Third Session of the Forum on Minority Issues
14-15 December 2010
Aleksandra Dimitrijević
Senior Lawyer/Investigator
Ombudsperson Institution in Kosovo
Madame Chairperson, distinguished delegations and participants,
I would like to thank you for giving me this opportunity to share with the Forum my experience
gained in the field of minority rights and protection of human rights as a whole, especially in the
last six years spent working for the Ombudsperson Institution in Kosovo, in accordance with UN
Security Coincil Resolution 1244.
Protecting minority rights throughout history and even today is important, considering that there
are a great number of countries and societies with mixed populations, having different ethnic,
racial, religious or linguistic affiliations. Harmonious relations between minority groups
themselves and between minority and majority communities, as well as respect for the identity of
each group, present the picture of a wealthy multiethnic and multicultural global society. By
acknowledging the aspirations of national, ethnic, religious and linguistic groups and ensuring
the individual rights of the persons belonging to minorities, the dignity and equality of all
individuals is reaffirmed. This then leads to participation in the development of the society and
contributes to the relaxation of tensions among groups and individuals. In such societies, the
protection of minority communities represents an important test for the development of
democracy.
Kosovo society, however, belongs to those societies which encounter major problems in the
protection of minority rights; even though there are a great number of legal instruments aimed at
minority protection, in reality the results are very low. Consequently, the obstacles encountered
by minority communities in Kosovo are quite high. The armed conflict that occurred in Kosovo
in 1999 has stigmatized minority culture, breached their rights and increased interethnic
intolerance. Kosovo therefore belongs to those societies which still have to reconstruct the
culture and respect of minority rights, interethnic tolerance, and multiculturalism in a modern
European sense.
In my presentation, I will try to give you the overall situation regarding minority communities
and their prospects in economic life in Kosovo.
When talking about the ethnic make-up, nowadays there live in Kosovo 88% Albanians, 7%
Serbs and 5% other ethnic minorities (Bosniaks, Turks, Croats, Goranis and Roma, Ashkali,
Egyptians (RAE)). Those figures date from 2005, and since the overall registration of Kosovo’s
population will not be conducted before 2011, we cannot rely 100% on this figures. With regard
to these figures, it should be emphasized that this data does not include refugees and IDPs. Next
to common concerns for the return of refugees and of IDPs mostly from Serbia and Montenegro