fbpx
Wikipedia

Adem Jashari

Adem Jashari (born Fazli Jashari; 28 November 1955 – 7 March 1998) was one of the founders of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), a Kosovo Albanian separatist militia which fought for the secession of Kosovo from the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia during the 1990s.[3][4][5][6][7]

Adem Jashari
Birth nameFazli Jashari[1]
Born(1955-11-28)28 November 1955
Gornje Prekaze, PR Serbia, FPR Yugoslavia
(now Prekaz i Epërm, Kosovo)[a]
Died7 March 1998(1998-03-07) (aged 42)
Gornje Prekaze, FR Yugoslavia
(now Prekaz i Epërm, Kosovo)[a]
Buried
Adem Jashari Memorial Complex, Prekaz
Allegiance Kosovo Liberation Army
Albania[2]
Years of service1991–1998
RankCommander
Commands heldDrenica region
Battles/warsInsurgency in Kosovo (1995–1998)
Kosovo War:
 • Attack on Prekaz  
AwardsHero of Kosovo
National Flag Decoration
MemorialsAdem Jashari Memorial Complex
Spouse(s)Adilje Jashari
ChildrenKushtrim Jashari
RelationsHamëz Jashari (brother)
Bekim Jashari (nephew)

Beginning in 1991, Jashari participated in attacks against the Serbian police before travelling to Albania to receive military training. Arrested in 1993, he was released at the behest of the Albanian Army and later returned to Kosovo, where he continued launching attacks against the Yugoslav establishment. In July 1997, he was convicted of terrorism in absentia by a Yugoslav court. After several unsuccessful attempts to capture or kill him, Serbian police launched an attack against Jashari's home in Prekaz in March 1998. The battle that followed resulted in the deaths of 57 members of Jashari's family, including that of Jashari, his wife, brother and son.

Seen as the "father of the KLA", Jashari is considered a symbol of Kosovar independence by ethnic Albanians. He was posthumously awarded with the title "Hero of Kosovo" following its declaration of independence in 2008.[b] The National Theatre in Pristina, Pristina International Airport Adem Jashari and the Adem Jashari Olympic Stadium have been named after him.

Biography Edit

Early life Edit

Adem Shaban Jashari[8] was born in the village of Prekaz, SAP Kosovo, SFR Yugoslavia on 28 November 1955[9] as Fazli Jashari.[1] Descended from Kosovo Albanian guerrillas who had fought Yugoslav forces decades prior,[10] he was raised on Albanian war stories and was rarely seen without a gun.[9] According to the journalist Tim Judah, Jashari "hated the Serbs, and although he was one of the KLA’s early recruits, he was no ideological guerrilla."[11]

Guerrilla activities Edit

Drenica is a hilly region in central Kosovo inhabited almost exclusively by Kosovo Albanians. Prior to the Kosovo War, the government of Yugoslavia considered it "the hotbed of Albanian terrorism."[12] Jashari was a farmer.[13] In 1991, he participated in an armed uprising against the Yugoslav authorities in Kosovo.[14] During this period, a Kosovo Albanian irredentist organization that came to be known as the Kosovo Liberation Army first emerged.[13]

From 1991 to 1992, Jashari and about 100 other ethnic Albanians wishing to fight for the independence of Kosovo underwent military training in the municipality of Labinot-Mal in Albania.[15] Afterwards, Jashari and other ethnic Albanians committed several acts of sabotage aimed at the Serbian administrative apparatus in Kosovo. Attempting to capture or kill him, Serbian police surrounded Jashari and his older brother, Hamëz, at their home in Prekaz on 30 December 1991. In the ensuing siege, large numbers of Kosovo Albanians flocked to Prekaz, pressuring the police to withdraw from the village.[9]

While in Albania, he was arrested in 1993 by the government of Sali Berisha and sent to jail in Tirana[16] before being released alongside other Kosovo Albanian militants at the demand of the Albanian Army.[17] With the Yugoslav forces now considering Prekaz a "no-go" area, Jashari launched several attacks over the next several years. These targeted the Yugoslav Army (VJ) and Serbian police in Kosovo.[9] Jashari was convicted of terrorism in absentia by a Yugoslav court on 11 July 1997. Human Rights Watch subsequently described the trial, in which fourteen other Kosovo Albanians were also convicted, as "[failing] to conform to international standards."[18] Pursuing Jashari for the murder of a Serb policeman, Yugoslav forces again attempted to assault the Jashari compound in Prekaz on 22 January 1998.[8] With Jashari not present, thousands of Kosovo Albanians descended on Prekaz and again succeeded in pushing the Serbs out of the village and its surroundings. The next month, a small unit of the KLA ambushed Serbian policemen. Four Serbs were killed and two were injured in the ensuing clashes. At dawn on 5 March 1998, the KLA launched an attack against a police patrol in Prekaz.[9]

