Watch Kosovo's
No mentions found
This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.
Related Articles from SNS
Kosovo Seeks to End Impasse With Snap Election: What to Watch
Kosovo's Prime Minister Albin Kurti (C) arrives to deliver a speech during a closing rally ahead of the parliamentary elections in Kosovo, in Pristina on June 6, 2026. Kosovo holds another snap election on June 7, 2026, its third in just over a year, as voter frustration mounts at a grinding political gridlock in Europe's youngest country. The ballot comes after a polarised parliament failed to elect a president in April 2026, deepening a political crisis that has gripped the country since...
Newsletter: Bust to boom? Europe’s most exclusive club might be getting bigger
Dozens of European leaders and heads of state from the six Western Balkan countries will be in Montenegro on Friday for talks about how to grow the European Union. Also in the newsletter: how Europe balances trade with the US and China. Good morning, Brussels.
Prime Minister Albin Kurti's party wins Kosovo vote but falls short of majority
Prime Minister Albin Kurti's party wins Kosovo vote but falls short of majority Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti's party emerged as the largest force in Sunday's snap election but failed to secure enough support to govern alone, setting the stage for difficult coalition negotiations. The vote, marked by low turnout and voter frustration, is unlikely to end the political deadlock that has gripped the country. Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti's party won the most votes in a snap election...
Final predictions for the World Cup: Champions, Go...
The 2026 FIFA World Cup has arrived! Four years after Argentina's triumph over France in Qatar, the latest edition of the world's biggest sporting event kicks off with Mexico vs. South Africa on Thursday at 3 p.m. ET, the first of 104 games over the next several weeks. That means it's time for ESPN's writers from around the globe to make their picks on everything from silverware and most entertaining teams to which host nation is most likely to advance the furthest: the United States, Mexico...
Watch: Forget idealism—the multi-billion euro reason the EU wants the Western Balkans in the bloc
Top EU chiefs are gathering in Tivat, Montenegro from this Thursday for the EU-Western Balkans summit. But with the EU already struggling to manage 27 member states, why is Brussels pushing for enlargement right now? Albania, Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovia, North Macedonia Kosovo are at various stages of trying to join the bloc.
Newsletter: The quest for the EU’s tech independence
Also in this newsletter: The EU's sanctions envoy David O'Sullivan says the bloc should be willing to take “unilateral action” against China's facilitation of Russian sanctions evasion; and why Italy is expected to be criticised by Brussels for its intervention in response to the energy crisis. Good morning from Brussels. This is Mared Gwyn with a packed newsletter to kick off your Wednesday.
How Donald Trump helped make Spain’s prime minister a ‘rockstar’
MADRID — When Europe’s leaders hold their periodic gatherings in Brussels, Pedro Sánchez isn’t often at the center of media attention. As a rule, when Spain’s 54-year-old prime minister strides down the red carpet below the giant glass oval structure in which the EU’s heads of government meet, only Spanish reporters surge forward to shout out questions about domestic affairs. Correspondents from other countries tend to focus on their own leaders, or chase after French President...
Off the Record: Politics, protests and dead flamingos dominate EU-Western Balkans summit
Euronews Europe editor Maria Tadeo provides highlights and analysis from the EU-Western Balkans summit held this week in her signature newsletter Off the Record. When I launched this newsletter, I promised you zeitgeist, so here's the zeitgeist — I am filing this at ungodly hours, from a flat in Tivat, on the coast of Montenegro, on five hours' sleep, praying for no typos and my keyboard on fire. But oh boy how I love this job.