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Background

The Promise of Accountability for the March 2004 Violence in Kosovo

The international community is] totally determined to find the perpetrators, to find those people who are behind those kind of things, because they have tried to destroy the whole future of Kosovo. They are responsible for severe crimes against humanity.1
—Harri Holkeri, UNMIK SRSG, March 24, 2004

Forty-eight hours of rioting by Kosovo Albanians between March 17 and 18, 2004, involving an estimated 51,000 participants throughout Kosovo, left nineteen persons dead, 954 wounded, and 4,100 displaced. At least 730 minority-owned homes, twenty-seven Orthodox churches and monasteries, and ten public buildings providing services to minorities (including a hospital, two schools, and a post office) were burned and looted. The violence mainly affected Serb, Roma, Ashkaeli, and other non-Albanian minority communities living in Kosovo, including people who had recently returned to the province, but also had an impact on the Albanian community,2 nine of whom died during the riots.3

(The riots are discussed in detail in a Human Rights Watch report of mid-2004, derived from research conducted in Kosovo in the immediate aftermath of the March events. See Human Rights Watch, “Failure to Protect: Anti-Minority Violence in Kosovo, March 2004.”4)

The criminal justice response to March 2004 provides a useful yardstick with which to measure progress on accountability efforts in the province generally. First, after more than six years of international administration, it can no longer be argued that the international community has had insufficient time to address the shortcomings in the legal framework, the police, the prosecuting authorities, and the courts.5 Second, the international community has itself emphasized that March marked a genuine turning point in its efforts to create accountability for ethnic and political violence in Kosovo.

The resounding message from the international community and from the Kosovo Albanian political leadership at the time was that the March violence was unacceptable and that it would be “fixed.” Specifically, it was claimed that houses would be rebuilt to their original state;6 displaced persons would be cared for until return was possible; deficiencies in security structures and lines of communication that had led to the failure to protect would be remedied; and that those responsible would be brought to justice.

On March 17, 2004, a joint statement was issued on behalf of U.N. Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) Special Representative of the Secretary-General (SRSG) Harri Holkeri, the Provisional Institutions of Self-Government (PISG, the interim local government in Kosovo), the E.U. Presidency, and the governments of the United States, France, Germany, the United Kingdom and Italy (the so-called Quint). It contained a clear commitment to create accountability: “The events of today and the last days will be investigated, and those responsible for deaths and acts of violence will be prosecuted.”7

The following day, the U.N. Security Council made clear the importance of accountability, “reiterat[ing] the urgent need for the authorities in Kosovo to take effective steps to enforce the rule of law, ensure proper security for all ethnic communities and bring to justice all the perpetrators of criminal acts.”8 The Council of the European Union issued a similar call at its March 25-26, 2004 summit: “The European Council strongly condemned the recent ethnically-motivated violence in Kosovo… Those responsible for the violence must be brought to justice.”9

The Kosovo Standards Implementation Plan—“standards” being the political criteria tied to negotiations on Kosovo’s future status—dated March 31, 2004, also makes reference to the need for accountability for the March violence. The first item on the list of priority actions for the rule of law under the plan is: “As soon as possible, bringing to justice those responsible for crimes of violence during the events of 17-20 March 2004 and ensuring they are punished appropriately.”10

In May 2004, European Union External Relations Commissioner Chris Patten, echoed the call for accountability: “The violent events of last March constitute a serious setback for Kosovo. It is essential that those responsible are brought to justice.”11

At the request of the U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, Special Envoy Kai Eide conducted a political assessment of Kosovo during the summer of 2004. In his report to the Secretary-General, Eide emphasized the need for the international leadership in Kosovo to show “demonstrable progress in the area of security, reconstruction, prosecution of those responsible for March events, and reform of local government.”12

By late 2004, there was a widely held belief that real progress was being made in these areas. There had been a flurry of highly publicized arrests for March-related crimes immediately after the riots, as well as prompt allocation of funds from the central Kosovo budget for reconstruction efforts.

