United Nations Administered Kosovo


United Nations Administered Kosovo refers to the period when the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo was directly responsible for the governance of Kosovo between 1999 and 2008. This period began on 10 June 1999 with the adoption of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1244 and effectively ended on 17 February 2008 with the unilateral declaration of independence of Kosovo.

Background

In 1945, at the conclusion of the Second World War, Kosovo was organised within the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia as the Autonomous Region of Kosovo and Metohija. In 1963 the region was reorganised as the Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija with increased autonomy and was renamed as the Socialist Autonomous Province of Kosovo in 1968. In 1975 Kosovo was granted significantly increased levels of autonomy. In 1990, under the regime of Slobodan Milošević, the level of autonomy was reduced and the official name reverted to the Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija.
In 1991, during the breakup of Yugoslavia, ethnic Albanian representatives of the Provincial Assembly unilaterally declared the Republic of Kosova and established parallel instructions for education, medical care, and taxation. Serbia and Montenegro formed the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in April 1992. Ethnic tensions increased between Yugoslav authorities and the Ethnic Albanian guerilla movement, the Kosovo Liberation Army, resulting in the Kosovo War breaking out in February 1998. In March 1999, NATO proposed the Rambouillet Agreement which would have granted Kosovo substantial autonomy within the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. The agreement was accepted by the Kosovo Albanian side but rejected by the Yugoslav side prompting the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia on 24 March 1999. On 9 June 1999, NATO and the Federal Republic Yugoslavia reached the Kumanovo Agreement whereby Kosovo would be placed under United Nations administration. This arrangement was formalised by the passing of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1244 on 10 June 1999 which established the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo.
Kosovo unilaterally declared independence on 17 February 2008 as the Republic of Kosovo. Serbia continues to claim Kosovo as the Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija.

Administrative history

allowed for the " in Kosovo, under United Nations auspices, international civil and security ". The first regulation passed by the Special Representative of the Secretary General, on 25 July 1999, established that UNMIK was responsible for all legislative and executive authority in Kosovo. That regulation also stated that all laws applicable in Kosovo prior to 24 March 1999 would continue to apply in Kosovo insofar as they do not conflict with "internationally recognized human rights standards and shall not discriminate against any person on any ground such as sex, race, colour, language, religion, political or other opinion, national, ethnic or social origin, association with a national community, property, birth or other status". This was later amended to state that the law applicable would be that as it stood on 22 March 1989.

Initial arrangements

A twelve-member Kosovo Transitional Council was formed on 16 July 1999. Chaired by the SRSG, the KTC was the described as being the highest political consultative body within the United Nations administration. Its purpose was to offer the main political parties and ethnic communities in Kosovo an opportunity for direct input into the decision-making process of UNMIK.

Joint Interim Administrative Structure

A more formal system of administration was put in place on 30 January 2000 when a Joint Interim Administrative Structure was established. The membership of the Kosovo Transitional Council was expanded and it assumed the role of a deliberative assembly. A transitional cabinet, known as the Interim Administrative Council, was established with eight members, four of which were appointed by UNMIK and four by political parties in Kosovo.

Provisional Institutions of Self Government

Resolution 1244 permitted the United Nations to establish and oversee the development of "provisional, democratic self-governing institutions" in Kosovo. To achieve this aim, a Constitutional Framework for Self-Government in Kosovo was promulgated in May which would established Provisional Institutions of Self-Government. The institutions included establishing a directly elected Assembly of Kosovo which would nominate a President and a Government led by a Prime Minister. Elections for the new assembly were held on 17 November 2001 and on 4 March 2002, Ibrahim Rugova was appointed as President and a cabinet was formed led by Bajram Rexhepi as Prime Minister.

