So far in Gracanica, only 8% of Serbs who put their names down for elections 
have voted. Not many considering a population size of 6500.
 
Local serb parties were offering money, food and promising jobs for votes. 
 

  _____  


  

 BBC NEWS 
<http://newsvote.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/img/printer_friendly/news_logo.gif> 

Kosovo election divides Serbs 

 

By Mark Lowen 
BBC News, Kosovo 

Deep in the south of Kosovo, near the Macedonian border, the town of Strpce is 
an isolated little place. 
Surrounded by the snowy peaks of Kosovo's neglected ski resort, communication 
here is poor. The town's one factory stands empty. 
Serbs make up 70% of Strpce's population. And, like most of the 120,000 Serbs 
in Kosovo, they have largely boycotted all previous elections that were not 
organised by Belgrade. In their eyes, Kosovo's declaration of independence from 
Serbia last year was illegal, favoured only by the territory's Albanian 
majority. 
But this time a handful of posters line the centre of town, advertising 
candidates for Sunday's local election. 
It is the first poll in Kosovo since independence and the authorities are 
hoping for a moderate Serb turnout. Many in Strpce feel cut off from Belgrade. 
So Serbs here are increasingly working with local institutions, obliged to 
stomach reality. 
Serbs moving on 
Armed with a pile of fliers, Serb mayoral hopeful Bratislav Nikolic works his 
way down the main street. Ten years after Kosovo's brutal war between Serbs and 
Albanians, he tells me it is time to move on. 

"We have to live and work together. We have to play soccer together," he says. 
"We can't escape co-operating with Albanians." 
He denies that running in the election means he is accepting Kosovo's 
independence. 
"On a local level, we can't recognise a country," he says. "We're fighting for 
our lives here." 
There is little expectation that Serbs will openly recognise Kosovo anytime 
soon. But if they are beginning to engage with Kosovan government structures on 
the ground, that is still a significant change. 
Among Strpce's Serb population, opinions are divided over whether to take part 
in the poll. 
"I don't want to give legitimacy to what the Albanian government is doing 
around here", says Ivan. "That's why I'm not going to vote in unfair 
elections." 

But Dmitry, a local translator, tells me he supports the elections. "They have 
to be held. We are the minority in Kosovo, but we can take responsibility for 
what happens in this municipality if we go out and vote." 
In the centre of town, Albanian construction workers are re-roofing a 
Serb-owned house - the two communities slowly building a new future. Surrounded 
by his tools, Afrim says life here is returning to normal. "I hope the Serbs do 
vote," he says, "so we can live together like we used to". 
Flashpoint town 
But about 100km (60 miles) north, it is a very different story. The town of 
Mitrovica, near the Serbian border, has frequently been the flashpoint for 
clashes between Serbs and Albanians in the past. It remains cut in two by the 
Ibar river. 

The Albanian-dominated south is adorned with election posters. But cross the 
bridge to the Serb north, and they are replaced by Serbian flags. No election 
is being held here - almost two years after Kosovan independence, Pristina 
still wields no authority. 
Mitrovica's concrete walls are plastered with slogans like "EU go home", 
"Welcome Russian army". And the Serb national sign - a cross adorned with the 
Cyrillic letter "S" - is scrawled in graffiti on street corners. It stands for 
"Samo sloga Srbina spasava": "Only unity saves the Serbs". 
Partitioning Kosovo along the Ibar river dividing line has long been discussed. 
But were it to be implemented, it could destabilise the wider region if other 
ethnically-split areas demanded the same. 
In reality, though, de facto partition already exists and as Serbs elsewhere 
show signs of co-operating with local institutions, the division between north 
and south is growing ever wider. 
"These are illegitimate elections organised by a quasi-state," says Milan 
Ivanovic, President of the Serbian National Council for Northern Kosovo. "Some 
of the Serbs running for office have a criminal past. And those who are going 
to vote are betraying our national interest." 
I put it to him that it is simple for him to maintain that stance: close to the 
Serbian border, the north has always received the bulk of attention - and money 
- from Belgrade. But down in enclaves like Strpce, Serbs resent the approach of 
the hardline north - they do not have the luxury of resisting Kosovan 
independence so easily. 
Mr Ivanovic disagrees. "We have to support our own institutions. Anyway, the 
Serbs calling for people to take part in the election have very little 
support." 

Test of statehood 
It is still unclear just how many Serbs will go out to vote - many feel 
pressurised by Belgrade to boycott the poll and fear for their 
government-sponsored jobs if they choose to take part. 
The Serbian government maintains the line that conditions are not right for 
Kosovan Serbs to participate. 
The first election entirely organised by the Kosovan government is a big test 
for Pristina, keen to show it can run a free and fair vote. 
If Kosovo is to grow into an all-inclusive nation, a lot rests on whether the 
Serbs will take part. They hold the key to Kosovo reaching its goal of becoming 
a truly multi-ethnic democracy. 

 

 

Story from BBC NEWS:

 


http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/europe/8359761.stm

Published: 2009/11/14 00:57:44 GMT

 

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