The Structure of the Criminal Justice System in Kosovo

Police

The Kosovo police is a hybrid force of national and international police officers. Upon arrival in Kosovo in 1999, and as part of its policing responsibilities, UNMIK established an international U.N. civilian police force, responsible for interim law enforcement functions until the creation of a “credible, professional, and impartial” Kosovo Police Service (KPS).13

UNMIK was also tasked with the establishment of the KPS, with support from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (which is responsible for “institution building” in Kosovo). UNMIK and the OSCE have worked together to train recruits to become KPS officers, a process that began in September 1999 with the training of the first group of 176 aspiring police officers.14 By March 2006—six–and-a-half years later—some 6,846 KPS officers had been trained and deployed throughout Kosovo.15 (At the time of the riots, there were 5,700 KPS officers.16)

While in March 2004 most of the KPS officers were working under the supervision and direction of the international UNMIK Police, since then much of the policing responsibilities in Kosovo have been transferred to the operational control of the national KPS police.17 UNMIK international police officers function primarily in a monitoring and advisory role, and their numbers are steadily decreasing as the mission comes to a close. From approximately 4,450 officers in early 2003,18 by March 2006 there were 2,200 international officers working in Kosovo.19

In April 2004—just a few weeks after the March riots—a new criminal procedure code and criminal code came into effect that fundamentally altered the structure of the criminal justice system, shifting primary responsibility for bringing cases to trial from investigating judges to prosecutors. The new law introduced the concept of a “judicial police,” a specialized police branch tasked with supporting the investigative efforts of prosecutors.20 (See section on “Impact of the April 2004 Restructuring of the Criminal Justice System,” below.)

Prosecutorial Service

The prosecution service in Kosovo is also hybrid, with nationals and internationals working separately within the same court system. At the time of writing there were ten international prosecutors working for the criminal division of the Department of Justice (DOJ).21 Since late 2005, the work of the international prosecutors has been centralized, with all international prosecutors working from the DOJ building in Pristina, supervised by the deputy director of the department.22 Though working under the same domestic law as national prosecutors, international prosecutors have the authority to remove cases from national prosecutors’ jurisdiction or to retain them for themselves. Cases are generally taken over or retained where they are deemed sensitive because they include an inter-ethnic, political or organized crime dimension.

The eighty-nine national prosecutors working in Kosovo’s courts are divided between thirteen prosecutors’ offices throughout the province. These offices mirror the structure of the courts. The service has three tiers, headed by the Pristina-based Office of the Public Prosecutor for Kosovo, followed by five district prosecutors’ offices, and seven municipal prosecutors’ offices. The offices are generally located in court buildings.23

The Office of the Public Prosecutor for Kosovo has a mandate to oversee and standardize the work of all of the prosecutors in the province. In practice, however, this does not happen. Although the Office does submit reports on national prosecutors’ work to the Department of Justice, the head public prosecutor made clear to Human Rights Watch that he understands the mandate of the Office for the Public Prosecutor to relate to appeals to the Supreme Court rather than supervising the work of national prosecutors.24

One national prosecutor described the current interaction between national and international prosecutors as “a parallel system.” 25 International prosecutors confirmed the separation of the two prosecutorial systems, suggesting that this was largely due to the nature of their work on different cases and the logistical set-up of their office space.

In practice, then, each national prosecutorial office works autonomously from the national system and from the international prosecutors working in the province. The lack of coordination between prosecutors’ offices exacerbates the difficulties that prosecutors already face with a large caseload and insufficient numbers of staff.26 

In the words of the Head Public Prosecutor:

We have an international prosecutor assigned [to this jurisdiction]. I never see him. He officially works for this office, but I never see him. It would be different if he was here and we ran into each other and could organize our work together. . . It is obvious. They do not even try to hide the fact that we are completely separate.27

Lack of coordination limits experience-sharing between national prosecutors or between national and international prosecutors, and inhibits the development of best practices.