Office Holders

Special Representative of the Secretary-General

President of Kosovo

; Parties

Prime Minister of Kosovo

; Parties

Cabinets

Assumed officePrime MinisterCompositionCabinetElection
15 December 1999n/aInterim
4 March 2002Bajram RexhepiRexhepi cabinet2001
3 December 2004Ramush HaradinajFirst Haradinaj cabinet2004
25 March 2005Bajram KosumiKosumi cabinet2004
10 March 2006Agim ÇekuÇeku cabinet2004
9 January 2008Hashim ThaçiSecond Thaçi cabinet2007
----2007

Elections

Central

Prior to the declaration of independence of Kosovo in February 2008, three elections were held for the Provisional Institutions of Self-Government:
  • 2001 Kosovan parliamentary election
  • 2004 Kosovan parliamentary election
  • 2007 Kosovan parliamentary election

    Local

Three local elections were held in Kosovo during the period of direct UN administration:
At the start of the period of United Nations administration Kosovo had been divided into five districts. Reforms initiated by UNMIK in 2000 increased the number of districts to seven which were; District of Mitrovica, District of Peja, District of Gjakova, District of Pristina, District of Ferizaj, District of Prizren and District of Gjilan. Each region was overseen by a Regional Administrator appointed by UNMIK.
The districts of Kosovo are divided into municipalities. In 2000, UNMIK merged the municipalities of Gora and Opolje to form the new municipality of Dragash and created a new municipality, Malisheva in Prizren district. New Serb majority municipalities were subsequently created along with the Turkish majority municipality of Mamusha. By 2008, the number of municipalities stood at 38 of which 27 had an Albanian ethnic majority, 10 Serb and 1 Turkish.
Initially, municipalities were administered by Municipal Administrative Boards headed by Municipal Administrators appointed by UNMIK. Local elections were first held on 28 October 2000 to elect Municipal Assemblies for each municipality. Each Municipal Assembly was headed by an Assembly President elected by the members of its Municipal Assembly from within its membership. Further local elections were held on 26 October 2002 under the same model. At the final set of local elections held under United Nations administration on 17 November 2007, each municipality directly elected a Mayor in addition to its Municipal Assembly.

Security and law enforcement

The Kumanovo Agreement, which ended the Kosovo War, and Resolution 1244 required that the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia withdrew its military, paramilitary forces and police from Kosovo. The resolution also required that the Kosovo Liberation Army and other armed Kosovo Albanian armed groups be disbanded. Security in Kosovo was to be provided by a NATO-led international peacekeeping force known as the Kosovo Force.
On 21 September 1999, UNMIK established a civil defence service known as the Kosovo Protection Corps to assist in emergency situations such as major fires, industrial accidents, search and rescue operations, humanitarian assistance and demining. The KPC could have up to 3000 full time officers and 2000 reservists of which 10 percent should be from ethnic minority groups. The KPC would not have any role in law enforcement.
Initially law and order in Kosovo was maintained by a United Nations International Police Force. On 6 September 1999, UNMIK established a police school in Vushtrri to train officers for the new Kosovo Police Service which would gradually take over policing duties as it expanded in size and developed further capabilities.

International relations

Membership of international organizations

During the period of direct administration by UNMIK, Kosovo gained membership of the following international organisations:
International OrganisationPolitical Entity RepresentedApplication dateAdmission dateStatus
Southeast European Cooperative Initiative UNMIKObserver
South East Europe Transport Observatory UNMIK11 June 2004Member
Energy CommunityUNMIK1 July 2006Member
European Common Aviation Area UNMIK30 November 2006Member
Central European Free Trade Agreement UNMIK6 April 200626 July 2007Member

Free trade agreements

UNMIK signed several free trade agreements with other countries on behalf of Kosovo:
International treaty or conventionPolitical Entity RepresentedSignatureRatification
Free Trade Agreement with AlbaniaUNMIK7 July 20031 October 2003
Free Trade Agreement with North MacedoniaUNMIK2 February 2006
Free Trade Agreement with CroatiaUNMIK28 September 20061 November 2006
Free Trade Agreement with Bosnia and HerzegovinaUNMIK19 October 20061 December 2006