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The Head of UNMIK, Dr. Bernard Kouchner, has
announced that Kosovo-wide municipal elections will be held on
Monday, 28 October 2000. "Upon the
recommendation of Ambassador Daan Everts, OSCE Chief of Mission and
Chairman of the Central Election Commission, and exercising the
authority granted me under Security Council resolution 1244, and
after consultation with the Interim Administrative council, I,
Bernard Kouchner, the Special Representative of the
Secretary-General, have decided that municipal elections in the
territory of Kosovo will be held on the 28th of October, 2000," he
declared. Kosovars registered to vote
during the registration campaign which ended in late July. On 28
October, they will elect members of 30 municipal assemblies.
Nineteen political parties have been certified to take part in the
elections, along with two coalitions, three citizens' initiatives
and 15 independent candidates. According
to electoral rules set by the Central Election Commission, during
the 45 days prior to election day, all broadcast media should
provide free and equitable access to air time to all political
parties, and the campaign spending limits of DM 1 per registered
voter go into effect. Every voting in the
elections will have a chance to check their details on the
provisional voters' lists later this month as part of the standard
process to finalize the voters' list. Each
of the 448 registration centres around Kosovo will have the
provisional list of people eligible to vote there on election day
available for inspection between Monday, 21 August, and Wednesday,
30 August. The centres will be open on a rotating basis from 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m. during those days, including Sunday. In order to check the
lists, people should go to the centre where they originally
registered. In the majority of cases, this centre will also be their
polling station on election day. The aim
of the ten-day Confirmation, Additions and Challenges (CAC)
inspection period is to give registrants an opportunity to confirm
that their own entries on the provisional voters' lists are
correct.
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Starting a series of planned meetings with
residents of Kosovo to discuss directly with them their concerns,
the Head of UNMIK, Dr. Bernard Kouchner, on 12 August held a town
hall meeting in Vushtrri/Vucitrn. As he addressed a crowd of mainly
young people in the municipal Culture Centre, the SRSG appealed to
them to go to the elections on 28 October with a spirit of
tolerance, and without violence or crises.
"Free and fair elections are a big step towards democracy,
towards the tolerance needed to build a Kosovo where all communities
will live together, and with freedom of movement all over Kosovo,"
Dr. Kouchner said. ""You have the duty to protect minorities. This
is your problem and you must find a solution. This is time to stop
violence and build tolerance and confidence in the hearts of all
Kosovars," he stressed. The SRSG said that
the first period of international presence in Kosovo was devoted to
ending the humanitarian emergency, and that now was time to build
the future of Kosovo. Some achievements have been made, including
hundreds of thousands of refugees who returned after the war, and
the resumption of public services, such as health infrastructure.
Ninety per cent of the children of Kosovo are enrolled in
school. He said that going to elections
was an opportunity for Kosovo people to show the rest of the world
that they are themselves involved in building democracy for the
future of Kosovo. Questions raised by
residents related to security measures that UNMIK would use to
insure free and fair elections, travel documents, housing and
property rights-a concern of refugees and displaced persons who lost
possession of property during the conflict, or of those who
purchased a house or an appartment when that was prohibited by
discriminatory laws.
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TSRSG Dr. Bernard Kouchner on 11 August ended
his meetings with the non-Albanian and non-Serbian communities, with
an assurance that in future these meetings would be held once a
month. The first meeting was held with the Bosniac and Gorani
representatives on 9 August, the second with the Roma, Egyptian and
Hashkali representatives on 10 August, and the third with the
Turkish community on 11 August. The
meetings helped the SRSG to gain first-hand knowledge on the issues
of concern to these communities: security, freedom of movement, use
of their language and education of their children. To address these
concerns, follow-up steps will be taken, including regular meetings
at the political level with JIAS structures. These contacts will
seek to address specific issues, such as access to public services
and employment in public sector and economic and social
issues.
KTC briefed on
elections
The Kosovo Transitional Council (KTC)
on 9 August discussed preparations for elections. Deputy SRSG Daan
Everts said political parties had submitted lists of candidates,
which were being reviewed by the OSCE to see if candidates met the
criteria for eligibility. About 30 per cent of the candidates were
women. The Central Election Commission will take a final decision on
the lists by 18 August. He regretted that no Serbian party had
registered for the elections. Behxet Brajshori and Peter
Schumann, co-heads of the Department of Public Services, briefed the
KTC on the Joint Interim Administrative Structure. Brajshori said
most departments had been officially established. The initial
difficulty of finding qualified international and Kosovar staff for
the JIAS departments was being overcome, though the situation was
still not satisfactory due to paucity of funds.
Public health campaign to address
lead threat
A public health awareness campaign to address
the rising level of lead detected in the air and blood of people
living and working in the Mitrovica area, particularly downstream of
the Zvecan lead smelter, was launched by UNMIK on 8 August. Recent
measurements have shown that the amounts of lead in the air there
are some 200 times more than those recommended as acceptable by WHO.
Blood tests on some KFOR soldiers and UNMIK Police have also
revealed high levels of lead. The Zvecan smelter, which restarted
operation in June, is in need of air pollution controls and filters.