Following major changes to the criminal justice system in April 2004, all prosecutors, national and international, are now expected not only to prosecute cases but to also work in an investigative capacity with the police on investigations, “directing and supervising the work of the judicial police in the pretrial stage of criminal proceedings.”28  This new role, previously performed by judges, significantly increased demands on the prosecutorial service, and underscores the need for effective coordination of the work of prosecutors both horizontally and vertically. (For more details, see section on “Impact of the April 2004 Restructuring of Criminal Justice System,” below.)

Courts

Kosovo is a civil law system. The present court structure is largely that of the pre-conflict system, with one important change. That change arises from the reforms of April 2004, which removed investigative responsibilities from judges and gave them to prosecutors. At the top there is a Supreme Court with appellate and original jurisdiction. The Supreme Court has a broad mandate to supervise the work of the lower courts, but it has not exercised this function since 1999.29

Below the Supreme Court there are five regional district courts, also with original and appellate jurisdiction.30 Original jurisdiction for criminal cases in the district courts is generally for crimes that carry a penalty of five years of imprisonment or more. Below the district courts are twenty-four municipal courts across Kosovo with first-instance jurisdiction over criminal cases with a penalty of up to five years of imprisonment.31

Also, twenty-five minor offenses courts have jurisdiction over all cases that hold a maximum penalty of two months of imprisonment. These cases are primarily of the “disturbance to public order” type, including a large percentage of traffic violations. They do not require and rarely include the appearance of prosecutors or defense attorneys as part of the proceedings. Appeals from the minor offenses courts may be heard by the High Court for Minor Offenses.

By the end of January 2006 there were a total of 306 national and thirteen international judges working in the Kosovo courts. The international judges only operate in the Supreme and district courts, sometimes as members of mixed international-national panels and sometimes on exclusively international panels (e.g. for war crimes trials). They hear cases tried by international prosecutors.

Kosovo’s fifty-nine courts are located in thirty-six buildings across the province.32 The geographic spread of court locations has been regarded in some quarters as an impediment to effective monitoring of proceedings by the Department of Justice, the OSCE, the Department of Judicial Administration, and nongovernmental organizations.

Political Oversight of the Criminal Justice System

The international United Nations civilian administration in Kosovo is a complex system in which responsibility is shared among the United Nations, the OSCE and the European Union.33  The head of mission is a Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General (SRSG) and ultimately wields all legislative and executive authority in Kosovo, including the administration of the criminal justice system.34

In 2001, as envisioned by the U.N. Security Council when the United Nations assumed responsibility for Kosovo two years previously, UNMIK began transferring some of its powers to local institutions. These institutions include a directly elected Assembly, which in turn elects the President and appoints the Kosovo Government. Kosovo has seen an accelerated transfer of powers to the Provisional Institutions of Self-Government (PISG) in the last couple of years. In addition to a previous and broad transfer of powers across the municipal level, a number of ministries have been transferred from international to national control.35

UNMIK Police and Justice

UNMIK Pillar I—Police and Justice is the primary rule of law and justice player in Kosovo.36 The Pillar not only holds reserved powers over the functioning of the various aspects of the system, but also dictates policy to the institutions that answer directly to it. Pillar I also retains financial control of the national judiciary and control of overall policy decisions.37 Pillar I has both a police department headed by an international police commissioner and a Department of Justice, and is “the focal point for UNMIK’s efforts to establish the rule of law in Kosovo.”38

Pillar I oversight over the national judiciary is supported by a local Department of Judicial Administration (DJA) within the transferred Ministry of Public Services in the PISG. This Department has technical responsibility for the administration of the national judiciary, but is primarily engaged with managing material and staffing resource requests from the national judges and prosecutors to the UNMIK Department of Justice and Pillar I.

