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Albanians will be represented by only one member of the Serbian Parliament, the voice that will speak for them will be that of Shaip Kamberi, of the Coalition of United Albanians, who secured 0.3% of the vote.
Albanian parties competed with two lists in this election, with a total of 20 candidates. Due to political differences, they failed to find the language of compromise for a common list, as happened in the 2020 elections, when Albanians from the Presevo Valley came together for the first time and won three seats in the Serbian Parliament.
This time, with 0.09 percent of the vote, Shqiprim Arifi’s “Alternative for Change” was left out. The President of Kosovo, Vjosa Osmani identified another problem, which seems to have influenced this result. Reacting to the comment that the international community “should condemn the true face of Serbia’s authoritarianism”, through a Twitter post, she expressed concern about the non-participation of thousands of Albanians in the Presevo Valley in Serbia’s presidential and parliamentary elections.
“According to reports, 6,000 Albanians in Serbia have been denied their basic right to vote, due to the deliberate campaign of ethnic cleansing through passivity by administrative means,” Osmani wrote. Albanian politicians in the Presevo Valley have said earlier that for years, Serbia has launched the so-called passivity of the addresses of Albanians living in the three southern municipalities, in Presevo, Medvedja and Bujanovac, to change the “ethnic structure” of these municipalities. There is no exact number of Albanians in Serbia, as Albanians boycotted the 2011 census.
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