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Dielli | The Sun

Albanian American Newspaper Devoted to the Intellectual and Cultural Advancement of the Albanians in America | Since 1909

DITA E TE PAGJETURVE NE KOSOVE

April 27, 2017 by dgreca

-Kosovë-Thaçi: Bashkësia ndërkombëtare t’i bëjë trysni Serbisë për zbardhjen e fatit të pagjeturve/unnamed

-Kosova shënon Ditën e të Pagjeturve, tubim përkujtimor në Mejë të Gjakovës/3 thaci

-“Liria, demokracia dhe çdo vlerë e ndërtuar me mund dhe sakrificë në Kosovën e lirë, nuk është e plotë pa dënimin e kriminelëve për personat e vrarë, të masakruar dhe pa zbardhjen e fatit të të zhdukurve dhe të varrosurve brenda dhe jashtë Kosovës”, tha presidenti Thaçi/

2 Te humburit

PRISHTINË, 27 Prill 2017-Gazeta DIELLI-B.Jashari/ Kosova shënoi sot Ditën e të Pagjeturve të saj -27 Prillin, në mesditë, në Mejë të Gjakovës në Kompleksin Memorial u organizua tubimi përkujtimor për masakran e para 18 viteve, ku presidenti i Republikës, Hashim Thaçi tha se  bashkësia ndërkombëtare duhet t’i bëjë trysni Serbisë për zbardhjen e fatit të të pagjeturve.

“Dita Ndërkombëtare e Personave të Pagjetur në botë shënohet më 30 gusht, por në Kosovë ajo me të drejtë shënohet më 27 prill, në ditën kur forcat ushtarake dhe policore serbe vranë dhe masakruan 377 qytetarë të pafajshëm në Mejë të Gjakovës”, u shpreh presidenti.

 

Thaçi  tha se,  sakrifica dhe dhimbja e madhe e Mejës është ajo që përmbylli Javën e të Pagjeturve dhe të viktimave të terrorit shtetëror serb anekënd Kosovës, si në Qirez e Likoshan, në Prekaz, Reçak, Krushë, Izbicë, Rezallë, Çikatovë, Poklek, Qyshk e kudo ku pësuan banorët e pafajshëm në vitet e luftës.

“Liria dhe pavarësia e Kosovës në themelet e saj ka gjakun dhe jetën e dëshmorëve dhe martirëve. Prandaj për dëshmorët dhe martirët e Kosovës nderimi institucional është i përjetshëm”, u shpreh ai.

 

Presidenti kosovar shtoi se, do të përkulemi gjithmonë me respekt dhe pietet të thellë para secilit dëshmor dhe martir.

 

“Liria, demokracia dhe çdo vlerë e ndërtuar me mund dhe sakrificë në Kosovën e lirë, nuk është e plotë pa dënimin e kriminelëve për personat e vrarë, të masakruar dhe pa zbardhjen e fatit të të zhdukurve dhe të varrosurve brenda dhe jashtë Kosovës”, tha presidenti Thaçi.

 

Kreu i shtetit theksoi se vlerëson punën e të gjitha institucioneve vendore dhe ndërkombëtare që kanë bërë deri më tani për zbardhjen e fatit të të pagjeturve. Por, sipas tij, familjet e personave të pagjetur me të drejtë kërkojnë që të bëhet më shumë për zbardhjen e së vërtetës për më të dashurit e tyre.

 

“Ata me të drejtë kërkojnë ta dinë përfundimisht se kush kanë qenë urdhërdhënësit zyrtarë dhe ekzekutuesit e krimeve në periudhën ‎‎1998-1999. Institucionet vendore, shoqatat dhe komisionet për personat e pagjetur kanë bërë aq sa kanë lejuar kapacitetet e tyre në këtë drejtim. Përpjekjet për të ndriçuar çdo rast të krimit mbi civilët e pafajshëm nuk do të ndalen asnjëherë. Por, ajo çka mbetet jashtë mundësisë së ndikimit të institucioneve tona, i takon bashkësisë ndërkombëtare që të ushtrojë trysni serioze tek Beogardi zyrtar, i cili posedon arkivat dhe të dhënat e sakta të veprimeve të ushtrisë dhe policisë serbe”, theksoi presidenti Thaçi.