The Department of Justice

To date, the UNMIK Department of Justice, acting for the international administration, has exercised responsibility for the courts in Kosovo, performing the functions of a ministry of justice. The department is tasked with prosecution and adjudication of the most serious cases through international prosecutors and judges as well as responsibility for overall justice concerns. There are specific sections within the DOJ tasked with prosecution of crimes and with general judicial development, including the overall functioning of the national judiciary.39 The Department also maintains responsibility for substantive legal and policy decisions.40

While theoretically much of the responsibility for oversight of the judiciary at the ground level in courts and prosecutorial offices falls to the PISG, in practice this has not happened. Instead, as noted above, the local Department of Judicial Administration (DJA) has primarily acted as a conduit between the courts and the Department of Justice with regard to material and personnel needs. The DJA maintains some statistics on the work of the courts, but does not carry out management or administrative functions over them.41 These functions are performed by individual court administrators and/or presidents. In the words of a senior DJA official:

Although this Department has been transferred to the Ministry of Public Services, it is not really in charge of the judiciary, beginning with the budget. If you have no budget you cannot make any decisions. So we coordinate with the DOJ.…Whatever lies with the work of the courts, with professional issues, is the DOJ. Court staff and resources—that is DJA. The DOJ has acted as a Ministry of Justice with reserved powers until now—even still now….42

Given UNMIK’s continued control over the budget and its reserved powers in the areas of justice and policing, including responsibility for the police, prosecutors, and courts, as well as agenda setting, and in the assessment of DJA official above, it is apparent that Pillar I remains the central actor in the criminal justice system in Kosovo.43 

The Establishment of New PISG Ministries of Justice and Internal Affairs

Some of the Department of Justice’s powers are in the process of being transferred to a new Ministry of Justice within the PISG. The bulk of the Ministry of Justice’s new responsibilities will initially be administrative in nature. It is expected that UNMIK will continue to exercise responsibility for sensitive cases (such as those involving inter-ethnic conflict or organized crime) for the near and mid-term future. The Special Representative of the Secretary-General and head of UNMIK (currently Soren Jessen-Petersen) will also retain reserved powers over highly sensitive or political issues.44

In mid-March 2006, a first minister of justice was elected and approved by the SRSG. His main priorities for his first three months in office, as reported in the press, include further staffing, the creation of an inter-ministerial working group, and negotiating terms for the ministry with UNMIK Pillar I.45 After the establishment of the Ministry, the DJA was officially divided. The department’s responsibilities for prosecution matters have been transferred to the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Justice. Its court administration responsibilities have been formally transferred to the Kosovo Judicial Council (established pursuant to UNMIK regulation No. 52/2005).46 At the time of writing, discussions over the transfer of the court administration budget were ongoing.47

On December 20, 2005, UNMIK also passed a regulation on the establishment of a Ministry of Internal Affairs. The implementation plan for the new ministry, as with the Ministry of Justice, first involves the appointment of a minister and deputy minister. Following these appointments, the ministry will begin to assume legal, technical, financial, and administrative responsibility for policing. Transfer of the more important responsibilities such as full operational control of the KPS and the Kosovo Correctional Service (KCS, which administers detention facilities) will only take place after a three-month performance evaluation by the Special Representative of the Secretary-General.

Following a positive evaluation, the next step would be the appointment of a KPS deputy police commissioner who would work directly under the guidance of the minister of internal affairs, but still be subject to the overall authority of the Special Representative and the international UNMIK Police commissioner.48 At the time of writing, a minister for the post of the Ministry of Internal Affairs had just been appointed, and two departments (of Emergency and of Civil Documents) had been transferred to the new Ministry.49




[1] Nebi Qena, “UN accuses Kosovo violence instigators of ‘crimes against humanity,’” Agence France-Presse, March 24, 2004.

[2] It should be noted that although March 2004 did predominately affect minorities, several hundred Albanians living in a minority position in the northern part of the province were also displaced as a result of the riots.

