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Central, Eastern and South Eastern Europe
On 17 February 2008 the Assembly of Kosovo in Pristina declared Kosovo’s independence from the Republic of Serbia. On 15 June 2008, the constitution of the Republic of Kosovo came into effect, formally completing the state-building process. Since then, 62 countries, including Germany and the majority of EU member states, have recognised Kosovo as an independent state (as of September 2009). Prior to the declaration of independence, Kosovo had been administered by the United Nations since 1999 as an autonomous territory on the basis of UN Resolution 1244.
Germany’s cooperation with Kosovo began immediately after the cessation of NATO’s military intervention in 1999. German development cooperation measures in Kosovo – and indeed in the region of South-East Europe as a whole – aim to improve the living conditions of the population, promote small and medium-sized enterprises and support the transition from a socialist planned economy to a market economy.
In Kosovo, German involvement initially concentrated on emergency aid. More recently the focus has shifted to the sustainable recovery of the Kosovan economy and, in the longer term, closer political and economic alignment with EU norms and standards.
To that end, the following priorities for development cooperation were agreed with the partners in Kosovo: the promotion of public utility infrastructure, economic development and employment promotion, public administration reform and governance, and the reform of education.
German Embassy

German Embassy in Kosovo
Rr. Azem Jashanica Nr. 17
Arberia (Dragodan)
10 000 Pristina
Kosovo
Phone: +381 / 38 / 25 45 00
Fax: +381 / 38 / 25 45 36






