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Декабрь
2015

Parliament no place for tear gas, Kerry tells Kosovo lawmakers

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PRISTINA — US Secretary of State John Kerry called on opposition lawmakers in Kosovo on Wednesday to stop setting off tear gas in parliament, and on the young country to combat corruption, radicalism and ethnic division.

In the Balkans for the first time as secretary of state, Kerry's brief stop in Kosovo underscored Western concern over the slow pace of progress 16 years after a US-led NATO air war set the former Serbian province on the road to independence.

The country of 1.8 million people — mainly ethnic Albanians — faces a deepening political crisis over relations with former master Serbia, against a backdrop of widespread frustration at a lack of progress on democracy, corruption and Western integration.

Kosovo has been rocked by riots and opposition MPs have disrupted parliament's work for two months by releasing tear gas in the chamber, angry over a deal to grant ethnic Serbs greater local powers and allow them some funding from Belgrade. The opposition believes this could threaten Kosovo's independence.

After meeting Kosovo's Prime Minister Prime Minister Isa Mustafa at the Pristina airport, Kerry said parliament should be "a shrine to democracy, a place of reverence, of respect, that is not the place for tear gas and it is not the place for intimidation".

"All parties need to renounce the use of violence in public life, and commit to engaging with each other peacefully and constructively."

Kerry praised the proposed agreement with Serbia, leveraging the popularity enjoyed by the United States in Kosovo to help build support for the deal.

"Make no mistake: we would not support any agreement that would threaten the sovereignty, or the security, or the independence of Kosovo," he said.

Kosovo broke away from Serbia in 1999 when the United States led an 11-week NATO bombing campaign to halt the killing and expulsion of ethnic Albanian civilians by Serbian security forces fighting a two-year counter-insurgency war.

Kosovo declared independence in 2008.

The mainly Muslim but overwhelmingly secular country remains staunchly pro-American, and Kerry was met at the airport with red, white and blue banners that said "Welcome Secretary John Kerry" and greeted by a 50-man honour guard.

However, there are concerns in the West over the risk of radicalisation among disaffected and jobless young Kosovars. At least 200 of them are believed to have joined militants in Syria and Iraq.

 

While praising government efforts to tackle militancy, Kerry said more needed to be done by "all of us". 

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