[3] The figure of nine Albanian dead (of a total nineteen) is as reported by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE); these figures are used throughout this report. The Department of Justice told Human Rights Watch that there had been twenty deaths related to the March riots, with twelve ethnic Albanians among them. Human Rights Watch interview with Department of Justice staff, Pristina/Prishtine, February 23, 2006 (for the sake of clarity and consistency, Human Rights Watch provides both the Serbian and Albanian name at first mention of location. Subsequent references are in the Serbian language only, since this is the English language practice—for example, Pristina and not Prishtine).

[4] Human Rights Watch, “Failure to Protect: Anti-Minority Violence in Kosovo, March 2004,” A Human Rights Watch Report, Vol. 16 No. 6 (D), July 2004, [online] http://hrw.org/reports/2004/kosovo0704/. See also International Crisis Group, “Collapse in Kosovo,” Europe Report No. 155, April 22, 2004, [online] http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id=2627&l=1 (retrieved May 2, 2006).

[5] In September 2002, the OSCE Mission in Kosovo asserted that “a regular and functional court system with regard to criminal cases had been put in place throughout Kosovo.” OSCE Mission in Kosovo, Legal Systems Monitoring Section, “Kosovo’s War Crimes Trials: A Review,” September 2002, p. 10 [hereinafter “OSCE 2002 War Crimes Report”].

[6] The issues related to the reconstruction effort post-March 2004 fall outside the scope of this report, though they are an important aspect of the comprehensive accountability effort to be undertaken in Kosovo post March-2004.

[7] Joint Statement of PISG, Political Leaders, the QUINT, E.U. Presidency and SRSG Harri Holkeri, UNMIK/PR/1141, March 17, 2004, [online] http://www.unmikonline.org/press/2004/pressr/pr1141.pdf (retrieved April 15, 2006).

[8] United Nations,.“Security Council, in Presidential Statement, Strongly Condemns Inter-Ethnic Violence in Kosovo, Insists on Immediate Halt,” U.N. Press Release, SC/8030, March 18, 2004, [online] http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2004/sc8030.doc.htm (retrieved April 15, 2006).

[9] Council of the European Union, Presidency Conclusions, 9048/04, POLGEN 20, CONCL 1, March 25-26, 2004, [online] http://europa.eu.int/comm/environment/climat/pdf/spring_2004.pdf (retrieved April 15, 2006).

[10] Kosovo Standards Implementation Plan, March 31, 2004, [online] http://www.unmikonline.org/pub/misc/ksip_eng.pdf (retrieved April 15, 2006).

[11] “Patten visits Belgrade and Pristina, 10th and 11th May,” E.U. Pillar, UNMIK, Press Release, Pristina, May 7, 2004, [online] http://www.euinkosovo.org/press/2004/pr07052004.html (retrieved December 15, 2005).

[12] Kai Eide, “The Situation in Kosovo—Report to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Summary and Recommendations,” August 2004, page iv, paragraph 15.

[13] UNMIK, “Police and Justice (Pillar I)—Police, Mandate,” undated, [online] http://www.unmikonline.org/justice/police.htm (retrieved March 6, 2006).

[14] Ibid.

[15] Another 411 were attending the school and expected to be deployed by June 2006. KPS ultimately aims to train and deploy approximately 7,200 KPS officers in Kosovo—a goal largely achieved, but expected to be supported by the ongoing recruitment and training of small groups of officers to respond to the normal turnover within the service. Human Rights Watch interview with KPS training department, Pristina, March 1, 2006.

[16] Figure from UNMIK, cited in Human Rights Watch, “Failure to Protect.”

