The mayors of 4 Northern small municipalities coming from Lista Srbska (a party totally controlled by Vucic but who gets around 90% of the votes from Serbians in Kosovo) resigned. Kosovo declared new elections in those 4 municipalities, but Lista Srbska boycotted the elections, forcing Kosovo to postpone the elections until the last day that is constitutionally allowed. Lista Srbska boycotted elections again, as did the vast majority of the Serbian population (I think only 13 Serbs voted). In the elections, only around 3.5% of people voted, mostly from Albanians and Bisniak communities. Which kinda makes clear that the new mayors were legal but without much legitimacy.What did Kurti do?
EU as always asked for a non-solution, not doing the elections which based on the constitution cannot be done. The US were much more pragmatic, they asked for the new mayors to have a technical, but not political role, which I think should have been the most obvious thing to do.
However, Kurti, as always, had different plans. The mayors were sent into the municipalities, despite that there was a protest from Serbian people living there in 3 out of the 4 municipalities. They didn't want the new mayors to enter the municipality building, after which the Kosovan police intervened, and mayors went in.
Pretty much everyone was against this happening: Antony Blinken himself tweeted and then the Department of State posted a communication asking Kurti to de-escalate the situation, for the mayors to not enter with force, and threatening that this even will have consequences in the relations between the US and Kosovo. This is basically the worst thing that can happen to Kosovo, considering that the US has been the main sponsor of Kosovo, and Kosovo is still defended (primarily) by the US. It seems clear that the US ambassador had already strongly advised Kurti to not do this, and instead, the mayors to do their technical role from some village that is inhabited by Albanians. If Kurti had some dignity, he should have resigned immediately after Blinken's tweet.
Kurti was unanimously condemned for this act. Borrell tweeted against this (but the EU as an institution is a joke when it comes to foreign policy, just look at the laughable Ohrid's deal), and the US, the UK, Germany, France, and Italy made a joined declaration asking all sides to de-escalate, and Kosovo government to not use the police for the mayors to enter (essentially, the US option). Even the UK, which generally is much more supportive of Kosovo than the US, said the same in an individual declaration by their ambassador. And some consul of Germany for Kosovo-Serbia dialogue said literally 'Not all legal things are smart, stop doing stupid things'.
In other words, what Kurti did was legal in terms of the constitution and all that stuff. But considering that at this moment in time, everyone (primarily the US) is against it, it was absolutely idiotic to act this way. The reward is non-existent (those municipalities are completely inhabited by Serbians and extremely small and irrelevant), and the risk was very high. A normal politician does not do these things, and sees the greater picture. But Kurti has always been an irrational actor, who does stupid things, without a clear agenda of 'what would Kosovo win, and what can it lose'. This happening at a time when New York Times had that article about Vucic, and Vucic is having the largest opposition demonstration against this, and still making Vucic looking like the nice guy and the serious partner in negotiations, is unforgivable. It is idiotic.
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Today, there was a demonstration in one of these municipalities. Serbians asked for KFOR (NATO) to replace Kosovan police. After this happened, Serbian demonstrators attacked KFOR. Around 20 KFOR soldiers are injured, and around 50 Serbians (apparently one of them is at risk of dying). Absolute lunacy!