Outbreaks of violence and a low turnout marred key local elections in Kosovo today, the first in which ethnic Serbs have been encouraged to vote since the territory proclaimed independence in 2008.
One woman was seriously injured when masked extremists stormed a polling station, attacking voters and election commissioners and destroying ballot boxes in the ethnically divided town of Kosovska Mitrovica, Belgrade-backed Serb mayoral candidate Krstimir Pantic told reporters.
Polling stations in the Serb-run northern part of the town closed an hour before the official close of voting at 1800 GMT as a result of the violence.
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"The vote was interrupted by violence... It is clear that the elections in northern Kosovska Mitrovica have failed and probably will be declared invalid," Ivanovic said.
The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), which had a key role in organising the polls in northern Kosovo, said it was withdrawing its staff from the town.
"The security of our staff was compromised and we decided to remove all our staff," spokesman Nikola Gaon told AFP in Pristina.
The election of deputies and mayors in 36 Kosovo municipalities is being watched closely by Brussels as a test of relations between Pristina and Belgrade after a historic EU-brokered deal in April to normalise ties.
Serbia rejects Kosovo's independence, but has openly backed the polls, urging the minority Serb community in the breakaway province to vote and have their say in Pristina-run institutions.
The participation of Serb voters is seen as crucial to the poll's success. There are some 120,000 ethnic Serbs living in Kosovo, some 40,000 of whom live in the north, where they make up the majority and enjoy control over some public institutions.
Many Serbs have expressed concern that voting in the election would give legitimacy to the Kosovo government.
Serb hardliners in the north have actively campaigned for a boycott of the polls and there were reports of voter intimidation.