 

Ai edhe në Mejë ritheksoi se Kosova dhe qytetarët e saj kanë një orientim të qartë politik e strategjik dhe integrimi në BE, në NATO dhe OKB është vizioni dhe ardhmëria e Kosovës.

 

Në Mejë, në Lëndinën e Pikëllimit, në 27 prill 1999, forcat serbe masakruan e zhdukën 377 shqiptarë që i rrëmbyen nga kolona e refugjatëve.

Asnjëri nga të ndaluarit në rrethimin e hekurt të kolonës së civilëve nuk kishte arritur të dilte i gjallë. Ajo ishte një nga kolonat e shumta të spastrimit etnik, të rreth 1 milion shqiptarëve të dëbuar nga Kosova, shumica drejt Shqipërisë.

 

 

Në Kosovë, 18 vjet pas luftës, janë ende mëse 1600 të zhdukur të pagjetur. “Atyre që na mungojnë”, me këtë emërtim, u është ngritur përmendore në sheshin kryesor të Prishtinës, para ndërtesës së Kuvendit të Kosovës.

“27 Prill – Dita e të Pagjeturve të Kosovës…vazhdojmë t’i kërkojmë…” shkruan në njoftimet e Komisionit Qeveritar për Persona të Zhdukur, me axhendën e shënimit të kësaj dite, të vendosura nga grupe të rinjësh nëpër kryeqytet, Prishtinë.

Nisma e të Rinjve për të Drejtat e Njeriut-Kosovë ka paralajmëruar aksionin simbolik me rastin e Ditës Kombëtare për Personat e Pagjetur, i cili do të realizohet në mbrëmjen e sotme në Sheshin Ibrahim Rugova në Prishtinë.

Në luftën e para mëse 18 viteve kundër Kosovës, në fushatën e terrorit, spastrimit etnik e gjenocidit, forcat serbe të Milosheviçit, i njohur edhe si Kasapi i Ballkanit, i cili më pastaj ka përfunduar në Tribunalin për Krime Lufte në Hagë, kanë vrarë e masakruar më shumë se 12.000 shqiptarë, e mijëra të tjerë i zhdukën duke i dërguar e groposur edhe në Serbi, apo edhe duke i djegur, kanë dëbuar rreth një milion, shumicën drejt Shqipërisë “përtej Bjeshkëve të Nemuna”, dhe kanë djegur mëse 400 qytete dhe fshatra.

Instituti për Hulumtimin e Krimeve të Luftës në publikimet e tij dëshmon se, pas luftës së përfunduar në 12 qershor 1999 në Kosovë nga Kryqi i Kuq Ndërkombëtar evidentoheshin 6027 persona të zhdukur, të lajmëruar nga familjarët.

Edhe sipas të dhënave të asociacioneve familjare të të zhdukurve të pagjeturve, numri i tërësishëm i të zhdukurve të Kosovës pas luftës së para 18 viteve mbërrinte mëse 6.000 veta. Mbi 90 për qind prej tyre ishin civilë shqiptarë, të cilët u rrëmbyen, u morën të gjallë në mënyra të ndryshme nga formacionet policore-ushtarake dhe paramilitare të pushtetit okupues serb. Një numër i tyre, rreth 600 janë gjetur të gjallë nëpër burgjet në Serbi.

Kosova vazhdon të kërkojë zbardhjen e fatit të qytetarëve të saj të zhdukur dhe me këtë mesazh fotografitë e të pagjeturve janë vendosur e rivenodur edhe për shënimin e ditës së sotme nga familjarët  në rrethojat e Kuvendit e qeverisë kosovare, në sheshin qendror të Prishtinës.

