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Kosovo fails to amend constitution on warcrime court

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Kosovo's parliament on Friday failed to adopt constitutional amendments needed for the creation of a special court that would handle war crimes allegedly committed by former ethnic Albanian guerrillas.

Only 75 lawmakers in the 120-seat parliament supported the amendments that would have allowed the establishment of the court dealing with accusations for war crimes committed during and after the 1998-1999 Kosovo war. The change of the constitution had to be backed by a two-thirds majority in the parliament.

Pristina has been under intense international pressure to create the special court ever since a 2011 Council of Europe report alleged crimes including abductions, summary executions and -- most controversially -- the trafficking of prisoners' organs by Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) members during the war.

The report by the Council's special rapporteur Dick Marty said the KLA had abused, tortured and killed 500 prisoners, mostly ethnic Serbs and Roma.

The KLA guerrillas are still considered heroes among Kosovo's majority ethnic Albanian population of almost two million.

The war ended with a NATO-led air campaign that forced Serbian forces to withdraw from the territory in June 1999. Kosovo unilaterally proclaimed independence from Serbia in 2008.

Kosovo’s parliament on Friday failed to adopt constitutional amendments needed for the creation of a special court that would handle war crimes allegedly committed by former ethnic Albanian guerrillas.

Only 75 lawmakers in the 120-seat parliament supported the amendments that would have allowed the establishment of the court dealing with accusations for war crimes committed during and after the 1998-1999 Kosovo war. The change of the constitution had to be backed by a two-thirds majority in the parliament.

Pristina has been under intense international pressure to create the special court ever since a 2011 Council of Europe report alleged crimes including abductions, summary executions and — most controversially — the trafficking of prisoners’ organs by Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) members during the war.

The report by the Council’s special rapporteur Dick Marty said the KLA had abused, tortured and killed 500 prisoners, mostly ethnic Serbs and Roma.

The KLA guerrillas are still considered heroes among Kosovo’s majority ethnic Albanian population of almost two million.

The war ended with a NATO-led air campaign that forced Serbian forces to withdraw from the territory in June 1999. Kosovo unilaterally proclaimed independence from Serbia in 2008.

AFP
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