Kosovo Institutions Threaten our Monks and Nuns With Deportation

KOSOVO INSTITUTIONS THREATEN OUR MONKS AND NUNS WITH DEPORTATION

After an attempt to renew residence permit, one of the monks of the Raška-Prizren Diocese faced a threat that, within few days, he could be deported outside of Kosovo and Metohija (KiM). The problem of documents that majority of Kosovo Serbs have, has proven to be one of the more serious problems the Serbs have been facing in this area. 
M.Š. has been for years a monk in one of the monasteries of the Diocese of Raška-Prizren. Yesterday (8.11.2018) he tried to renew the residence permit in KiM.  He came at the invitation of the Interior Affairs Ministry of Kosovo (MoIA) to take a photo at the police in Priština, after being told he was granted a residence permit (third time in a row).
According to the previous agreement, he was expecting to have a temporary Kosovo ID card issued for the period of 5 years (regular ones are valid for 10 years). However, when he arrived, after waiting for couple of hours, two policemen appeared and took him to the car behind the police building. There he was told his request had been rejected a month ago although M.Š. had received a written confirmation that he would be granted a Kosovo I.D. He was told that the deadline for appeal had expired, so he could be immediately deported, according to the law.
When M.Š. tried to calmly explain he had not received any notice of refusal, but that he was even promised he would receive an ID card, he asked for a reason for the refusal, and the policemen told him this was because he had travel documents of Coordination Administration (i.e., documents the Republic Serbia issues for Serbs living in KiM), and that, in the meantime,  Kosovo MoIA stipulated such documents cannot be used in applications for an extension of residence.
However, he was told to come the next morning, to see the head of the Migration and Foreigners Office at the MoIA. So it was. M.Š. arrived today (November 9, 2018) in the morning, expecting the disagreement to be resolved, but this time he also received a written confirmation (a decision) that his request had been rejected. He was given a new 8-day deadline to appeal, with a promise that he will not be deported out of Kosovo until the appeal is decided.
Raška-Prizren Diocese immediately notified about the case, and through our lawyers and  the Diocese has been in touch with the OSCE mission that mediates in this issue.
It is particularly worrying that monk M.Š. was told in the police to also notify other clerics who have documents of the Coordination Administration for KiM that they will be deported out Kosovo if they do not obtain regular documents of the Republic of Serbia, which again, Serbian MoIA does not issue to citizens in KiM, unless they have a place of residence outside of KIM.
It should be kept in mind that most Kosovo Serbs possess only these documents and passports of Coordination Administration (which are not part of the visa-free Schengen regime as regular documents of the Republic of Serbia). Citizens regularly face problems obtaining visas because foreign embassies in Pristina request Kosovo passports, and when they appear at foreign embassies in Belgrade, they are told they are not authorized to issue visas to citizens of Serbia. According to the latest Kosovo rules, foreigners should apply for minimum five years to obtain temporary documents. M.Š., for the third year, regularly extended his stay, but suddenly faced a situation with the rules changed. This is by the way already seventh procedural change which Kosovo institutions introduced since they promised that at least for the ecclesiastical persons (in accordance with Ahtisaari’s Annex 5), they will, with urgency, provide residency permits for monks and nuns who now live in the monasteries of Kosovo and Metohija.
This attitude of Kosovo institutions towards Serbs who are living in KiM for many years is ultimately discriminatory and directly encourages emigration of our population.
On the other hand, the competent institutions of the Republic of Serbia should find a solution as soon as possible how to help their citizens who are facing with increasingly serious difficulties to survive under existing conditions.
Raška-Prizren Diocese believes this issue should be urgently included in the agenda of the upcoming UN Security Council session in New York, and for this problem to be included in the report of the UN SRSG for KiM.
Raška and Prizren Diocese
9 November 2018, Gračanica-Prizren
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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
According to the latest information which the Diocese obtained from the international sources in Priština and the checkup of the Law on Foreigners (L04/L-219) which was quoted in the refusal letter to M.Š. it is possible that this is a case of technical and not substantial changes to the Law implementation. In other words as M.Š. has already applied for the residence permit prolongation and received it, it appears that the way of the implementation of the law has been changed and not the law itself as the Law on Foreigners specifically requests only “a valid travel document”.
However, there are also specific provisions related to the clergy and monastics of the Serbian Orthodox Church in accordance to the Ahtisaari Plan (Annex V) articles 8.2 and 7A Article of the Law on religious freedom stating:
Article 7A (3):
‘There will be no arbitrary prohibition of entry in Kosovo, or residence within Kosovo for priests, candidates for priesthood, monks, nuns and visitors’.
Article 8/2:
“Unobstructed access by pilgrims, guests and persons who live permanently or temporarily in religious institutions or premises should be guaranteed. This obligation shall be taken into account for the application of the relevant provisions concerning residence and travel”
At the end it appears that this issue has not been clearly defined as the latest draft Law on religious freedom in Kosovo is still stuck in the Parliament (for almost 2 years) and the Kosovo institutions show an increasingly lesser consideration of the Ahtisaari plan and its provisions, which leaves space for arbitrary decisions and interpretations of discriminatory nature as this is the case. Regrettably, this and some other key issues related to the future of our people in KiM have never been discussed in the course of the Brussels Dialog (according to our knowledge) nor do we have any information that this issue is die to be discussed. This creates a grave concern, not only of our clergy and monastics, but also our people who possess only the travel documents issued by the Coordination Administration of Serbia for Kosovo-Metohija.