 

Filed Under: Politike Tagged With: Behelul Jashari, Dita e te pagjeturve, kosovo, Thaci, trysni Serbise

Kosovo protesters demand government resignation on independence day

February 17, 2016 by dgreca

On the country’s eighth independence day, thousands of protesters in Kosovo have called for new leadership. The opposition supporters have accused the government of violating the constitution.

Shouting anti-government slogans, thousands of opposition-supporting protesters gathered in Kosovo’s capital, Pristina, on Wednesday to rally against the government.

“Kosovo will not allow itself to be led by people who have violated the constitution, its sovereignty,” said Visar Ymeri, leader of the main opposition Self-Determination Movement party.

Ymeri has given the government until February 27 to resign and announce new elections, or “our protests will not stop.”

Rally participants enthusiastically waved Albania’s red-and-black national flag and only a few Kosovo flags. The country is comprised of mostly ethnic Albanians.

The opposition party rejects an EU-brokered deal that the government made with Serbia last year which gives more powers to Kosovo’s ethnic Serb minority. In December, the Constitutional Court declared that part of the deal was unconstitutional.

They also oppose a border demarcation deal which was reached with Montenegro and have called for a referendum on the matter.

The rally participants dispersed peacefully, but another protest was called for Friday when Kosovo’s parliament might begin procedures to elect a new president Tear gas in parliament

The day began with a military parade at a government-held ceremony to celebrate the eighth anniversary of the country’s independence from Serbia.

President Atifete Jahjaga said the people have a “democratic right” to voice their opinions but appealed for a “dignified and peaceful protest”.

“Such a government has a clear mandate. It has the legitimacy to serve the citizens who trusted it with the majority of votes in a democratic process accepted by the whole political spectrum in Kosovo,” said Prime Minister Isa Mustafa.

Over the past four months, opposition members of parliament have sought to disrupt parliament by releasing tear gas into the main chamber and by blowing whistles.

Members of the international community have denounced the opposition party’s violent tactics, asking for them to resolve the political deadlock by working together in parliament.

Kosovo declared its independence from Belgrade in February 2008, a move which has been widely recognized by 111 countries, including the US and major European Union member states.

However, their claim to independence has been rejected by Serbia, along with the support of Russia. The two have successfully blocked Kosovo from becoming a UN member.

(AP, AFP, dpa)

 

 

Filed Under: Kronike Tagged With: kosovo, on independence day, protesters demand government resignation

Kosovo, Serbia Agree to Exchange School Books

September 11, 2015 by dgreca

By Besa Maliqi/

Pristina will supply school textbooks to Albanian communities in Serbia while Belgrade will do the same for Serbs in Kosovo, they agreed for the first time since the war in 1999./

Kosovo’s education minister Arsim Bajrami said on Thursday that his ministry had begun cooperation with its Belgrade counterpart to supply the Albanian community in Serbia with books for school pupils.

Bajrami said that Pristina and Belgrade education ministries reached an agreement that allows delivery of books to ethnic Albanian students living in Presevo, Bujanovac and Medvedja in the Presevo Valley area of southern Serbia, which has a large ethnic Albanian population.

Bajrami added that this is the first officially organised effort to send Albanian-language textbooks to schools in the Presevo valley since the end of the war in 1999.

“The textbooks have already been sent to Presevo and we ask the Serbian authorities that these textbooks be delivered to students and for them not to forbid any of the textbooks because the textbooks are based on new curricula and there is no absolutely hate speech and there is no ideological content either,” Bajrami said.

He said that his Serbian counterpart, Srdjan Verbic, agreed that Kosovo’s education ministry could send the books to the Presevo valley, while he had allowed books from Serbia to be sent to Kosovo.

