Nonviolence is nonviolent

I’m taking flak for yesterday’s post on the violence between Albin Kurti’s demonstrators and the police in Kosovo yesterday.  Most of the criticism is based on misunderstanding or distortion.  I don’t know what RTK read over the air during the evening news, but I would urge those who were upset by it to read the entire original, then compose and submit a reasoned comment.  I’ve published a few already.  In the meanwhile, I’ll try to respond to what I have heard so far.

First, I wasn’t there, so I depended on news reports that the demonstrators were throwing rocks, which in my book is a violent act.  Here is a BBC account:

Police said more than 30 officers were injured after protesters hurled rocks and metal bars at them in the town of Podujevo, and at the nearby border crossings of Merdare and Dheu i Bardhe….Police responded with tear gas and water cannon and a Reuters reporter saw several injured protesters in the ensuing clashes.

It is Martin Luther King day tomorrow in the U.S., so this is a fine weekend to make this point:  nonviolence is nonviolent.  It requires the demonstrators to resist the temptation to throw rocks, push the police, whack them with baseball bats or attack them in any way.  This requires training and discipline.

The first time I sat down in a street for a cause was 1964 in Cambridge, Maryland, then a segregated city in which the police and National Guard were not on our side.  We were civil rights demonstrators advocating equal treatment for the Black population.  The National Guard, which was under state (not national) authority at the time, was armed with tear gas and bayonets.  Yes, fixed bayonets.  Had we in any way provoked them, there would surely have been a much worse mess than yesterday in Kosovo, including deaths.  Had we tried to remain seated in the street, they would have dispersed or arrested us, or both.  We would have had to remain nonviolent throughout that process as well, not resisting arrest or trying to escape, even when the tear gas burned and the billy clubs (or the bayonets) got used.

It appears to me that Albin is not exerting the kind of nonviolent discipline that nonviolence requires.  He seems to me to be trying to provoke the authorities, knowing full well that they will hesitate to use lethal force.  If I am correct about that, I stand by every word of what I wrote yesterday.  If I am wrong, I may need to adjust my view, but I’d like someone who was there to tell me that there was no physical provocation of the police, even after the police started to try to disperse the protesters. As a citizen, you are not entitled to use force against the authorities just because they use force against you.  The monopoly on the legitimate means of violence is theirs, even when they are in the wrong. You have the right to resist passively (not actively!) and sue them in court after the fact.

Of course Albin may reject this view and challenge the authorities with rocks or other means.  If he does, he can expect to be arrested and tried.

I’ve also been challenged on grounds that I showed bias toward the Serbs by opposing the Albanian blockage of the border crossings and not the Serb embargo of Kosovar goods.  This is wrong.  I have decried the Serbian blockade of Kosovo and urged that it be lifted.

I have been told the underlying cause of what happened is that Prime Minister Hashim Thaci has refused to implement a parliamentary resolution calling for reciprocity with Serbia.  All the demonstrators were trying to do is ensure that reciprocity.

There is a big difference in the American system of government between a Congressional resolution, which the executive branch can ignore, and a law, which it cannot.  Even with a law, there is often some leeway in implementation.  In a case like this, where implementation requires the cooperation of another sovereign government, it may well take time and effort to get results.  Thaci’s government has chosen the route of negotiation without (further) unilateral action.  Whether that is wise or not, Albin is entitled to demonstrate against it, to speak against it in parliament, but not to try to implement the resolution by blocking the roads.

A final concern I heard yesterday was that this might lead to civil war within Kosovo.  That I take very seriously.  Kosovars, from Albin Kurti to Hashim Thaci, should take stock now and come to the realization that further incidents of this sort are in no one’s interest.  The Serbs have already done themselves tremendous damage by blocking the roads in northern Kosovo and challenging the international authorities, which has put at risk their hopes for European Union candidacy.  How much sympathy with Kosovo do you think will survive in Washington, Brussels or even Tirana if you continue to fight with each other when there are so many more important things to do?

 

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6 thoughts on “Nonviolence is nonviolent”

  1. “A final concern I heard yesterday was that this might lead to civil war within Kosovo. ”

    The person who told you that needs to see a shrink.

    And Tirana is a non-entity. Sadly.

  2. Everybody else, from the Serbian newspapers to the Chicago Tribune, is also reporting that the protesters were throwing stones, and some add “items of metal.” The B92 translator mistranslated “lumps of snow” as “snowballs,” much to the merriment of some.

    One reason I follow the events in Kosovo is because, like America, it gained its independence by fighting for it, to international disapproval (even though with some important help from stronger friends), and it’s fascinating to watch its progress. America’s start was not easy, either. After the Revolution, the country went through a major financial depression (without any help from the IMF) and here in now staid Massachusetts Shay’s Rebellion against the government began. It was probably justified, in human terms (soldiers who had fought for years for the country were financially ruined and thrown into debtors prison), but it was put down as a danger to the survival of the country as a whole, since Britain didn’t give up hopes of retaking the country for years. (The cannon used against protesters then didn’t fire water, BTW. But then, the protesters were armed with more than stones.) “Liberty may be endangered by the abuses of liberty as well as the abuses of power.” (James Madison – one of those Founding Fathers Americans tend to go on and on about.) Maybe it’s something worth considering in Europe’s newest democracy?

  3. It’s somewhat fascinating how many similarities there are between (militant) nationalists of all ethnic origins in the Balkans. Each of those like to describe themselves as the “greatest patriots”, but in reality – they are all doing exactly those things that go directly against the interests of their respective nation states.

    1. It is wrong to lump them together just because they have “something” in common. I watched a TV program some time ago in which what Albin Kurti said regarding Serbia reminded me of what you have published. Following your logic, I must associate you with VeteVendosje members.

      Albin Kurti and his followers have no Serb blood in their hands nor do they advocate violence towards Serbs like the nationalist Serb organisations do.

      1. “Albin Kurti and his followers have no Serb blood in their hands nor do they advocate violence towards Serbs like the nationalist Serb organisations do”.

        I was not speaking about “blood in hands” or about violence toward others. I didn’t even mention any of these. My point refers to any moves of any sort which are politically harmful to the interest of one’s country.

  4. “I’m taking flak for yesterday’s post on the violence between Albin Kurti’s demonstrators and the police in Kosovo yesterday. ”

    So is the rest of the “international community,” which is being accused by the NGO’s in Prishtina of enabling Thaci and the police’s “violent” behavior. The Assembly leader is acting responsibly by calling on the President to convene a meeting of all parties (including non-political organizations) to meet for dialog. (Her responsibility under the Constitution.) VV didn’t exhaust all the possibilities available under Assembly rules before going to direct action, he says.

    This may turn out to be an excellent learning opportunity for the country, as well as a kind of final exam. Eventually (Feith is talking about this year) the training wheels are going to come off, supervised independence will end, and it will be a relief to all to know that Kosovo’s institutions are up to governing the country when things start to go off track – not just by sending in the police, but looking to dialogue to solve problems. (And it’s not such a bad idea that everybody be clear that international support is for the country, not just for Albanians.)

    BTW, compare the behavior of the police Saturday to that of MUP when faced with the threat of violence by nationalist groups at the time of the gay parade in Belgrade. Dacic said he couldn’t guarantee protection for participants, individual members of the police force said they wouldn’t show up for work, and a few thousand people were denied their right to peacefully assemble. I’m pretty sure there were members of the KP who quietly agreed with Kurti’s position, but they behaved professionally and did their job.

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