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Kosovo’s leftist opposition party gains landslide win

A close-up of Albin Kurti.
Albin Kurti, leader of the Self-Determination Movement Party, will become Kosovo’s prime minister.
( Visar Kryeziu / Associated Press)
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The left-wing opposition leader poised to become Kosovo’s next prime minister said Monday that he would push hard for his country to join the European Union, but he also urged the bloc to provide an economic aid package to help smooth the path to membership for western Balkan states.

Albin Kurti’s Self-Determination Movement Party, or Vetevendosje, won a clear victory with 48% of the vote in Sunday’s early election held amid the pandemic, an economic downturn and stalled negotiations with wartime foe Serbia. About 99% of the vote had been counted Monday.

The center-right Democratic Party of Kosovo, or PDK, placed a far second with 17%, and the conservative governing Democratic League of Kosovo, or LDK, captured 13% of the vote.

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Turnout was 47%, or 2.5% higher than the 2019 election, according to the Central Election Commission.

Kurti faces the challenges of reviving the poor nation’s economy and reducing unemployment, as well as fighting the pandemic, organized crime and corruption.

He hopes to secure the required 61 votes in the 120-seat parliament to govern alone, or he will cooperate with the non-Serb minority lawmakers to form his Cabinet. He made it clear there would be no coalition with the PDK and LDK parties.

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Kosovo’s Serb minority has 10 seats in parliament, and 10 other seats belong to other minorities.

In an interview with the Associated Press on Monday, Kurti urged the European Union to apply what he called a mini-Marshall Plan — alluding to the U.S. post-World War II reconstruction plan for Europe — for six western Balkan countries that are hoping to join the 27-nation bloc.

Those countries are Kosovo, Albania, North Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Bosnia-Herzegovina.

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Kurti said those countries had the “EU as the most important partner. But, on the other hand, history teaches us that also [the] Balkans [are] very important for Europe.”

Negotiations on normalizing ties with Serbia, which stalled again last year after talks brokered by the U.S. and the EU, did not figure high on the winning party’s agenda. Kurti said forming a negotiating team for dialogue would not be a priority.

“To move on further,” he said, “we need to establish clear principles of dialogue and [an] honest and serious approach by putting the demands of Kosovo and Serbia to each other.”

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell and Enlargement Commissioner Oliver Varhelyi urged Kosovo to act soon to form the new parliament and government, elect the president and advance reforms, and pledged continuous support from Brussels.

“Kosovo’s European path also goes through the comprehensive normalization of relations with Serbia,” their statement said.

Kosovo has signed a stabilization agreement with the EU, the first step toward membership.

Kurti said his government would apply for candidate status, and deplored that Brussels had still not allowed visa-free travel for Kosovars seeking to enter the EU.

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Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008, a decade after a brutal 1998-1999 war between separatist ethnic Albanian rebels and Serb forces. The war ended after a 78-day NATO air campaign drove Serb troops out and a peacekeeping force moved in.

Most Western nations have recognized Kosovo, but Serbia and its allies Russia and China do not. Tensions over Kosovo remain a source of volatility in the Balkans.

Within two months of taking their seats, Kosovo’s lawmakers must elect the country’s president. If no candidate is elected after three rounds of voting, the country could be forced to hold another early parliamentary election.

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