“Since the Serbian government allowed the delivery to Presevo, I have taken a decision to allow Serbian textbooks enter Kosovo for the needs of Serbian students in Kosovo,” Bajrami added. (BIRN Foto: Kosovo minister education Arsim Bajrami)

Filed Under: Rajon Tagged With: Besa Maliqi, kosovo, Serbia Agree to Exchange School Books

Why countries that recognize Palestinian tatehood turn their backs on Kosovo

March 20, 2015 by dgreca

BY Hazir Reka*/
When we talk about Islam in Europe, we’re generally thinking about Bangladeshis in Britain and Algerians in France. Maybe Pakistani migrant-farmers in Greece, or Somali refugees in Scandinavia.
But the Muslims of Europe’s Balkan peninsula long predate Maghrebi settlement in the Goutte d’Or. And few outside the region realize that, in fact, there are countries on the European continent where Muslims compose the majority—and not as a result of spectral “reverse colonization.”
Countries with Europe’s most substantial Muslim communities include Bosnia-Herzegovina, where they are 40% of the population, according to the CIA; Macedonia, where they make up a third; Montenegro, where they’re 19%, and Bulgaria, 7.8%.
Nearby Albania and Kosovo are arguably Europe’s “most Islamic” countries, when excluding Turkey. In Albania, 56.7% of the population adheres to Sunni Islam. And although exact numbers aren’t available for Kosovo, one of the world’s youngest countries, estimates of the Muslim population hover at around 90% of its two million residents.
Both countries are home to ethnic-Albanian majorities, many of whom are descended from Christians that converted to Islam during four centuries of Ottoman-Turkish rule. Despite this, a number of Muslim-majority countries refuse to recognize Kosovar statehood; even as they passionately advocate for Palestinian sovereignty with the other hand. Most notable among these are Iran, Syria, and the Palestinian Authority.
“The PLO didn’t recognize the independence of Kosovo,” Imam Stephen Schwartz, executive director of the Center for Islamic Pluralism, tells Quartz. “Kosovo is not a member of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation. And this is because Kosovars and Albanians are seen to be the lapdogs of the Americans.”
Schwartz refers to a palpable, on-the-ground popularity of the US in Albania and Kosovo, almost entirely due to NATO’s involvement in the tail end of the Yugoslav Wars; specifically, the allied bombing of Belgrade, capital of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY), now the Republic of Serbia. NATO and FRY officials signed an agreement mandating full withdrawal of Serbian troops from Kosovo in late 1999, which paved the way toward an independent Republic of Kosovo, officially declared in Feb. 2008. Though there is measurable interaction and occasional cooperation between Kosovo and Serbia, the latter has yet to recognize Kosovar independence.
And this might partially explain why Kosovars lack the international support lent to other statehood efforts, like that of the Palestinians.
“The hypocrisy of refusing to recognize Kosovo is an unbelievable thing,” Schwartz says. “Certain Arab countries and members of the OIP won’t do it because Kosovar statehood was assisted by America. Kosovo was liberated by America.”
In fact, when looking at respective lists of countries that recognize Palestine and/or Kosovo, the divide runs rather cleanly along factional lines:
With some overlap in Latin America, the Middle East, Scandinavia, and Africa (the British parliament’s Oct. 2014 vote to recognize Palestinian statehood was non-binding), the allegiance to Kosovo or Palestine can be distilled to a given country’s attitude toward the US. With the exception of Libya, Egypt, and Pakistan, most Middle Eastern supporters of Kosovar statehood are also strategic US military allies: Saudi Arabia, the Gulf states, and Jordan.
Predictably, Iran and North Korea recognize Palestine, but not Kosovo. Russia, a long-time ally of Serbia—which insists Kosovo to be part of the ancestral ethnic-Serb homeland (Raska)—recognizes Palestine, but not Kosovo. Members of the Moscow-led Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)—Belarus, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, etc.—follow suit.
The remaining BRICS (China, India, Brazil, South Africa) recognize Palestine, but not Kosovo; perhaps in some spirit of defiance against the “old guard” of geopolitical order—countries like Canada, Australia, Japan, South Korea, and most of the EU, all of which recognize Kosovo, but reject Palestinian statehood.
The divide plays out even further along traditional international rivalries. Colombia recognizes Kosovo, not Palestine; Venezuela recognizes Palestine, not Kosovo. Pakistan recognizes Kosovo; India and Bangladesh do not. Azerbaijan recognizes Palestine; Armenia does not.
Though beyond the seemingly simple cartographic representations, the issue of limited recognition gets pretty complicated. There are some conspicuous ambivalences. Mexico recognizes neither Palestine nor Kosovo, perhaps in part to appease both the US and its Latin American (largely pro-Palestine) neighbors. Nor does Greece recognize either, perhaps because it has stood close to the flame of Balkan interethnic violence for centuries, and lies just a few hundred nautical miles the west of Israel.
Israel, interestingly enough, does not recognize Kosovar statehood—probably because the establishment of an ethnic-Albanian state on formerly Serbian soil would set a precedent for Arab-Palestinian secession. You’ll see similar mentalities at practice in Spain, which has historically struggled to keep hold of its Basque and Catalan regions; Morocco, which maintains a claim on the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (Western Sahara); China, for obvious reasons regarding Taiwan, Tibet, and the Uighur region; and the Russian Federation, which seems to make the bulk of its foreign-policy decisions based on whether a given move might inspire, or stoke extant secessionist sentiments in its outer republics.
This ultimately renders humanitarian appeals for recognition in Kosovo and Palestine (and Abkhazia, and eastern Ukraine, and Kurdistan) rather dishonest. The nations in question, the actual people vying for self-determination, are championed by their respective supporters as suffering nobly under the yoke of amoral oppressors. To the pro-Kosovo faction, big-bad Russia and little-bad Serbia impede international recognition for the sake of being bad. To the pro-Palestine crowd, big-bad America and little-bad Israel deny Palestinian sovereignty within the same, moralistic, black-and-white framework.
All parties seem to use righteous indignation to their political advantage; except, of course, the parties with the most tangible stakes: the Kosovars and Palestinians. They are minimized to little more than chess pieces—pawns, in fact, the most disposable of chess pieces—buffeted between elite players in the great game of 21st century realpolitik. A game that, for these would-be states, offers no discernible prize.
*Reuters

