*** ----> Kosovo votes to create own army | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Kosovo votes to create own army

Kosovo yesterday passed laws to build an army, asserting its statehood in a move that has inflamed tensions with Serbia, which does not recognise the former province’s independence. Kosovo has been guarded by NATO-led peacekeeping troops since it broke away from Belgrade in a bloody separatist war in 1998-99. The new laws will double the size of a small crisis-response outfit, the Kosovo Security Force (KSF), and set out a national defence mandate for a professional army of 5,000 troops.

“This vote today begins a new era for our country. From this moment we officially have the army of Kosovo,” parliamentary speaker Kadri Veseli said as MPs hugged each other after the session, which was boycotted by minority Serb politicians. The vote will delight many Kosovo Albanians, who are ready to celebrate the army as a new pillar of their independence, which was declared in 2008. “Now we can say that we are a state, there is no a state without an army,” Skender Arifi, a 37-year-old hairdresser in Pristina, told AFP ahead of the vote.

Serbia will ‘stay peaceful’

While it is a mostly symbolic flaunting of Kosovo’s sovereignty, Serbia -- which still considers the former province a renegade territory -- has castigated the move as a threat to regional stability. Speaking after the vote, Serbia’s Prime Minister Ana Brnabic said it was “a hard day,” but that Serbia would “stay on its path of peace and prosperity”. In particular, Belgrade has sounded the alarm over the safety of 120,000 Serbs still living in Albanian-majority Kosovo, mainly in the north near their contested border.

Those Serb communities are loyal to Belgrade and also broadly against the army plan. “We do not want a Kosovo army here,” said Marko Djusic, a Serb resident of Dren village near the border. “I hope that even if Albanians make some moves (against) us, the state of Serbia will do something to protect us,” he added. NATO, which has four members that do not recognise Kosovo, had warned the army move was “ill-timed” amid already strained ties between Pristina and Belgrade. NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said Friday the alliance will “re-examine” its role in Kosovo in light of the vote.

“NATO supports the development of the Kosovo Security Force under its current mandate. With the change of mandate, the North Atlantic Council will now have to re-examine the level of NATO’s engagement with the Kosovo Security Force,” he said. But Washington -- Kosovo’s pre-eminent ally -- voiced public support, as did the United Kingdom. Many Kosovo roads were adorned with American flags on Thursday in a sign of gratitude.

But divided allegiances were on display in the segregated city of Mitrovica, where US flags were flown in the Albanian-dominated south while Serbian flags covered the mainly Serb north. In a statement Friday the US Embassy affirmed its support for the KSF’s transition, but added that Kosovo and Serbia should take “immediate steps to lower tensions” and make progress in their ongoing dialogue.