I love the classic political we havent done anything but we think its going to turn out good.
Two days ago, Kosovo Albanians crossed the administrative line and opened fire on serbian police while stealing wood.
“Optimistic of progress” my a$$.
40 of them crossed the border to steal woods(it’s a tradition at this point) and opened fire on the serbian police patrolling there 3 days ago. nice progress!
Here is how the first attempt to bring administration to Kosovo went. UNMIK
Key infrastructure is not reconstructed; specifically, electric distribution is still very problematic;
Corruption, **including allegations of corruption within UNMIK,** remains endemic;
Human rights have been problematic, especially with Kosovo’s minority communities;
There has been a failure to eliminate parallel structures, insofar as health and education within the Kosovo Serbian community remain dependent on Serbian budgets;
The government of Serbia claims there are around 250,000. refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs) from Kosovo, the vast majority of whom are Serbs, who still do not feel safe returning to their homes. Kosovo Albanians displaced from the divided town of Mitrovica have yet to be granted the right to return.
Amongst other things, according to SC Resolution 1244, Serbia is authorised to send a specific amount of its troops back into Kosovo. The UNMIK so far has prevented Serbia from doing so, thus in fact breaching the resolution.
Since the establishment of the United Nations Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) in 1999, according to some international organizations **Kosovo has become a major destination country for women and young girls trafficked into forced prostitution. There have also been allegations that the presence of UN/NATO peacekeeping troops helps “fuel the sex **trafficking trade.” According to Amnesty International, most of these women are trafficked from Moldova, Romania, Bulgaria and Ukraine.
On 10 February 2007 **UN police fired rubber bullets at unarmed demonstrators in Pristina, killing two** and injuring 82.
Ok but after this failure they “handed” authority to “EULEX” the same piece of shit but packaged differently.
Note that this time there is way less information as I presume they have clamped down on free information
To guarantee the full transparency and accountability of EULEX, on 29 October 2009 the European Union established the Human Rights Review Panel with a mandate to review alleged human rights violations by EULEX Kosovo in the conduct of its executive mandate.
The European Court of Auditors in a 2012 report found that EULEX assistance has not been sufficiently effective. According to a February 2016 report by FOL, an accountability NGO in Kosovo, during the first 7 years of operation up until August 2015, EULEX judges delivered 47 verdicts on corruption cases and 23 verdicts on organised crime. This makes a total of 70 verdicts in these respective crimes since 2008. Numbers of convictions resulting from these verdicts was not provided to the researchers. In this period, EULEX prosecutors gained 24 indictments which amount to approximately a 6% indictment rate.
In October 2014, British EULEX prosecutor Maria Bamieh, demanded a corruption inquiry against some of her colleagues. She was suspended on 24th of October.
EU High Representative Federica Mogherini said she would appoint an independent legal expert to probe Eulex.
4 comments
I love the classic political we havent done anything but we think its going to turn out good.
Two days ago, Kosovo Albanians crossed the administrative line and opened fire on serbian police while stealing wood.
“Optimistic of progress” my a$$.
40 of them crossed the border to steal woods(it’s a tradition at this point) and opened fire on the serbian police patrolling there 3 days ago. nice progress!
Oh that sounds like excellent progress
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Interim_Administration_Mission_in_Kosovo?wprov=sfti1
Here is how the first attempt to bring administration to Kosovo went. UNMIK
Key infrastructure is not reconstructed; specifically, electric distribution is still very problematic;
Corruption, **including allegations of corruption within UNMIK,** remains endemic;
Human rights have been problematic, especially with Kosovo’s minority communities;
There has been a failure to eliminate parallel structures, insofar as health and education within the Kosovo Serbian community remain dependent on Serbian budgets;
The government of Serbia claims there are around 250,000. refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs) from Kosovo, the vast majority of whom are Serbs, who still do not feel safe returning to their homes. Kosovo Albanians displaced from the divided town of Mitrovica have yet to be granted the right to return.
Amongst other things, according to SC Resolution 1244, Serbia is authorised to send a specific amount of its troops back into Kosovo. The UNMIK so far has prevented Serbia from doing so, thus in fact breaching the resolution.
Since the establishment of the United Nations Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) in 1999, according to some international organizations **Kosovo has become a major destination country for women and young girls trafficked into forced prostitution. There have also been allegations that the presence of UN/NATO peacekeeping troops helps “fuel the sex **trafficking trade.” According to Amnesty International, most of these women are trafficked from Moldova, Romania, Bulgaria and Ukraine.
On 10 February 2007 **UN police fired rubber bullets at unarmed demonstrators in Pristina, killing two** and injuring 82.
Ok but after this failure they “handed” authority to “EULEX” the same piece of shit but packaged differently.
Note that this time there is way less information as I presume they have clamped down on free information
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Union_Rule_of_Law_Mission_in_Kosovo?wprov=sfti1
Let’s see how that’s going
To guarantee the full transparency and accountability of EULEX, on 29 October 2009 the European Union established the Human Rights Review Panel with a mandate to review alleged human rights violations by EULEX Kosovo in the conduct of its executive mandate.
The European Court of Auditors in a 2012 report found that EULEX assistance has not been sufficiently effective. According to a February 2016 report by FOL, an accountability NGO in Kosovo, during the first 7 years of operation up until August 2015, EULEX judges delivered 47 verdicts on corruption cases and 23 verdicts on organised crime. This makes a total of 70 verdicts in these respective crimes since 2008. Numbers of convictions resulting from these verdicts was not provided to the researchers. In this period, EULEX prosecutors gained 24 indictments which amount to approximately a 6% indictment rate.
In October 2014, British EULEX prosecutor Maria Bamieh, demanded a corruption inquiry against some of her colleagues. She was suspended on 24th of October.
EU High Representative Federica Mogherini said she would appoint an independent legal expert to probe Eulex.
GREAT PROGRESS