Filed Under: Analiza Tagged With: Hazir Reka, kosovo, Palestine, recognize

Kosovo’s joy now despair on anniversary of independence

February 17, 2015 by dgreca

By Nebi QENA/AP/
PRISTINA, Kosovo (AP) — Jubilant throngs gathered around gigantic letters spelling “NEWBORN,” when Kosovo declared independence from Serbia seven years ago. Today, there’s a new national symbol: The bus stop where hundreds of people gather every day to flee a country they’ve given up on.
High hopes have turned to despair as Kosovars on Tuesday mark the anniversary of their dream of nationhood coming true. Tens of thousands of people, including at least 5,000 schoolchildren, have already fled on the nightly bus journey through Serbia and into the European Union. The mass movement of people — which some describe as an exodus — is a sign of simmering discontent with the governing elites in Europe’s youngest, poorest and most isolated country. The departures, coupled with violent January protests, threaten to export Kosovo’s economic and social troubles beyond its borders.
“I am so disappointed with my own place, I just want to leave,” said Bislim Shabani, an ethnic Albanian heading to Germany with his wife and four children.
Shabani said he worked in a company that went bust in a botched privatization, leaving many workers mired in debt: “They owe me 12 months of wages. I couldn’t provide for my family any longer.”
Lured by promises of a secure future abroad, many are happy to turn their backs on a country with rampant unemployment and corrupt officials — who critics say enjoy the protection of a justice system that caters to the elite.
Mirsad Muliqi waved goodbye to his brother and his family boarding a bus to Serbia, then said: “They just want to get out of this filthy place.” The unemployed Muliqi said he would follow as soon as his brother settles down in Germany.