Death Edit

In response to this attack, the Yugoslavs organized a "full-scale revenge mission" involving tanks, APCs and helicopters.[19] They were backed up by artillery from a nearby ammunition factory.[20] With the intention of "eliminating the suspects and their families,"[18] the police attacked villages that had been identified as KLA strongholds, including Likošane and Ćirez. Human Rights Watch noted that "special police forces attacked without warning, firing indiscriminately at women, children and other noncombatants." KLA members and their families subsequently fled to Jashari's compound. Here, the police invited Jashari to surrender, giving him a deadline of two hours in which to respond. During this period, a number of families left the compound.[21] Jashari remained, ordering his family members to stay inside and telling his militants to resist to the last man.[22]

Once the two-hour deadline had expired, the two sides began exchanging gunfire. In one of the houses, where most of Jashari's extended family had gathered, a mortar shell fell in through the roof, causing many deaths. After a two[21] or three-day siege, the police captured the Jashari compound.[23] Once inside, they discovered that Jashari and his brother Hamëz had been killed.[21] Also killed were Jashari's wife, Adilje, and his thirteen-year-old son, Kushtrim.[24] Overall, approximately fifty-eight Kosovo Albanians were killed in the attack, including eighteen women and ten children under the age of sixteen.[25][26] Goran Radosavljević, a major in the Serbian Interior Ministry, said that "[Jashari] used women, children and the elderly as hostages."[27] Speaking of the attack, Yugoslav General Nebojša Pavković stated that it was "a normal policing action against a well-known criminal. It was successful. The other details I don't remember."[28] The only survivor was Besarta Jashari, Hamëz Jashari's daughter. She claimed that the policemen had "threatened her with a knife and ordered her to say that her uncle (Adem Jashari) had killed everyone who wanted to surrender."[29]

Aftermath Edit

Soon after the attack against Prekaz, 46 bodies were taken to a hospital morgue in Pristina on 7 March before being returned to Skenderaj the next day. There, they were placed inside a warehouse located on the outskirts of town. Photographs taken during this time revealed that Jashari had received a bullet wound to the neck. On 9 March, the police publicly stated that they would themselves bury the bodies of those killed if they were not quickly claimed and buried by family members. The next day, the police dug a large grave near Donji Prekaz and buried the bodies of fifty-six people, ten of whom could not be identified. On 11 March, the bodies were disinterred by relatives and reburied in accordance with Islamic tradition[30] on a field known as the "field of peace".[31]

The shootout at the Jashari family compound involving Adem Jashari, a KLA commander and surrounding Yugoslav troops in 1998 resulted in the massacre of most Jashari family members.[32][33] The deaths of Jashari and his family generated an international backlash against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.[34] As news of the killings spread, armed Kosovo Albanian militias emerged throughout Kosovo, seeking to avenge Jashari's death as Albanians flocked to join the KLA.[35] The event became a rallying myth for KLA recruitment regarding armed resistance to Yugoslav forces.[32]

