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Undid revision 192552627 by 60.241.51.136 (talk) The staus of Kosovo is not at concern of this article
My edit is bit speculative, but I this fact must be emphised. Number of 6 etnical groups is disputive, beacose it doesn't include Croats, Montenegrins and Gorans often declares themselfs as Serbs
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The '''[[flag]] of the [[Republic of Kosovo]]''' was officially adopted following the [[UDI|unilateral]] declaration of independence from [[Serbia]] on [[17 February]] [[2008]]. The flag is partly the result of an international design competition, organized by the [[United Nations]]-backed [[Provisional Institutions of Self-Government|provisional government]], which attracted almost a thousand entries. The competition rules insisted that the final design must not use ethnic or national symbols or colour schemes in order to ensure that it represented all citizens. The now-used design is a variant of one proposal. It shows six white stars in an arc above a golden map of Kosovo on a blue field.<ref>[http://www.kosovapress.com/ks/index.php?cid=2,2,38819 Parliament adopted the flag of Kosovo state], ''Kosovapress'', Priština, 17 February 2008.</ref> <ref>http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/slideshow/photo//080217/ids_photos_wl/r1435251374.jpg/</ref> They are meant to symbolize Kosovo's six ethnic groups: [[Albanians]], [[Serbs]], [[Turkish people|Turks]], [[Gorani (ethnic group)|Gorani]], [[Romani people|Roma]], and [[Bosniaks]].
The '''[[flag]] of the [[Republic of Kosovo]]''' was officially adopted following the [[UDI|unilateral]] declaration of independence from [[Serbia]] on [[17 February]] [[2008]]. The flag is partly the result of an international design competition, organized by the [[United Nations]]-backed [[Provisional Institutions of Self-Government|provisional government]], which attracted almost a thousand entries. The competition rules insisted that the final design must not use ethnic or national symbols or colour schemes in order to ensure that it represented all citizens. The now-used design is a variant of one proposal. It shows six white stars in an arc above a golden map of Kosovo on a blue field.<ref>[http://www.kosovapress.com/ks/index.php?cid=2,2,38819 Parliament adopted the flag of Kosovo state], ''Kosovapress'', Priština, 17 February 2008.</ref> <ref>http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/slideshow/photo//080217/ids_photos_wl/r1435251374.jpg/</ref> They are meant to symbolize Kosovo's six ethnic groups: [[Albanians]], [[Serbs]], [[Turkish people|Turks]], [[Gorani (ethnic group)|Gorani]], [[Romani people|Roma]], and [[Bosniaks]]. There is some indices's that six stars "reflects Kosovo's historic connection to the [[Albanians]] of [[Montenegro]], [[Macedonia]], the [[Preševo Valley]], [[Chameria]] (the [[Chams]] and [[Arvanites]]), and [[Italy]] (the [[Arberesh]])"<ref>http://www.huliq.com/9736/kosovas-new-flag</ref>


The Flag of Kosovo resembles the [[flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina]] in terms of colours and shapes used (white stars and yellow shape of the country on a blue field). It also resembles the [[flag of the Democratic Republic of the Congo]] used between [[1997]] and [[2006]], which was deep blue with six yellow stars down the hoist and a larger yellow star in the centre.
The Flag of Kosovo resembles the [[flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina]] in terms of colours and shapes used (white stars and yellow shape of the country on a blue field). It also resembles the [[flag of the Democratic Republic of the Congo]] used between [[1997]] and [[2006]], which was deep blue with six yellow stars down the hoist and a larger yellow star in the centre.

Revision as of 16:20, 19 February 2008

Kosovo
UseState flag
Proportion2:3[1]
AdoptedFebruary 17, 2008
DesignBlue with six white stars in an arc above a gold-colored map of Kosovo in the center.

The flag of the Republic of Kosovo was officially adopted following the unilateral declaration of independence from Serbia on 17 February 2008. The flag is partly the result of an international design competition, organized by the United Nations-backed provisional government, which attracted almost a thousand entries. The competition rules insisted that the final design must not use ethnic or national symbols or colour schemes in order to ensure that it represented all citizens. The now-used design is a variant of one proposal. It shows six white stars in an arc above a golden map of Kosovo on a blue field.[2] [3] They are meant to symbolize Kosovo's six ethnic groups: Albanians, Serbs, Turks, Gorani, Roma, and Bosniaks. There is some indices's that six stars "reflects Kosovo's historic connection to the Albanians of Montenegro, Macedonia, the Preševo Valley, Chameria (the Chams and Arvanites), and Italy (the Arberesh)"[4]

The Flag of Kosovo resembles the flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina in terms of colours and shapes used (white stars and yellow shape of the country on a blue field). It also resembles the flag of the Democratic Republic of the Congo used between 1997 and 2006, which was deep blue with six yellow stars down the hoist and a larger yellow star in the centre.

Flag use during United Nations administration

During administration by the United Nations, Kosovo (still legally a province of Serbia), had no provincial flag. Whenever an official flag was needed, the United Nations' flag was flown. The province remains the subject of a long-running political and territorial dispute between the Serbian (and previously, the Yugoslav) government and Kosovo's largely ethnic-Albanian population.

International negotiations began in 2006 to determine the final status of Kosovo (See Kosovo status process). Most ethnic-Albanians would otherwise display the Albanian flag, whilst Serbs would use the Serbian flag. There is no current or historic national, provincial or regional flag that represents Kosovo's territory. However an Albanian flag with the red star outlined in yellow is erroneously reported as a historical flag while in fact this was the flag of the ethnic Albanian community in Socialist Yugoslavia (mainly in Kosovo).[5] Ibrahim Rugova, the first president of Kosovo introduced the "flag of Dardania" on October 29, 2000. The flag with the Albanian eagle bears the legend "Dardania", the name of an ancient region in the same general area as Kosovo, but is not officially recognized by any international power.[6] This flag did not gain much popularity.[7]

Competition for a new flag

A competition for a new flag was held in June 2007 which received 993 entries. Under the terms of UN talks, all such symbols would have to reflect the multi-ethnic nature of Kosovo,[10] avoiding the use of the Albanian or Serbian double-headed eagles or the use of solely red and black or red, blue and white colour schemes. Additionally, all entries had to be rectangular and have a 2:3 proportion. A total of 700 proposals met these criteria. A group of Kosovo politicians and experts known as the "Unity Team" selected three designs which were then voted on by the Assembly of Kosovo (with a two-thirds majority required for approval), when independence was declared after the status talks.[11]

The three proposals selected were forwarded to the Assembly on 4 February 2008.[12] [13]

The proposals

  • Blue field with a white map of Kosovo surrounded by five stars. The stars vary in size and represent the different ethnic groups that reside in Kosovo. The largest star would represent ethnic Albanians. Inspired by the Flag of Europe.[14]
  • A vertical tricolour of black, white and red. [15]
  • A vertical tricolour of black, white and red with a spiral (Dardanian symbol of the rotating sun) in the center of the white stripe.[16] [17]

Agence France-Press is carrying a story that the Assembly of Kosovo will officially confirm the seal and flag of Kosovo at the same session as the declaration of independence. It also stated that the flag will feature "a white map of Kosovo on a blue field" thus making it only the third country to have a map of the country on their flag, Bangladesh's original flag and Cyprus's current flag being the first two (although for sporting events, the Korean Unification Flag also exists with the same property).[18]

Prior to the declaration of independence, Kosovars displayed a flag featuring a map of Kosovo against a blue and yellow background, similar to the flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.[19]

See also

References