Trust us, EU asks Kosovo amid corruption probe

By Fatos Bytyci PRISTINA (Reuters) - The European Union mission in Kosovo, meant to help the state develop its justice system, urged Kosovars on Thursday not to lose trust over allegations at least two senior staffers took bribes to drop criminal charges. The mission, known as EULEX, is the EU's biggest and most expensive and the affair threatens to undermine its goal of promoting law and order in the young country. Citing leaked documents, the leading Kosovo daily Koha Ditore has reported that at least two employees of the mission were being investigated on suspicion of dropping charges in at least three cases in return for money. The cases included murder and corruption involving a number of senior state officials. Koha Ditore said an EULEX judge and prosecutor were being investigated. Though he declined to comment on the specific allegations or individuals, EULEX chief Gabriele Meucci said a criminal investigation was launched after the case surfaced in 2013. The EU had agreed to "partially lift" the immunity of one person, he added. The newspaper reports have fuelled speculation in Kosovo of a possible cover-up, particularly after British prosecutor Maria Bamieh was suspended and she went to the local press describing herself as a whistleblower in the case. Meucci confirmed the prosecutor had been suspended but did not say why. "We deserve to be trusted," he told a news conference. "Allegations of corruption are being thoroughly investigated... If we have allegations of something wrong going on, we are acting, and we don't just sit and wait and look." The mission of 1,600 people deals with sensitive cases of organised crime, corruption and war crimes considered too complex or politically sensitive to be handled by local prosecutors and judges. EULEX, created in 2008 in the wake of Kosovo's declaration of independence from Serbia, also helps train justice officials in an effort to create a professional, independent judiciary free of the graft and political pressure still dogging Kosovo. (Editing by Matt Robinson and Tom Heneghan)