EU visa-free travel for Kosovo enters into force


Kosovo’s Prime Minister Albin Kurti, who has led awareness campaigns about visa-free travel for Kosovars in the European Union, will address the first of his people bound for the Schengen today. – EPA pic, January 1, 2024.

A LONG-awaited European Union’s visa liberalisation scheme allowing Kosovo nationals to travel to Europe’s borderless zone without a visa came into force today.

The new regime, which came into force at midnight (2300 GMT Sunday), enables Kosovars to travel to the passport-free Schengen zone without a visa for periods of up to 90 days in any 180-day period.

Kosovo, with a population of 1.8 million, was the last of the six countries in the Western Balkans to get the waiver.

The reform was perceived in Pristina as another step towards full recognition and a boost for the ambition of the country that proclaimed independence in 2008 to join the EU.

The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, said Kosovo by 2018 met all the criteria for the visa-free regime, including border and migration management.

But the approval has been held up by France and the Netherlands, which were concerned about the possibility of new migration waves, as well as by five other EU members – Cyprus, Greece, Romania, Slovakia and Spain.

The five do not recognise Kosovo’s independence from Serbia, and neither does the latter.

Before the EU lifted the visa regime with Kosovo, its passport holders could travel without a visa only to 14 countries all over the world.

During the past few months, Pristina has been conducting a public awareness campaign urging people not to misuse the freedom of travel by looking for jobs in the EU.

Later today, Prime Minister Albin Kurti, who led the campaign, would address the first Kosovo residents set to travel from the Pristina airport to the EU without a visa. – AFP, January 1, 2024.



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