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July 12, 2008 Saturday Rajab 8, 1429



Kosovo wins $1.9bn in aid pledge


BRUSSELS, July 11: Newly independent Kosovo won 1.2 billion euros ($1.9 billion) in aid pledges at a donors’ conference on Friday billed as the first step to rebuilding its shattered economy.

Prime Minister Hashim Thaci announced that Kosovo, which broke away from Serbia in February, had applied to join the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF). He reaffirmed its long-term goal of entering Nato and the European Union.

“This is testimony that the world believes in Kosovo,” Thaci told delegates after the one-day conference attended by the EU’s 27 countries, the United States and other international donors.

The European Commission pledged 500 million euros of EU funds ahead of the event and the United States offered $400 million. Individual EU states added their own contributions, with Germany providing 100 million euros.

“Kosovo is a profoundly European matter ... and this is the most concrete, tangible proof of our commitment to Kosovo and stability in the western Balkans as a whole,” EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said of the EU cash.

The amount raised includes some EU money that was already earmarked for Kosovo, and falls short of the 1.4 billion euros of funding needs that had been identified for Kosovo between 2009 and 2011.

But Thaci, vowing “zero-tolerance” on the corruption that has dogged Kosovo for years, said the result was better than expected because much of the funds covered only the next two years.

A breakdown of individual contributions was not provided but conference sources said the German pledge far outweighed all others aside from the US offer. Non-EU states Saudi Arabia and Norway gave smaller but substantial donations, they added.—Reuters







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