Europe’s richest country has borne the brunt of the flow of refugees, with some 18,000 Kosovars entering since the beginning of the year. Official figures in Kosovo show that at least 30,000 Kosovars have sought asylum, mostly in Germany, since August. The figure, however, does not include migrants that stay illegally and do not register with the authorities. Hungarian police say over 23,000 migrants have been detected crossing their border in 2015 alone, the vast majority coming from Kosovo.
Almost none has any chance of receiving asylum, German authorities say, because they are not considered political refugees. The usual fate of those who receive a rejection letter: deportation.
To stem the flow, German border patrols have been deployed to secure the border between Serbia and Hungary and help with passport controls of people from Kosovo.
Unemployment in Kosovo stands at 30 percent, according to official statistics. It is highest among young people aged 15 to 24 — at a staggering 56 percent. Some 30 percent of the population lives in poverty.
President Atifete Jahjaga toured Kosovo cities recently in a bid to halt the exodus. In some towns she was met by hostile crowds accusing politicians of getting rich at the expense of citizens.
Anger boiled over in the streets of Pristina twice last month as stone-throwing anti-government protesters clashed with police who fired tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse the crowd. The government blamed the unrest on opposition parties wanting to stage a coup.
But Ramush Haradinaj, an opposition leader who backed the protests, said the dissatisfaction is due to stalled economic and social progress.
“People are not satisfied merely by the most basic rights,” Haradinaj told The Associated Press. “They want to know when Kosovo can join the EU, in what time frame? When will it no longer suffer from corruption? We are not talking about the Kosovo citizen who just wants to be free. We are talking about a citizen that has higher expectations.”
Kosovo came under NATO control in 1999 after the alliance bombed Serbia for 78 days to make it end its onslaught on ethnic Albanians. Since breaking away from Serbia, Kosovo has been recognized by 108 countries. Kosovo’s recent membership in sports organizations such as the International Olympic Committee has been welcomed as a major victory in its road to full-fledged statehood.
But Serbia’s rejection of Kosovo’s independence has prevented further recognitions and helped to isolate it internationally. The country’s 1.8 million inhabitants are subject to strict visa requirements and can only travel visa-free to a handful of countries, mainly neighboring Albania and Turkey. Kosovars are able to flow into Serbia under an EU-brokered deal for Serbia to recognize Kosovo-issued identification papers without recognizing its statehood.
The ease of travel to Turkey has also encouraged hundreds of Kosovo Muslims to join the ranks of Islamic militants in Iraq and Syria. Alarmed at the prospect of ending up with battle-hardened religious extremists, Kosovo lawmakers passed legislation to jail returning fighters for up to 15 years and rounded up over 50 suspected radicals, including imams.
Political analyst Dukagjin Gorani blames the simmering troubles on former rebel leaders who steered the province to independence from Serbia — but have become detached from their compatriots. He said they are now moving Kosovo toward “social revolt and political discontent.”
“Kosovo has … been systematically robbed and enslaved in the name of liberation,” Gorani said, referring to officials from the Kosovo Liberation Army who fought the separatist war and are now in leading positions.
A European Union police and justice mission that helped local authorities fight corruption has launched a series of indictments and investigations against senior officials. But no sentences have been handed down — triggering claims that the accused have strong-armed the fledgling legal system.
Gorani said the situation could explode into unrest at any time.
“You know how it is with the Balkans,” he said. “It is always a powder keg and at the heart of which Kosovo remains with a very short fuse.”
___
Kirsten Grieshaber and Geir Moulson in Berlin contributed to this report

Filed Under: Rajon Tagged With: Albanian children, kosovo

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