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Kosovo elects new president, opposition protests

Kosovo's Prime Minister Isa Mustafa (R) and Kosovo's Foreign Minister Hashim Thaci (L) attend a parliamentary session in Pristina on August 3, 2015. Kosovo lawmakers are set to vote today for constitutional amendments that will pave the way for the establishment of a special EU-backed court to address war crimes allegedly committed by ethnic Albanian guerrillas during the 1998-1999 war.
Kosovo's Prime Minister Isa Mustafa (R) and Kosovo's Foreign Minister Hashim Thaci (L) attend a parliamentary session in Pristina on August 3, 2015. Kosovo lawmakers are set to vote today for constitutional amendments that will pave the way for the establishment of a special EU-backed court to address war crimes allegedly committed by ethnic Albanian guerrillas during the 1998-1999 war. ARMEND NIMANI/AFP/Getty Images

PRISTINA, Kosovo – Kosovo’s Parliament was voting Friday on whether to elect Hashim Thaci, foreign minister and former guerrilla leader, as the next president.

Thaci, who led the fighters of Kosovo’s successful separatist war against Serbia in 1998-99, believes he has the votes in the 120-seat Parliament. Kosovo declared independence in 2008, although that is rejected by Serbia.

Rafet Rama, a lawmaker from Thaci’s Democratic Party of Kosovo, is also running for the post.

The opposition boycotted the voting, and hundreds of opposition supporters are camping out in tents on the main square demanding the government’s resignation and fresh elections.

Thousands of people gathered at Skanderbeg Square in front of the building sheltering Parliament, the government and the president’s office.

Police have been trying to keep a small group of Thaci’s supporters away from the main square. They came out despite Thaci’s call to celebrate at home.

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The opposition has disrupted Parliament since September with tear gas, pepper spray, whistles and water bottles to reject a deal between Kosovo and Serbia, reached last year, which gives more powers to ethnic Serbs in Kosovo. The opposition also rejects a border demarcation pact with Montenegro.

As president, Thaci would also deal with a special war crimes court created last year, which will have international judges and prosecutors to try ethnic Albanian guerrillas for the alleged killing of civilian detainees, most of them Serbs, immediately after the war ended in 1999.

Thaci was mentioned in a 2010 Council of Europe report which claimed that leaders of the now disbanded Kosovo Liberation Army were responsible for the deaths of hundreds of Serbs, Roma and ethnic Albanians suspected of collaborating with Serbs. Thaci denies the claims.

Llazar Semini in Tirana, Albania, contributed to this report.

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