Constitution of Newly Independent Kosovo Takes Effect
PRISTINA, Kosovo, June 15 -- Kosovo's government took control of the newly independent nation Sunday as the country's constitution went into force after nine years of U.N. administration. The charter, a milestone that comes four months after leaders declared independence from Serbia, gives the government sole decision-making authority.
But it threatens to worsen ethnic tensions between Kosovo's majority Albanians and Serb minority. Security in the divided northern town of Mitrovica was tight a day after a gunman attacked a police station, wounding one officer.
Kosovo's ethnic Albanian leaders marked the transition in a low-key ceremony in Pristina, the capital, that opened with Kosovo's newly approved, wordless anthem. Prime Minister Hashim Thaci told local and international dignitaries the constitution comes after years of "hardship and sacrifice." "Today the dream of the people of the Republic of Kosovo has come true," Thaci said.
Earlier, President Fatmir Sejdiu called it the most important act since Kosovo's declaration of independence in February.
However, Serbs -- who make up less than 5 percent of Kosovo's population of 2 million -- strongly oppose the ethnic Albanian leadership's decision to declare independence from Serbia after U.N.-mediated talks fell through last year. "Serbia views Kosovo as its southern province," Serbian President Boris Tadic said Sunday. "It will defend its integrity by peaceful means, using diplomacy, without resorting to force."
Posted by: Steve White 2008-06-16 |