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Kosovo Agriculture and Fishing Overview
Agriculture
The conditions for successful agriculture are
really good in Kosovo, which has large areas of fertile
land. Just over half of Kosovo's surface is used for
agriculture and pasture. Here wheat is grown mainly but
also potatoes, maize and pepper. Some viticulture also
occurs.
- CountryAAH:
Comprehensive import regulations of Kosovo. Covers import prohibitions and special documentation requirements for a list of prohibited items.
The vast majority of residents live in the
countryside, where many support themselves through
self-catering.
Farms are mostly privately owned, but they are often
small and lack of investment and old-fashioned farming
methods yield low returns. Kosovo is not self-sufficient
for agricultural products.
According to UN data, agricultural production
decreased by an average of 8 percent over the period
2001-2010, but then increased again.

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Digopaul: Definition and brief introduction of Kosovo. Major cities are listed and popular images are presented for this country.
FACTS - AGRICULTURE
Agriculture's share of GDP
8.3 percent (2018)
Percentage of land used for agriculture
52.4 percent (2007)
2018
December
Customs wall against Serbia is tightened
December 28
Kosovo introduces more customs duties on imports from Serbia. In November,
the government imposed 100 percent duty on Serbian goods, but the measure did
not include goods from international companies manufactured in Serbia, such as
drinks such as Coca-Cola, dairy products and medicines. With today's decision,
the tariffs also apply to such goods. Customs will be introduced as revenge for
Serbia's counteracting Kosovo's membership of international organizations (see
also November 21, 2018).
Upset reactions to army decisions
December 14
Decides that Kosovo's security force KSF should be converted into a regular
army, whose personnel will eventually be increased from 3,000 to 5,000 soldiers;
The Kosovo Serbs boycott the vote, with all parties otherwise voting yes (see
October 18). In Serbia, which does not recognize Kosovo's
independence, President Vučić promises to protect the approximately 120,000
Kosovo Serbs if they are attacked.
US support for army
December 6
Washington supports Kosovo's plans to set up its own army, said US Ambassador
Philip Kosnett, in dispute with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg who, the
day before, said the timing of such a change is badly chosen and goes against
"many NATO allies' advice". Parliament is expected to vote on this issue again
shortly (see October 2018).
November
100% duty on Serbian goods
November 21st
Kosovo introduces 100% tariff duties on imports from Serbia (and Bosnia),
warning Serbia of a total cessation of cross-border trade and the EU demands
that the decision be immediately withdrawn. But Kosovo threatens more measures.
The already tense situation worsened already on November 6, when Kosovo imposed
10% tariffs on Serbia and Bosnia, for running an "aggressive campaign" against
Kosovo. According to Prishtina, Belgrade is behind the fact that several smaller
states have withdrawn their recognition of Kosovo as an independent state.
Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić has accused Kosovo of undermining stability
in the region after the first increase. The decision to raise tariffs to 100
percent comes the day after the international police organization Interpol voted
no to join Kosovo for the third time. Kosovo has invested big money in a
campaign to support membership, while Serbia has campaigned for a no.
Cooperation on lost war victims
November 6
Kosovo is one of five countries to sign an agreement to work together to
identify victims of the 1990s war in former Yugoslavia. Around 12,000 of the
40,000 reported missing after the war have still not been found, according to
the International Commission for Missing Persons (ICMP), a non-profit
organization that contributes in the identification work with DNA samples and
information exchange. The ICMP chief calls the agreement an investment in peace
and stability and notes that it is especially important in the current era of
"populism and nationalism". In addition to Kosovo, the agreement includes
Bosnia, Croatia, Montenegro and Serbia.
October
First step towards own army
October 18
In a first reading, Parliament adopts three laws that lay the foundations for
turning the security force KSF into a regular army, without going through a
constitutional change; Serbian members leave the parliament building in protest
during the vote. An amendment to the Constitution would require a two-thirds
majority of both Kosovo Albanian and Kosovo Serbian members - and the Serbs have
so far blocked all such initiatives.
September
Protest against land exchange
September 29th
Thousands of people are demonstrating in Prishtina against the proposal to
change the Kosovo-Serbia border (see August 2018). The
protesters point their anger at President Hashim Thaçi, saying he has no mandate
to negotiate land change.
