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Germany and Kosovo: Bilateral relations
Germany was one of the first countries to officially recognise the Republic of Kosovo and establish diplomatic relations with it after it declared independence in 2008. Furthermore, the country’s government and people have not forgotten that Germany took in hundreds of thousands of refugees from Kosovo before and during the conflict in the late 1990s, or that from 1999 onwards it helped with reconstruction efforts, initially through emergency relief measures and shortly afterwards by commencing development cooperation.
In addition, there is a sizeable Kosovar diaspora in Germany with a total of more than 600,000 Kosovar nationals and people originally from the Republic of Kosovo, making it the world’s largest Kosovar diaspora.
Germany is actively supporting the country in its efforts to integrate into Euro-Atlantic structures.
Germany is Kosovo’s second most important trading partner, its largest investor and one of the largest bilateral donors in the field of development cooperation. Since 1999, Germany has provided more than 660 million euro for technical and financial cooperation projects. A climate and energy partnership has been in place between Germany and Kosovo since April 2024, the aim of which is to promote Kosovo’s green transition and to enable its participation in international climate forums.
There has been a Goethe-Zentrum in Pristina since 2018. In addition, the German Embassy in Pristina handles a substantial part of the cultural work, including scholarship and further-education programmes, concerts and exhibitions. Along with English, German is the most widely spoken foreign language. Indeed, the German language and German culture are popular in Kosovo. A cultural agreement entered into force in 2013, placing cultural exchange on an official footing under international law.