Kosovo on Saturday celebrates 10 years since it declared independence, a moment of pride for its ethnic Albanian majority, although sovereignty remains fiercely contested by Serbia. The capital Pristina is covered in the blue and yellow colours of the Kosovan flag for a weekend of festivities, with Kosovo-born British pop star Rita Ora due to headline a concert in the main square on Saturday night.
The singer's family left Kosovo in 1991 to escape the repression imposed by Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic after he stripped the Yugoslav province of its autonomy. In 1998, a war broke out between Kosovo's ethnic Albanian rebels and Serbian troops that left 13,000 people dead, most of them Albanians. Belgrade withdrew its forces the following year after a Nato bombing campaign against Serbia.
Kosovo subsequently became a United Nations protectorate and, with the support of Washington and other Western powers, it declared independence from Belgrade on February 17, 2008. "The state of Kosovo has upheld the people's demand for freedom," Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj said in a special government session in Pristina on Saturday morning. But "we are aware that citizens' expectations for a modern state have not yet been fulfilled".
Although more than 110 countries have recognised Kosovo's independence in the past 10 years, Serbia and dozens of other states have not. Sovereignty is rejected by Russia, whose Security Council veto prevents Kosovo from joining the United Nations, and five EU countries including Spain and Greece.
Kosovo's milestone is also marred by huge economic challenges. With the unemployment rate at around 30 percent - and 50 percent among young people - tens of thousands have moved abroad in search of work over the past decade. Home to 1.8 million citizens, Kosovo is one of the poorest parts of Europe and hugely dependent on remittances from its diaspora to drive economic growth of around four percent.
"Our expectations have not been met at all," said retired teacher Pashk Desku, 66. "I am afraid that instead of improving, the situation could get worse," he told AFP. On Friday, Kosovo's ethnic Albanian schoolchildren began the day with lessons dedicated to the anniversary.
But this was not the case in the separate education system of Kosovo's Serb minority, which remains loyal to Belgrade. The two ethnic communities rarely mix. The "normalisation" of ties between Belgrade and Pristina is crucial to both sides' bids to join the European Union, but Serbian officials say recognition of independence is a red line.