Pop star Dua Lipa has said it "feels like my two sides are now one" after being granted Kosovo citizenship.
The singer was born in London to Kosovan-Albanian parents, and she lived in the capital Pristina briefly from the age of 11 when her parents returned after Kosovo gained independence.
In a statement, Lipa added: "It completes the duality I have always had within. I love this country and this means so much to me and my family."
Sharing photographs of the ceremony on X, Osmani wrote: "Dua and Kosovo have always been inseparable. From the world's biggest stages to the hearts of millions, she's carried our story with strength, pride, and grace…"Kosovo's gem - welcome back home," she added in a separate post.
Lipa is currently in Kosovo for the three-day Sunny Hill Festival, which she headlined on Friday.
Also in attendance was UK Ambassador to Kosovo, Jonathan Hargreaves.
Lipa now has citizenship for Britain, Albania and Kosovo.
She was granted Albanian citizenship in 2022 for promoting the country through her music and fame.
She said it was an "honour and a privilege to be able to represent my country all over the world and to continue my work and efforts globally".
After her performance at the Sunny Hill Festival on Friday, she wrote on Instagram: "Sharing this night with you all, in the city that shaped me, surrounded by so much energy, joy, and pride… it's hard to put into words what it means."
The festival, she explained last year, was set up "to change the rhetoric of what people think about Kosovo and it being war-torn".
But Serbia refuses to recognize Kosovo, as do most ethnic Serbs inside Kosovo.
Russia, China and several African and Latin American nations also do not recognize its independence, writes the BBC.