Former fighters in Kosovo's independence movement have allegedly collected more than 10,000 signatures for a petition on a 2015 law that governs the Kosovo Specialist Chambers court, based in The Hague, Netherlands, seeking to extend its jurisdiction to include Serbs, their former adversaries in a war for independence.
The court was set up as a result of US and European pressure on Kosovo's government to confront alleged war crimes the Kosovo Liberation Army committed against ethnic Serbs. "Don't turn back the clock," US Ambassador Greg Delawie wrote on Twitter. "We have not invested so much effort into #Kosovo's success to see it destroy its future by undoing the Special Court Law."
Forty-three lawmakers called for the session today, but a quorum was not obtained since opposition parties refused to take part in consecutive meetings.
Some lawmakers also said the draft law should be prepared and put to a cabinet vote before reaching parliament. Both Delawie and his British counterpart, Ambassador Ruairi O'Connell were at the parliament building through the day. "It will be considered by the United States as a stab in the back," said Delawie, calling on Kosovo's leader "to end this effort."
The court, with judges from European Union member countries, the US and Canada, says it has jurisdiction over all potential war crimes suspects who were citizens in Kosovo, which includes Kosovars and Serbs. It is part of Kosovo's legal system and covers crimes against humanity, war crimes and other crimes committed during and immediately after the 1998-1999 war.