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By Euronews with REUTERS Published on 19/07/2019 - 18:01 GMT+2•Updated 19:32 Kosovo's Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj said on Friday he was resigning after being called to The Hague war
crimes court linked to Kosovo's independence struggle. "The reason for this decision is because of a call I have received from a specialist chamber as a suspect," Haradinaj
said. The special court in the Hague was set up in 2015 to try ex-Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) guerrillas for alleged atrocities in the war that led to independence from Serbia. The
specialist chamber is funded in part by the European Union. The Kosovar president, Hashim Thaçi, wrote in a Facebook post that he had learned that the special court planned on interviewing
former members of the KLA. Thaçi said he respected the prime minister's decision but said he believed in the "purity" of the war and in the "high moral values of the
soldiers of freedom". Haradinaj said he would travel to The Hague next week. This is the second time he has had to resign as prime minister. During the Balkan wars, a paramilitary group
the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) formed. The group fought against Serbian authorities in a violent war that was only ended after NATO launched a 77-day air campaign against Serbia. Serbia
still does not recognise Kosovar independence. _Read more on Kosovo-Serbian relations here._