[17] All thirty-three (33) police stations and five of the six regional headquarters (all but Mitrovica/Mitrovice) have been transferred to KPS control, with international officers sitting primarily in a monitoring and advisory  role. In addition, by late 2005 the following units had been transferred to KPS control: the Canine (K-9) Unit; gender affairs units; regional crime squads; regional traffic units; the KPS Appeals Board; weapons licensing; community policing; professional standards; and forensics. “Report of the Secretary-General on the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo to the Security Council,” S/2006/45, January 25, 2006, Annex I “Technical assessment of progress in implementation of the standards for Kosovo,” prepared by the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Kosovo on December 20, 2005, pp. 12-13, para. 29.

[18] UNMIK website at http://www.unmikonline.org/justice/police.htm (retrieved March 6, 2006). In comparison, by the end of 2003 there were 3,752 international police officers in the mission. In March 2004, the number of international UNMIK civilian police had reduced to 3,248. U.N. Security Council, “Report of the Secretary-General on the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo,” U.N. Doc. S/2004/348,.April 30, 2004, Annex 1.

[19] This includes 1,718 civilian police (CIVPOL), two officers working in the correctional facilities, and five hundred members of Special Police Units (SPUs). Human Rights Watch telephone interview with UNMIK Police representative, Pristina, March 1, 2006. UNMIK Police officers come from some forty-six contributing nations, from Argentina to Zimbabwe, and vary widely in terms of their policing experience and human rights awareness.

[20] Provisional Criminal Procedure Code of Kosovo, UNMIK/REG/2003/26, July 6, 2003, entered into force April 6, 2004, [online] http://www.unmikonline.org/regulations/2003/RE2003_26_PCPC.pdf (retrieved April 14, 2006).

[21] In the fall of 2005 and early 2006 there were thirteen international prosecutors. Human Rights Watch telephone interview with criminal division staff member, Department of Justice, May 8, 2006.

[22] Human Rights Watch interview with international prosecutor, Department of Justice, Pristina, February 20, 2006. Previously, there was an international prosecutor designated to work in the Supreme Court and one or two prosecutors based in each region (district courts). For an in-depth discussion of the history of international judges and prosecutors in Kosovo see Michael E. Hartmann, “International Judges and Prosecutors in Kosovo: A new Model for Post-Conflict Peacekeeping,” United States Institute of Peace, Special Report no. 112, October 2003, [online] http://www.usip.org/pubs/specialreports/sr112.html (retrieved March 14, 2006).

[23] For further discussion of the locations and mandate of these offices, see Rubotham, Sejr, Tunheim, Wiggins, and Zimmer, “Kosovo Judicial System: Assessment and Proposed Options 2003-2004,” prepared pursuant to a request of the SRSG and KJPC, July 2005, pp.34-36 [hereinafter Rubotham and others, “Kosovo Judicial System Assessment”].

[24] Human Rights Watch interview with staff of the Office for the Public Prosecutor for Kosovo, Pristina, February 1, 2006. When specifically asked if this office has hierarchy over the other prosecutor offices in Kosovo, the head of this office replied, “only sometimes in some individual cases.” He further explained that for example if a case from the district court were appealed, his office would have hierarchy over the district court-level prosecutors and thus conduct the appeal.

[25] Ibid.

[26] The Department of Justice told Human Rights Watch that it has been difficult to find additional qualified people to fill these spots. Human Rights Watch interview with senior official, Department of Justice, Pristina, February 3, 2006.

[27] Human Rights Watch interview with national prosecutor, Office for the Public Prosecutor for Kosovo, Pristina, February 1, 2006.

[28] See Rubotham and others, “Kosovo Judicial System Assessment,” pp.70-76, for an analysis of the impact of transferring investigative responsibilities to the prosecution under the new code.

[29] See Rubotham and others, “Kosovo Judicial System Assessment,” p.26.

[30] The districts are: Pristina, Prizren/Prizren, Gnjilane/Gjilan, Pec/Peje, and Mitrovica.

