Kosovo Signs Draft Constitution
By Dimitar.Miscevic on Apr 8, 2008 in Featured, Kosovo, Serbia
It was on Monday the Kosovo’s leaders scripted the new chapter of their history signing the draft constitution, which will declare the
The draft constitution was signed in a signing ceremony was attended by representatives of the Kosovo institutions, the EU special representative Pieter Feith and officials of international offices in Pristina.
In the draft constitution signing ceremony, Prime Minister Hashim Thaci said, “Today we are giving legitimacy to our act of declaration of the independent, sovereign and democratic
Now, the draft constitution needs formal approval by the 120-seat parliament, which is expected to happen on Wednesday. The constitution could enter into force on June 15 this year, when the EU Rule of Law Mission in Kosovo (EULEX) of some 2,000 policemen, judges and advisers is scheduled to fulfill its deployment and take over authority from the U.N. mission in Kosovo(UNMIK) that has been in charge since the end of the war in 1999.
The draft constitution is comprised of 40 chapters and 160 articles and it defines Kosovo as “a parliamentary republic,” with Albanian and Serbian as official languages. The preamble of the constitution says, Kosovo is “a state of free citizens that will guarantee the rights of every citizen, civil freedoms and equality of all citizens before the law.” The constitution articulates that Kosovo “will contribute to the stability of the region and entire
Populated dominantly by ethnic Albanians, Kosovo had been run by the U.N. mission since 1999, when NATO bombing forced the Serbian government to end its crackdown against pro-independent Albanian guerrillas and pull its troops out of Kosovo.
Kosovo unilaterally declared its independence from
Feith, who approved the draft constitution on April 2, said, “This (constitution) will help Kosovo move closer to
The proposal of Ahtisaari is taken as a basis for the draft constitution. According to Ahtisaari’s proposal, Kosovo should be a state but under international supervision, to ensure the protection of minority rights and respect for the rule of law. However,
