Protesting MPs release tear gas in Kosovo parliament

Published October 9, 2015
Pristina: A white cloud of tear gas released by opposition lawmakers in Kosovo’s parliament rises on Thursday, causing two legislators to faint. The lawmakers were protesting a recent EU-brokered deal reached by the government with Serbia.—AFP
Pristina: A white cloud of tear gas released by opposition lawmakers in Kosovo’s parliament rises on Thursday, causing two legislators to faint. The lawmakers were protesting a recent EU-brokered deal reached by the government with Serbia.—AFP

PRISTINA: Opposition lawmakers released clouds of tear gas in Kosovo’s parliament on Thursday, causing two MPs to faint, in protest at a recent EU-brokered deal reached by the government with Serbia.

The session was immediately cancelled as smoke filled the chamber and two female lawmakers were taken by ambulance to hospital, said a reporter at the scene.

Four ambulances were seen outside parliament offering first aid to those affected by the incident, in which tear gas spread from two small boxes placed by the protesters near the assembly podium.

The government later released a statement saying the opposition’s “violent behaviour” had “exceeded all bounds of institutional and democratic behaviour”.

Opposition members are angry over an accord brokered by the European Union in August between Kosovo’s government and Serbia, which the EU had hailed as a “landmark” in normalising relations.

Kosovo, whose population is predominantly ethnic Albanian, declared independence from Serbia in 2008, but Belgrade fiercely rejected the move and still considers the breakaway territory as its southern province.

As part of the recent deal, Kosovo agreed to give more financial and legislative rights to its minority Serb community, setting up Serb-run municipalities that allow for greater autonomy.

Opposition parties see the move as a threat to the majority and believe it could deepen the ethnic divide in Kosovo.

Published in Dawn October 9th, 2015

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