[31] For a detailed description of the jurisdiction of these courts see discussion in Rubotham and others, “Kosovo Judicial System Assessment,” pp.15-22. Note that in addition to the twenty-four municipal courts there are additional departments in two majority Kosovo Serb areas: Gracanica/Gracanice, which is a department of the municipal court of Pristina; and, Strpce/Shterpce, which is a department of the municipal court in Urosevac/Ferizaj.

[32] This number includes the two departments in Gracanica and Strpce as well as the commercial court in Pristina. The non-functioning commercial court in Djakovica is excluded from this total.

[33] The original structure of the U.N. Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK), established by U.N. Security Council Resolution 1244, divided responsibility among four “pillars.” Pillar I, headed by UNHCR, was responsible for humanitarian assistance; Pillar II, under the control of UNMIK, was responsible for civil administration; Pillar III, led by the OSCE, had responsibility for institution building; and Pillar IV, managed by the E.U., was tasked with economic reconstruction. The humanitarian pillar was phased out in June 2000 and replaced by a new Pillar I for Justice and Police in May 2001. Policing and justice issues under the civil administration pillar’s authority were transferred at that time to the new Pillar. Pillar II was dissolved in the fall of 2005, and its functions transferred to local institutions or redistributed among Pillar actors. For a more detailed discussion of the establishment of UNMIK and developments in Kosovo, see Security Council Report, Update Report: Kosovo, February 10, 2006, [online] http://www.securitycouncilreport.org/site/c.glKWLeMTIsG/b.1416071/k.D974/update_report_no3BRKosovoBR10_February_2006.htm (retrieved March 14, 2006).

[34] The civilian administration is augmented by an international peacekeeping force (the NATO-led Kosovo Force, KFOR) tasked with maintaining peace and security and guarding Kosovo’s borders.

[35] These ministries include the Ministry of Local Government Administration; the Ministry of Public Services; the Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sports; the Ministry of Education; the Ministry of Health; the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare; the Ministry of Communities and Returns; the Ministry of Environment and Spatial Planning; the Ministry of Finance and Economy; the Ministry of Trade and Industry; the Ministry of Energy and Mining; the Ministry of Transport and Communications; the Ministry of Science and Technology; and the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Rural Development. The process of transferring powers to the newly established ministries of Justice and Internal Affairs was in progress at the time of writing. (See discussion in subsection “The Establishment of New PISG ministries of Justice and Internal Affairs,” below.)

[36] On May 1, 2006, as this report was going to press, Pillar I was abolished.  Its functions are now being carried out by a new policy office within the Office of the SRSG (Policy Office for Rule of Law). The Department of Justice and the Office of the Police Commissioner now report directly to the principal deputy SRSG, rather than to the head of Pillar I. These changes came too late for inclusion in the report. The analysis contained in this report is largely unaffected by the restructuring since UNMIK retains oversight of police and justice matters. All references in the report to Pillar I should be understood to refer to the Office of the SRSG. For more information see Office of the SRSG, PDSRSG, Guidance Circular on Restructuring if Pillar I, May 10, 2006, on file with Human Rights Watch.

[37] Human Rights Watch interview with Department of Judicial Administration official, Pristina, February 15, 2006.

[38] UNMIK, Pillar I—Police and Justice, Introduction, undated, [online] http://www.unmikonline.org/justice/index_pillar1.htm (retrieved April 17, 2006).

[39] Human Rights Watch interviews with Department of Justice staff, Kosovo, October and November 2005; Human Rights Watch interview with staff of the Legal Policy Division, Department of Justice, Pristina, January 2006; Human Rights Watch interview with staff of the Judicial Development Division, Department of Justice, Pristina, February 2006. See also the UNMIK website description of the Department of Justice’s mandate at http://www.unmikonline.org/justice/index_pillar1.htm. For a detailed analysis of the justice system in Kosovo, see Rubotham and others, “Kosovo Judicial System Assessment.”

