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Incidents in August

This issue of Kosovo Communities Issues Monitor addresses three incidents in chronological order that unfolded during August. First, it highlights an occurrence where the Emergency Centre at the University Clinical Centre (UCC) of Kosovo failed to provide timely assistance to members of a Roma family had. In the Monitor, both representatives of the Kosovo Assembly, the UCC and members of the family comment on the incident. In the second update, we turn to the insulting slogans that was written on the house of a Bosniak family in Prizren in an area of the city that is populated by Bosniaks. The slogans, targeting the Bosniak and Gorani communities. We welcome that the Kosovo Police is currently investigating the incident and is taking measures to identify the perpetrators. The third update comment on the Feast on the Dormition of the Virgin Mary (“Uspenje Presvete Bogorodice” in Serbian) where displaced Kosovo Serbs from Gjakovë/Đakovica and other regions in Kosovo, visited the Serb Orthodox monastery in the city to participate in a liturgy on the occasion. A group of 20-30 Vetëvendosje activists disturbed the occasion with smearing chants, signs and throw red paint in the direction of the pilgrims. It is clear that these visits need to be carefully managed by the political representatives and religious leaders and that a tolerant balance should be found between the plight of missing persons and the emotional attachment of Serb pilgrims to their hometown and places of worship.

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Disagreements Surrounding the Use of Languages in Kosovo and the poor Implementation of the Legal Framework

The decision of the Parliament’s Commission for Legislation not to proceed with a law proposal until further clarification on the fact that the proposal and in particular the Parliament’s logo were written in the Cyrillic alphabet reopened a longstanding discussion on the official use of language and their alphabets.

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Human Rights Law Package Enters into Force

In July the new human rights package came into effect. In this political analysis we provide an overview of the laws and the challenges that need to be considered by the Kosovo institutions on how to improve the enjoyment of the fundamental rights and freedoms for all the community members.

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On the Worrisome trend of Incidents Directed at Serb Communities in the Pejë/Peja and Klinë/Klina Area

During the past ten days, there has been an upsurge in incidents involving Serb communities in the Pejë/Peć and Klinë/Klina area. These incidents come on the heels of a series of incidents in Klinë/Klina this past May, where Kosovo Serb returnees were victims of robberies and verbal abuses. This newest contribution to ECMI Kosovo’s Kosovo Communities Issues Monitor argues that this series of attacks, while still being under investigation, speaks of an emerging trend of incidents directed at the Serb community in the area, which cannot be discarded as merely isolated cases. This pattern of incidents calls for adequate security measures and engagement from all sides of the political spectrum, including representatives of the majority community.

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Vidovdan: No News is Good News

During the past weeks, the Serb community in and outside Kosovo has marked the holiday of Vidovdan with cultural events and religious services throughout Kosovo. On Sunday 28 June, the annual celebrations surrounding Vidovdan concluded with a memorial service at Gazimestan. No incidents were reported either by police or by media. This is a highly significant step towards normalisation of ethnic relations in Kosovo, even in relation to politically charged commemorations such as Vidovdan. The latest update to our Kosovo Community Issues Monitor analyses the factors that contributed to this positive development.

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On the recent security incidents in Klinë/Klina and the difficult return process

In the night of 17–18 May, Kosovo Serb inhabitants who had recently returned to the villages of Bicë/Biča and Grapc/Grabac in the municipality of Klinë/Klina, were reported to have been victims of a series of robberies and verbal abuses by unknown assailants. These are the most recent additions to a number of similar incidents involving Serb returnees in the municipality of Klinë/Klina. The Kosovo Police is investigating the incidents, and on Tuesday, it announced that it has arrested seven individuals suspected to be behind the latest robberies and attacks. Events of this nature, even if not always primarily ethnically-motivated, are intolerable and they create an atmosphere of fear and insecurity for Kosovo Serbs inhabitants and especially returnees in Klinë/Klina and elsewhere in Kosovo.

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