By Fatos Bytyci and Matt Robinson
PRISTINA (Reuters) - Kosovo's ruling party of Prime Minister Hashim Thaci declared it had won a third term on Sunday in an election marked by a low turnout among Kosovars frustrated with widespread poverty and corruption.
A partial official vote count put Thaci's Democratic Party of Kosovo (PDK) on 31 percent, ahead of its arch rival in the Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK) on 25 percent. Projections by two non-governmental groups gave the PDK a similar margin of victory.
Thaci is likely to form a coalition government with smaller parties and ethnic Serbs to secure his third four-year term in power, but his dependence on others could hamper his ability to govern effectively.
Turnout of only 43 percent reflected widespread frustration among the Balkan country's 1.8 million people at the lack of progress made since Thaci presided over the territory's secession from Serbia in 2008.
"Our party is the biggest winner of the national election," PDK deputy leader Kadri Veseli told a news conference. "Kosovo today spoke with one voice and confirmed the European future of our children."
Fifteen years since breaking away in war, Kosovo ranks among Europe's poorest countries. A third of the workforce is unemployed and corruption is rife.
WAR CRIMES INVESTIGATION
The next government will come under immediate pressure from the West to heed the findings of a war crimes investigation that threatens to ensnare Thaci's former comrades-in-arms.
A special European Union task force is expected within weeks to issue the findings of an investigation into allegations that Kosovo's guerrilla army harvested organs from Serb prisoners of war and sold them on the black market during a 1998-99 conflict.
The investigation followed a 2011 report by Council of Europe rapporteur Dick Marty, which pointed the finger at Thaci and other ex-rebels, including four senior members of PDK and candidates for parliament. Veseli, who declared victory for the PDK, is among those named in the report.
"Today it is time to remember all of those who sacrificed for this country, fallen soldiers, former KLA (guerilla Kosovo Liberation Army) and all of those because of whom, thanks to their sacrifice, today we are free," Veseli said on Sunday.
Thaci has dismissed the allegations as an outrage, a bid to tarnish the Kosovo Albanian fight for freedom that eventually won NATO air support.
The West wants a court set up abroad to hear the case because of witness intimidation in Kosovo and a graft-riddled legal system. That will require changes to the law and constitution.
Thaci was one of the leaders of the Kosovo Liberation Army that took up arms in the late 1990s to break free from the repressive rule of Serbia under strongman Slobodan Milosevic.
NATO intervened in 1999 with 78 days of air strikes against Serbia, trying to halt the massacre and mass expulsion of Kosovo Albanians by Serbian forces waging a counter-insurgency.
YOUNG JOBSEEKERS
Kosovo declared independence almost a decade later and has been recognised by more than 100 countries, but not Serbia or its big-power backer Russia, which is blocking the young state's accession to the United Nations.
Its economy is forecast to grow by at least 3 percent this year, driven by construction and cash sent home by Albanians working abroad. Even that, however, is not enough to absorb the thousands of jobseekers entering the workforce every year in what is Europe's youngest society.
Two months before the election Thaci's government raised public sector wages, pensions and social welfare benefits by 25 percent. That directly affects 240,000 teachers, doctors, police, pensioners and others, with more benefiting indirectly.
He has promised to do the same every year if given a new term. At 43 percent, turnout was down on the past two elections in 2007 and 2010, when 54 percent and 48 percent of eligible voters cast their ballots.
Haki Jashanica, a 56-year-old former teacher, said of Thaci's PDK: "If this party continues in the same vein, in terms of the economy and raising salaries, then it will be a pleasure to have them in power again."
But Valbona Bajraktari, a 37-year-old unemployed woman, said her expectations were not high. "The only thing I want is for them not to steal or to hire their aunts," she told Reuters.
(Editing by David Goodman)
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