didn’t…for political (not judicial) reasons! Therefore Kosovo’s “special court” has no political weight at all in the light of the former Yugoslavia war crimes “completion strategy”!

Comments are closed.

Tweet