[40] UNMIK, Pillar I—Police and Justice, Introduction, undated, [online] http://www.unmikonline.org/justice/index_pillar1.htm (retrieved April 17, 2006); See also United Nations, Human Rights Committee, “Report Submitted by the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo to the Human Rights Committee on the Human Rights Situation since June 1999,” February 15, 2006, CCPR/C/UNK/1, para. 34.

[41] Human Rights Watch interview with senior management of the Department of Judicial Administration, Pristina, February 15, 2006.

[42] Ibid.

[43] UNMIK appears to come to the same conclusion, making the following observation: “Despite the reorganization of the Department [DJA] to correspond with the constitutional framework, difficulties continue to persist. Essentially, the framework leaves substantive legal and policy decisions as reserved functions, yet transfers the administration of many of these policies to the Department of Judicial Administration of the Ministry of Public Services.” UNMIK, Police and Justice, Effects of Constitutional Framework, undated, [online] http://www.unmikonline.org/justice/justice.htm (retrieved April 17, 2006).

[44] Human Rights Watch interview with senior management, Department of Justice, Pristina, February 3, 2006; Human Rights Watch interview with senior officials, Office of the Legal Advisor (OLA), Pristina, March 8, 2006. The Office of the Legal Advisor (OLA) is engaged in legislative drafting and review; it reports to and directly advises the SRSG on legal matters pertaining to the mission. See also, U.N. Security Council, “Report of the Secretary-General on the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo to the Security Council,” S/2006/45, January 25, 2006. For a discussion of the transfer of competencies to the PISG-led ministries of Justice and Internal Affairs see Edina Halapi, “New Ministries: PISG Assumes New Responsibilities,” UNMIK, Focus Kosovo, January 2006, [online] http://www.unmikonline.org/pub/focuskos/jan06/focusklaw1.htm (retrieved April 17, 2006).   

[45] “Kosovo Ministry of Justice and of Interior Get Competencies,” Balkan Update, March 22, 2006, [online] http://balkanupdate.blogspot.com/2006/03/kosovo-ministry-of-justice-and-of.html (retrieved April 17, 2006);  “Salihaj: I will serve justice,” Epoka e Re (Pristina), as reported by UNMIK, Division of Public Information, Media Monitoring, March 20, 2006, on file with Human Rights Watch.

[46] Human Rights Watch interview with official, Department of Justice, Kosovo, May 5, 2006. The DJA explained that the transfer would affect its reporting line (to the KJC instead of the DOJ) more than the actual day-to-day nature of its work. Human Rights Watch interview with official, Department of Judicial Administration, Pristina, February 15, 2006.

     The Kosovo Judicial Council will serve as an independent, administrative arm of the judicial branch. The Council members were sworn in during a ceremony in early April 2006. UNMIK “Members of Newly Established Kosovo Judicial Council Sworn-in,” Press Release, UNMIK/PR/1523, April 3, 2006, [online] http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/EKOI-6NJ4PU?OpenDocument (retrieved April 17, 2006). For discussion of the role of the newly constructed KJC see Arianna Lepore, “A Recipe for Judicial Independence,” UNMIK, Focus Kosovo, January 2006, [online] http://www.unmikonline.org/pub/focuskos/jan06/focusklaw2.htm (retrieved March 6, 2006).

[47] Human Rights Watch email correspondence with the Department of Judicial Administration, March 21, 2006.

[48] See U.N. Security Council, “Report of the Secretary-General on the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo to the Security Council,” S/2006/45, p. 6, para. 13,

[49] “Ministry of Justice and of Interior Get Competencies,” as reported by UNMIK, Division of Public Information, Media Monitoring, March 21, 2006, on file with Human Rights Watch. After the first meeting between the new minister of interior and the SRSG, the SRSG publicly stated: “[w]e are aware that the two newly established ministries have some logistic deficiencies in the beginning, but UNMIK believes in the responsibility of the locals. Based on what we heard and based on the commitment we saw, I think that we can start the second phase of the transfer of powers soon.” The official UNMIK website does not report on developments relating to the establishment of the ministries.


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