Kosovo

The long-running dispute between Kosovo and Serbia was a major driver of conflict in the Balkans in the 1990s and led to the separation of Kosovo (with its ethnic Albanian majority) from Serbia at the end of that decade. Belgrade and Pristina have never normalised relations with each other, with Serbia continuing to refuse to recognise Kosovo’s independence. The sharpest point of friction today is the level of self-rule in the four northern Kosovo municipalities, home to a Serb majority, and their connection to Serbia. Violent protests have occurred repeatedly since 2021. Crisis Group closely watches developments in the region and recommends ways to foster dialogue that could help avert violence and eventually lead to normalised relations.

CrisisWatch Kosovo

Unchanged Situation

Normalisation efforts with Serbia remained stalled.

Pristina’s and Belgrade’s chief negotiators 2 July held trilateral meeting with EU Special Representative Miroslav Lajčák in effort to resume normalisation talks, but did not reach agreement. PM Kurti 17 July discussed opening bridge across Ibar River, which divides Serb-majority North Mitrovica and Albanian-majority South Mitrovica, during meeting with QUINT (U.S., UK, Germany, France, Italy) and EU ambassadors; Kurti later said bridge could serve as “symbol of normalisation”, facilitating free movement and economic development. Meanwhile, President Osmani 31 July brought together various parliamentary political parties to discuss possible date for elections in early 2025; representatives from neither ruling party nor Serbian List – largest Serb political party in Kosovo – attended. 

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In The News

3 Apr 2024
Kosovo is winning the battle for control of its rebellious north, while hopes for normalisation between Pristina and Belgrade are fading . Bota Sot

Marko Prelec

Consulting Senior Analyst, Balkans
15 Feb 2023
There’s just zero trust [between Kosovo and Serbia] and active hostility on both sides. Gzero

Marko Prelec

Consulting Senior Analyst, Balkans

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