August
EU skeptical about land change
August 31st
Several EU foreign ministers warn Kosovo and Serbia to move forward with a
proposal to exchange land with each other, as part of attempts to normalize
relations. According to the proposal presented by Serbia's President Aleksandar
Vučić in July, parts of the Serbian-dominated northern Kosovo would be replaced
by Albanian-dominated parts of southern Serbia. Vučić's colleague Hashim Thaçi
first appeared positive to the idea, but has since partially backed down. From
an EU point of view, it is feared that the measure would tear up wounds and risk
causing a domino effect of demands and counterclaims on changed boundaries in
the ethnically charged region.
June
The EULEX mandate is being transformed
June 14
The current mandate for the EU legal mission EULEX expires and the executive
part of the mission ends. Kosovo itself assumes responsibility for the judicial
process. Eulex remains in a purely supervisory and advisory role, now with a
mandate extending to June 2020. President Thaci has thanked Eulex, saying that
the young Kosovo institutions have benefited from the legal cooperation. But
both Albanians and Serbs have been critical of Eulex, which has failed to stop
organized crime and corruption.
April
Prosecution for friendship corruption
April 6
Prosecutors are prosecuting eleven members of the ruling party PDK, for
friendship corruption. Among the defendants are Minister of Innovation and
Entrepreneurship Besim Beqaj as well as a former Deputy Minister and a current
as well as a former Member of Parliament. The charges relate to a scandal that
was revealed in 2016.
March
Minister of the Interior and chief of staff are fired
March 29th
Prime Minister Haradinaj is kicking off Interior Minister Flamur Sefaj and
intelligence chief Driton Gashi, after six Turks were expelled from the country
without the President being informed. Five of the six Turks worked as teachers
at schools in Kosovo that are reported to have ties to Fethullah Gülen, whom
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdo ğ accused of the coup attempt in
Turkey 2016.
Kosovo Serbs leave the government
March 27th
Serbian leader Goran Rakić says his party is resigning from the government in
protest at the expulsion of a high-ranking government representative from Serbia
from Kosovo. The message comes after a meeting between Rakić and Serbian
President Aleksandar Vučić in Belgrade. The reason is that Serbia's chief
negotiator on the Kosovo issue, Marko Đurić, the day before he was arrested and
expelled from the country. Riots erupted in Mitrovica when police arrested
Đurić, who was accused of illegally entering Kosovo. Prime Minister Haradinaj
says the Kosovo Serbs' departure is "incomprehensible". The seriousness of the
situation becomes clear when EU Foreign Minister Frederica Mogherini
unexpectedly visits Belgrade for talks with Vučić.
Boundary agreements are approved despite violent protests
21 March
Parliament ratifies the disputed border agreement with Montenegro (see
September 2015 and May 2017), thereby
fulfilling one of the conditions set for Kosovo to obtain visa-free access to
the EU. It was the fourth attempt by Parliament to try to ratify the agreement
signed almost three years ago and which Montenegro has already ratified. The
vote may be postponed several times since nationalists from Vetëvendosje
protested by throwing tear gas. Several Vetëvendosjel members are arrested and
others are shown out of the hall.
February
Kosovo celebrates its 10th anniversary
February 17th
With pomp and standing, the ten-year anniversary is marked by the
proclamation of the independent state. But many problems remain: 40 percent of
the world's countries have still not recognized the young nation, including
Russia and China, both of whom are permanent members of the UN Security Council.
Among the five EU countries that have not recognized Kosovo are Spain, whose
resistance to separatist flows hardly subsided during the crisis in Catalonia.
Albanian President Edi Rama possibly does Kosovo a bear service when, in a
speech to Kosovo's parliament, he said that the two countries could eventually
have a joint president, as a "symbol of national unity" between Tirana and
Prishtina. The statement is criticized by the EU, among others.
January
Serbian politician killed
January 16
One leading Kosovo Serb politician, Oliver Ivanović, is shot dead outside his
Mitrovica office. He led the Serbian Party Freedom, Democracy, Justice and was
regarded as a relatively moderate politician and the only leading Kosovo Serb
politician who openly condemned Belgrade's attitude towards Kosovo. Ivanović was
sentenced in January 2016 to nine years in prison for war crimes in 1999, but
was released by a higher court a little over a year later. A new trial is now
awaiting. The murder occurred on the same day that talks would resume between
Prishtina and Belgrade on a normalization of relations, after more than a year's
pause. However, the calls are canceled.
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