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The government section of the "Outline of Kosovo" needs to be checked, corrected, and completed -- especially the subsections for the government branches.
When the country outlines were created, temporary data (that matched most of the countries but not all) was used to speed up the process. Those countries for which the temporary data does not match must be replaced with the correct information.
Please check that this country's outline is not in error.
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Why is there nothing here about a judicial branch? I assume Kosovo has a Supreme Court or something similar. TheArchaeologist Say Herro 07:55, 25 February 2011 (UTC) Correction: Nothing other than sayign that they are separate from the other two branches. That merits some more info. TheArchaeologist Say Herro 08:00, 25 February 2011 (UTC)
The current list that includes the members of the executive is wrong. I don't have access to update it so someone should update it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 161.253.99.125 ( talk) 06:52, 19 March 2011 (UTC)
Both these articles are wrong, and not NPOV. There is no legal entity in Kosovo, whether under Serbian, UNMIK, or Kosovo law, known as the "Cabinet of Kosovo". In Kosovo, as in Serbia, or most of continental Europe, a "cabinet" consists of advisors, photocopyists, useless hangers-on etc of the Ministers, rather than the collection of principal Ministers which it means in Anglo-Saxon democracies. No-one in Kosovo would therefore have any idea of what this title was supposed to mean. Conversely, the "Government of Kosovo", whether one regards the current government as merely de facto or de jure, it is the term used in a status-neutral sense by the UN Secretary-General in his quarterly reports to the UN Security Council, and in the articles "Republic of Kosovo" and "Kosovo".
Sometimes one is tempted to despair. Any moment now I will come across articles called "Serbian Wines in Kosovo" (Talk: "They are jolly good for you". Response: "No, they'll poison you") and one called "Albanian Wines in Kosovo" (Talk: "They'll poison you". Response: "No, they're jolly good for you"). Perhaps all articles on the Balkans should have a footnote on their title referencing the normally tolerant and gentle Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson: "These little hordes of primitive warlike men". Markd999 ( talk) 20:07, 28 September 2012 (UTC)