The local population is being advised on the dangers posed by that
phenomenon, particularly to pregnant women, children, people living
in areas of highest lead concentration and smelter workers. The
awareness campaign will be followed by a comprehensive programme to
identify and assess the level of exposure by monitoring blood levels
in vulnerable groups. A new special unit for blood testing in the
Pediatrics Hospital in northern Mitrovica is now open to the
public.
IAC endorses Department on Public
Utilities
The Interim Administrative Council (IAC) on
11 August endorsed the draft regulation on the establishment of the
Department of Public Utilities, which will be signed by the SRSG and
become law. The department will handle the overall management
oversight and regulation of matters relating to public utilities in
Kosovo, including natural gas supply, electricity, heat, water
supply, waste collection and disposal, as may be provided by public,
private and other enterprises and institutions. The IAC also
discussed the draft regulation on the import, sale and distribution
of pharmaceutical products, including narcotic drugs and
psychotropic substances. In addition, it reviewed progress with the
draft regulation amending Regulation 1999/27 on the approval of
Kosovo budget.
More judges
appointed
An additional 139 judges and prosecutors and
309 lay judges-among them several members of minority
communities-were appointed by SRSG Dr. Bernard Kouchner on 9 August.
That brought to 405 the total number of local judges and prosecutors
in Kosovo. The appointments were made to the Supreme Court,
district, municipal and minor offences courts in each region, the
Commercial Court and the High Court of Minor Offences, both in
Pristina. Dr. Kouchner said a number of excellent candidates had
been recommended, but it was not possible to appoint all of them due
to budgetary constraints. The first swearing-in ceremonies took
place in Gjilan/Gnjilane and Mitrovicė/Mitrovica on 10 and 11
August, respectively. Similar events are scheduled for
Pristinė/Pristina (15 August), Pejė/Pec (16 August) and Prizren (17
August).
Kosovo municipalities
identified
Kosovo's 30 municipalities have been
officially identified by UNMIK Regulation 2000/43, which came into
force on 27 July. The new edict, entitled "On the Numbers, Names and
Boundaries of Municipalities", is designed to clarify the identity
of municipalities before the municipal elections on 28 October.
Official communications should not contain any name for a
municipality other than those listed in the regulation in the
Albanian or Serbian languages, except for municipalities where other
ethnic or linguistic communities form a substantial part of the
population.
Road repair
programme
The European Agency for Reconstruction has
launched a road repair programme, designed to bring Kosovo's roads
up to European standards. With a budget of DM 30 million for 2000,
the project will concentrate on the reconstruction of some 220 km of
road on three main axes in Kosovo: Pristina-Blace, Pristina-Pejė and
the Tetovo road. Repairs are due to be finished by the end of
November.
Another 318 police cadets
graduate
Another class of 318 police cadets graduated
from the OSCE-run Kosovo Police Service School on 12 August. It was
the seventh class to graduate from the school since September 1999,
bringing to 1,402 the total number of officers who have undergone
police training. Of these new 318 cadets, 276 are Kosovo Albanian
(of which 67 are women), 2 Bosniacs, 3 Gorani, 3 Muslim Slavs, 26
Kosovo Serbs (including 2 women) and 8 Kosovo Turks. The officers
will now spend 17 weeks in in-service training and an additional 80
hours of classroom instruction.
Selection of
beneficiaries
Selection of Kosovar families who will
receive assistance from donors to reconstruct their houses should be
completed by 20 August, according to an instruction issued by the
JIAS Department of Reconstruction. Past this date, if municipal
housing committees do not present final lists of beneficiaries, the
implementing agencies will assume that initial lists, which they
have compiled together with village representatives, are approved,
and housing housing reconstruction will proceed. Property
verification is also due to be carried out by 20 August. The
selection process is a crucial stage in the Housing Reconstruction
Programme for 2000, as it ensures that help goes directly to people
who need it most. The EU already has funds to rebuild 8,000
houses.
Appointments
Jean Guinard, a retired French general, was
appointed as new Regional Administrator for Pristina on 7 August.
For the past eight years, Guinard worked in the French Prime
Minister, overseeing relations between the army and civil
service. On 9 August, Simon Haselock of the United
Kingdom was named Temporary Media Commissioner. With powers to
monitor and regulate the operations of the Kosovo media, Haselock
will be reviewing license applications and issuing licenses. He will
also have sanctions at his disposal, which could be imposed on a
media outlet operating without a license or breaching Kosovo's
broadcast and print codes. The sanctions range from seeking an
apology or imposing a fine to a complete shutdown. The Temporary
Media Commissioner's post was created pending the establishment of
an Interim Media Commission.
The Interim Administrative Council (IAC) on
11 August endorsed the draft regulation on the establishment of the
Department of Public Utilities, which will be signed by the SRSG and
become law. The department will handle the overall management
oversight and regulation of matters relating to public utilities in
Kosovo, including natural gas supply, electricity, heat, water
supply, waste collection and disposal, as may be provided by public,
private and other enterprises and institutions. This regulation
The IAC also discussed the draft
regulation on the import, sale and distribution of pharmaceutical
products, including narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances. In
addition, it considered progress with the draft regulation amending
Regulation 1999/27 on the Approval of the Kosovo Consolidated Budget
authorizing expenditures for the period 1 January to 31 December
2000.
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