Denmark's justice minister Peter Hummelgaard has visited a detention centre in southeast Kosovo where his country intends to send up to 300 prisoners to ease overcrowding in the Danish prison system.
Speaking alongside his Kosovan counterpart Albulena Haxhiu, Hummelgaard praised what he called the "fruitful cooperation" between the two countries.
"Now we have come to Kosovo in need of help in the use of excess capacity in the Kosovan prison and detention facilities. And that is a very big help for Denmark in a time where we have a very, very pressured prison and probation services in in Denmark," he said.
The deal, which was originally signed in 2021, only became a treaty earlier this year when it was approved by Kosovo's parliament.
In the year the pact was signed, officials statistics said Denmark's prison population had grown by 19% since 2015, reaching more than 4,000 inmates at the start of 2021 and exceeding 100% of capacity.
It will see Pristina lease 300 cells in the Gjilan prison to Copenhagen which will be responsible for renovation and modernisation work to bring the facility in line with Danish standards in a deal worth €15 million per year to Kosovo.
The cells in Kosovo will only be used for foreign nationals convicted of crimes in Denmark who were due to be deported after they have served their sentence.