For the past several months, the
government in Pristina has been seeking to close one of the chief
means of livelihood for northern Kosovo Serbs by making it impossible
for Trepca North (TN) to operate, earn income and pay workers. TN is
part of the Trepca Mining Complex that was formerly the economic
engine of Kosovo. After 1999, Kosovo Albanians came to control the
part south of the Ibar River while the northern part remained in the
hands of the previous Serbian managers of Trepca as a socially-owned
enterprise (SOE) in the former Yugoslavia. Until Kosovo declared
independence in 2008, the two parts functioned more or less as one
unit under UNMIK administration. Since then, the Pristina government
has moved to take over the southern assets and to ready them for
privatization.
Until last year, Trepca North was able to operate by working under UNMIK regulations. But then Pristina sought to deny TN the opportunity to export by denying use of UNMIK customs documents and demanding it use Kosovo Customs procedures. Kosovo police also arrested truck-drivers seeking to deliver previously agreed shipments through southern Kosovo. Now Trepca North is on the verge of having to suspend operations.
Until last year, Trepca North was able to operate by working under UNMIK regulations. But then Pristina sought to deny TN the opportunity to export by denying use of UNMIK customs documents and demanding it use Kosovo Customs procedures. Kosovo police also arrested truck-drivers seeking to deliver previously agreed shipments through southern Kosovo. Now Trepca North is on the verge of having to suspend operations.
Trepca North management has tried to
deal pragmatically with Pristina but has refused to recognize Kosovo
Customs or to accept unilateral privatization. It relied on UNMIK
and EULEX - which assumed responsibility for rule of law, including
customs, from the UN in November 2008 – to ensure status neutral
treatment of the company. The UN Secretary General raised concern
with the actions of the Kosovo government to seize Trepca North's
bank account, harass its drivers and block shipments (S/2011/514 & S/2011/675). The UNSG also
noted that actions by Pristina to unilaterally change the law on
privatization would "significantly weaken the protection of
privatization funds and expose the funds to the possibility of
improper use" and would "acutely" curtail
"international involvement in and oversight of the privatization
and liquidation processes" (S/2012/72). Pristina ignored all this.
Instead, it unilaterally declared itself independent of the standing
international framework established to protect assets (and creditors)
until the status of former Yugoslav enterprises - SOEs and publicly
owned enterprises (POEs) - in Kosovo could be agreed.
Pristina's illegal actions against
Trepca North have brought its ability to operate and pay its
thousands of workers and dependents to a grinding halt. On April 6,
TN had to unload 19 trucks that were stalled in customs for three
days waiting to be cleared. Kosovo Customs refused to process the
papers, instead asking approval from Kosovo's Privatization Agency
(PAK). PAK refused because TN rejects its authority. TN will
finally have no alternative but to delay salaries as it has no money
left. (It has not gotten back the 2.4 million Euros seized by
Pristina last year.) Trepca North released the following statement
on the situation on the 6th:
Today, Kosovo Customs authorities refused to perform customs services for our buyer "Trafigura" Switzerland and blocked a shipment of lorries loaded with lead concentrate destined for export, hence 19 loaded lorries, were forced to return to “Trepca” industrial site in Zvecan, after being forced to wait for three days at a customs terminal in the south part of Mitrovica.
According to Kosovo Customs authorities it was Kosovo Privatization Agency who blocked the shipment of Trepca North products, allegedly out of political reasons i.e. because management of “Trepca” refuses to accept, nor acknowledge jurisdiction and competence of Kosovo Privatization Agency.
This sort of conduct, of so called Kosovo institutions has been going on for a while now, especially since July 2011, with an apparent end aim, of which representatives of international missions are fully aware of. All activities of Kosovo Institutions are to the effect of blocking commercial activities in the “North” particularly that of “Trepca” Enterprise, one of the most important and most influential economic subjects employing 3,500 workers. By doing so, Kosovo Institutions are denying “Trepca”, one of the basic human rights- a right to work. Even with the most flexible and pragmatic attitude of “Trepca” and an attempt to, in cooperation with UNMIK, KFOR and EULEX, find the best solution for overcoming the mentioned political questions pertaining to the legal status of “Trepca” Enterprise, under current conditions in Kosovo, institutions in Pristina continue to insist on their aggressive and discriminatory stance.
“Trepca” management shall not, at any cause, accept political blackmail coming from Pristina and shall take all the necessary steps to, in cooperation with the authorized ministries of the Serbian Government, find a solution for future business activity and subsistence.
Trepca North is now waiting for the
reaction of UNMIK and EULEX. The internationals are apparently
unhappy with Pristina's actions on Trepca and its unilateral approach
to privatization in general. But so far they have not intervened
directly under UNSCR 1244, which remains international law in this
regard. So far, the internationals seem to be standing by while
Pristina seeks to strangle the north economically. Putting thousands
of families in jeopardy of their sustenance is unlikely to improve an
already dangerously tense situation.