Parliamentary elections in Kosovo They are normally, with no problems. The ballots opened at 7:00 in the morning in all constituencies and there were no delays in the distribution of the electoral material, the Central Election Committee announced. There are 2,075,868 citizens of Kosovo who are invited to the polls to elect 120 representatives in Parliament. The 20 seats belong to the minorities and of these ten seats in the Serbian national community. Citizens’ vote in today’s elections is claimed by 1,280 candidates from 28 parties and political combinations. It is the sixth election for parliament since 2008 when Kosovo declared its independence and the first to be carried out regularly after the government of Albin Kurti exhausted its four -year term.

From dawn today, buses with voters from Serbia began arriving in Kosovo. Dozens of buses began organized on Saturday night, from Belgrade, Novi Sad, Nis and other Serbian cities carrying Serbs who have the right to vote in Kosovo. “Belgrade has received guarantees from the international factor that it would not be prevented from entering Kosovo to the Serbs who are going to vote,” the Serbian government’s office on Kosovo said in a statement.

The ballots of the parliamentary elections in Kosovo will close at seven o’clock in the evening and the votes will begin. The first indicative results are expected two hours later.

According to all polls and analyst estimates, the “self -determination” of the current Prime Minister Albin Kurti will emerge as a first force. It is doubtful, however, whether it will gain autonomy. However, it is certain that Curti will find political allies to form a government in minority, non -Serbian parties and renew his term. The rates are also foreseen for the older Albanian party in Kosovo, the Democratic Union of Kosovo, as well as for the Social Democratic Democratic Democratic Party of Kosovo, founded by Hassim Thaci, today at the Special Court of War Crimes in The Hague. It is not expected, however, that these parties will be able to prevent Albin Curti from forming a government.

Sunday’s parliamentary elections are of interest in areas where the Serbian population is a majority. The “Serbian list”, backed by Belgrade and which in the previous House held the 10 seats belonging to Serbs, is no longer almighty and is not expected to repeat the rates of the previous elections. The Serbian parties, in addition to the “Serbian list”, are very likely to enter the Parliament and two other parties, the “Serbian Republic” of activist Aleksandar Arseniyevic and the Progressive Democratic Party of Nedad Rasic, Minister of Communities and Communities. Albin Curtis. Six political combinations are claiming the Serbs’ vote in Kosovo.