Former Kosovo prime minister to travel to The Hague for war crimes questioning

Ramush Haradinaj has already been tried and acquitted twice before for war crimes by a UN tribunal

(FILES) In this file photo taken on April 27, 2017 Kosovo's former Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj sits in the side the Court in Colmar, eastern France, on April 27, 2017, as he waits to hear the result of his extradition hearing. Ramush Haradinaj, who resigned as Kosovo's prime minister after being summoned to The Hague as a war crime suspect, said he would leave on July 23, 2019 for the Netherlands. "Yes! I am travelling tomorrow," Haradinaj said late on July 22 in an interview with private T7 television channel. Haradinaj announced on July 19 that he had been summoned to the war crimes tribunal "as a suspect" and expected to be questioned.  / AFP / SEBASTIEN BOZON
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Ramush Haradinaj, who resigned as Kosovo's prime minister after being summoned to The Hague as a war crime suspect, said he would leave on Tuesday for the Netherlands.

"Yes. I am travelling tomorrow," Mr Haradinaj told private television channel T7 late on Monday .

He announced on Friday that he was summoned to the war crimes tribunal "as a suspect" and expected to be questioned.

Mr Haradinaj immediately resigned as premier and asked President Hashim Thaci to call for early elections.

The EU-backed special war crimes court for Kosovo was established in 2015 to try war crimes allegedly committed by ethnic Albanian guerrillas against minority Serbs and Roma, and local Albanian political opponents during and immediately after the 1998-1999 independence war against Serbia.

Mr Haradinaj, who has already been tried and acquitted twice for war crimes by a UN tribunal, said he did not expect to be charged again.

"I do not think there will be an indictment as I had already two court proceedings" for war crimes, he said.

Mr Haradinaj led guerilla forces in western Kosovo, the scene of heavy fighting with Serbian armed forces loyal to then Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic.

The prosecutors' office in The Hague has so far summoned about 30 Kosovo guerillas for questioning.

Local media said Mr Haradinaj was likely to be questioned on Wednesday.