Violence has flared since Kosovo authorities installed ethnic
Albanian mayors in offices in the municipalities after they were
elected in a vote in April on a turnout of just 3.5%, angering
Serbs who form a majority in northern areas and who had
boycotted the event.
Envoy Gabriel Escobar also urged Kosovo to withdraw police and
mayors from their offices in Serb-majority areas to de-escalate
tensions and then hold new municipal elections in which Serbs
would participate.
Kosovo's President Vjosa Osmani in an interview on Wednesday
told Reuters her country could trigger new elections in
Serb-majority municipalities if 20% of voters sign a petition
asking for them.
Escobar told reporters in the U.S. Embassy in Belgrade: "If
Kosovo wants to move towards Euro-Atlantic integration it will
have to establish (an association of Serb municipalities),"
"So it will happen. The question is, will it happen with this
(Kosovo) government or a next, a future government."
Serbia, which backs around 50,000 Serbs in northern Kosovo both
financially and politically, would have to ensure that the
region's Serbs took part in the new election, Escobar added.
Four predominantly Serb municipalities in northern Kosovo see
Belgrade as their capital and are defying the government in
Pristina.
The Serbs in north Kosovo left the country's institutions last
December. They want greater autonomy, under the provisions of a
2013 EU-sponsored agreement which envisaged the formation of an
Association of Serb Municipalities.
Prime Minister Albin Kurti is reluctant to implement the accord
because he fears that if granted more autonomy, the Serbs could
hold a referendum to join Serbia instead of staying as part of
Kosovo.
Reinforcements for NATO's peacekeeping force began to arrive in
Kosovo this week following the recent unrest.
Kosovo declared internationally recognised independence from
Serbia in 2008, nearly a decade after NATO bombing drove the
Serbian army and police from the territory. Serbia still regards
Kosovo as its southern province.
(Reporting by Ivana Sekularac; editing by Aleksandar Vasovic,
Gareth Jones and Angus MacSwan)
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