Kosovo and Turkey: Mutual cooperation or exploitation to detain opponents?
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has succeeded in
transforming all international steps and measures from a cooperative aimed at
bringing security throughout the world into an unbearable evil to serve his
repressive and authoritarian ambitions. Instead of using international
cooperation to extradite criminals, Erdogan uses these agreements to detain his
opponents in many countries.
Apparent good, hidden evil
Countries have cooperated with each other to ratify
agreements that contribute to detaining dangerous criminals, regardless of
their whereabouts, and Interpol was established to hand these criminals over
between countries with the aim of establishing global peace and security.
However, the Justice and Development Party (AKP) regime has used these
agreements, especially after the scripted military coup in Turkey in June 2016,
as a pretext to detain and dispose of Erdogan’s opponents abroad, accusing them
of participating in the implementation of the military coup and supporting Fethullah
Gulen.
In April 2018, the Turkish government announced a joint
operation between the Turkish Intelligence Organization and its counterpart in
Kosovo to recover 80 Turks accused of joining Gulen’s Hizmet movement, which
the Turkish government described as "the secret operation."
It was clear that the operation was secret even to former Kosovar
Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj, who sent a telegram of protest to Ankara and
sacked senior security officials in his country, including the minister of interior
and the head of intelligence. However, Kosovar President Hashim Thaçi was aware
of the operation and rejected the dismissals.
In the same year, instead of the rendition process, Ankara
resorted to requesting Kosovo to deport a doctor and five Turkish teachers
working for organizations affiliated with Hizmet, which was approved by
Pristina.
The Kosovar parliament resorted to summoning President Thaçi
in April 2019 to stand before the Parliamentary Inquiry Committee to clarify
the nature of security cooperation between Kosovo and Turkey, but the president
refused to appear because of the presence of an international expert on the
investigation committee.
It seems that there is a secret agreement between Thaçi and
Erdogan to exchange opponents of each other's regime, as Erdogan handed him two
opponents of the Kosovar regime present in Turkey.
In an official statement, the Turkish Ministry of Interior
announced in December 2019 the deportation of two persons from Kosovo as part
of the deportation of foreign terrorists in the country.
Neither authorities in Turkey or Kosovo revealed the nature
or identity of the two people deported from Ankara, which raised doubts about
the nature of the operation and its aims.
Economic support to serve security goals
During his visit to Kosovo in 2013, Erdogan said that
"Turkey is Kosovo and Kosovo is Turkey", in a clear indication of the
nature of the Turkish orientation and goals in controlling Kosovo.
According to the official website of the Turkish Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, Turkey views the Balkans and Kosovo as “important for Ankara
in terms of geographic, political, economic, historical, cultural and human
ties, as the Balkans region, which geographically constitutes an extension of
Turkey on the European continent, is very important for Turkey because of its
special position in the historical process of forming the Turkish nation and
regional integration.”
This is evident in official data from the Turkish Ministry
of Economy, which indicated that direct Turkish investments in Kosovo and the
Balkans amounted to approximately $10 billion at the end of 2016.