Legacy Edit

The exploits of Adem Jashari have been celebrated and turned into legend by former KLA members, some in government, and by Kosovar Albanian society resulting in songs, literature, monuments, memorials with streets and buildings bearing his name across Kosovo.[36][37] Dubbed the "Legendary Commander" (Albanian: Komandanti Legjendar) by Albanians,[38] Jashari is regarded by many in Kosovo as being the "father of the KLA". Portraits of him carrying an automatic weapon often adorn the walls of homes inhabited by ethnic Albanians.[39] Considered a symbol of independence by Kosovo Albanians, the anniversary of Jashari's death is annually commemorated in Kosovo[21] and his home has since been transformed into a shrine. The field where he and his family were buried has since become a place of pilgrimage for Kosovo Albanians, and several authors have equated Jashari with Albanian national hero Skanderbeg[40] as well as Albanian kaçak rebels from the past.[20] Following Kosovo's declaration of independence in 2008, Jashari was posthumously awarded the title "Hero of Kosovo" for his role in the Kosovo War.[21] The football stadium in Mitrovica,[41] the National Theatre in Pristina[38] and Pristina International Airport Adem Jashari have also been named after him.[42]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "Bekim Jashari zbulon një detaj interesant rreth emrit të Adem Jasharit, thotë se e kishte emrin Fazli" (in Albanian). Telegrafi. 19 August 2018. Së fundmi Bekim Jashari ka publikuar detaje tjera interesante, ku ka përmendur se Adem Jashari fillimisht e kishte pasur emrin Fazli
  2. ^ "Shqipëria dhe UÇK, prapaskena të historisë. Qëndrimi i Ramiz Alisë dhe mandej i Berishës ndaj luftëtarëve kosovarë (dhe një takim i fshehtë)". Gazeta Tema (in Albanian). 2018. Retrieved 17 February 2023.
  3. ^ State-building in Kosovo. A plural policing perspective. Maklu. 5 February 2015. p. 53. ISBN 9789046607497.
  4. ^ Liberating Kosovo: Coercive Diplomacy and U. S. Intervention. Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. 2012. p. 69. ISBN 9780262305129.
  5. ^ Dictionary of Genocide. Greenwood Publishing Group. 2008. p. 249. ISBN 9780313346415.
  6. ^ "Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA)". Encyclopædia Britannica. 14 September 2014.
  7. ^ "Albanian Insurgents Keep NATO Forces Busy". Time. 6 March 2001.
  8. ^ a b Elsie 2011, p. 142.
  9. ^ a b c d e Bartrop 2012, p. 142.
  10. ^ O'Neill 2002, p. 23.
  11. ^ Judah 2008b, ...for nothing.
  12. ^ Human Rights Watch 1998, p. 18.
  13. ^ a b Watson 2009, p. 193.
  14. ^ Elsie 2011, p. 32.
  15. ^ Judah 2002, p. 111.
  16. ^ Pettifer & Vickers 2007, p. 113.
  17. ^ Pettifer & Vickers 2007, pp. 98–99.
  18. ^ a b Human Rights Watch 1998, p. 27.
  19. ^ Bartrop 2012, pp. 142–143.
  20. ^ a b Pettifer 2005, p. 144.
  21. ^ a b c d e Bartrop 2012, p. 143.
  22. ^ Henriksen 2007, p. 127.
  23. ^ Judah 2008a, p. 81.
  24. ^ Human Rights Watch 1998, p. 29.
  25. ^ Human Rights Watch 1998, p. 28.
  26. ^ Judah 2002, p. 140.
  27. ^ Henriksen 2007, p. 128.
  28. ^ BBC & 12 March 2000.
  29. ^ Kolstø, Professor Pål (28 December 2012). Media Discourse and the Yugoslav Conflicts: Representations of Self and Other. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 96. ISBN 9781409491644.
  30. ^ Human Rights Watch 1998, pp. 30–31.
  31. ^ Judah 2008a, p. 28.
  32. ^ a b Di Lellio & Schwanders-Sievers 2006a, p. 514. "We concentrate on one symbolic event – the massacre of the insurgent Jashari family, killed in the hamlet of Prekaz in March 1998 while fighting Serbs troops. This was neither the only massacre nor the worst during the recent conflict..."; pp: 515–516.
  33. ^ Koktsidis & Dam 2008, pp. 169.
  34. ^ Carmichael 2012, p. 558.
  35. ^ Petersen 2011, p. 154.
  36. ^ Di Lellio & Schwanders-Sievers 2006a, pp. 516–519, 527.
  37. ^ Di Lellio & Schwanders-Sievers 2006b, pp. 27–45.
  38. ^ a b Luci & Marković 2009, p. 96.
  39. ^ Perritt 2010, p. 36.
  40. ^ Judah 2008a, p. 27.
  41. ^ BBC & 5 March 2014.
  42. ^ Elsie 2012, p. 222.

Books Edit

  • Bartrop, Paul (2012). A Biographical Encyclopedia of Contemporary Genocide. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-313-38679-4.
  • Carmichael, Cathie (2012). "Demise of Communist Yugoslavia". In Stone, Dane (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of Postwar European History. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-956098-1.
  • Di Lellio, Anna; Schwanders-Sievers, Stephanie (2006a). "The Legendary Commander: The construction of an Albanian master‐narrative in post‐war Kosovo" (PDF). Nations and Nationalism. 12 (3): 513–529. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8129.2006.00252.x.
  • Di Lellio, Anna; Schwanders-Sievers, Stephanie (2006b). "Sacred Journey to a Nation: The Construction of a Shrine in Postwar Kosovo" (PDF). Journeys. 7 (1): 27–49. doi:10.3167/146526006780457315.
Elsie, Robert (2011). Historical Dictionary of Kosovo. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-8108-7483-1. 

Websites Edit

  • "Behind the Kosovo crisis". BBC. 12 March 2000.
  • "Kosovo footballers draw with Haiti in Mitrovica debut". BBC. 5 March 2014.

adem, jashari, born, fazli, jashari, november, 1955, march, 1998, founders, kosovo, liberation, army, kosovo, albanian, separatist, militia, which, fought, secession, kosovo, from, federal, republic, yugoslavia, during, 1990s, birth, namefazli, jashari, born, . Adem Jashari born Fazli Jashari 28 November 1955 7 March 1998 was one of the founders of the Kosovo Liberation Army KLA a Kosovo Albanian separatist militia which fought for the secession of Kosovo from the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia during the 1990s 3 4 5 6 7 Adem JashariBirth nameFazli Jashari 1 Born 1955 11 28 28 November 1955Gornje Prekaze PR Serbia FPR Yugoslavia now Prekaz i Eperm Kosovo a Died7 March 1998 1998 03 07 aged 42 Gornje Prekaze FR Yugoslavia now Prekaz i Eperm Kosovo a BuriedAdem Jashari Memorial Complex PrekazAllegianceKosovo Liberation Army Albania 2 Years of service1991 1998RankCommanderCommands heldDrenica regionBattles warsInsurgency in Kosovo 1995 1998 Kosovo War Attack on Prekaz AwardsHero of KosovoNational Flag DecorationMemorialsAdem Jashari Memorial ComplexSpouse s Adilje JashariChildrenKushtrim JashariRelationsHamez Jashari brother Bekim Jashari nephew Beginning in 1991 Jashari participated in attacks against the Serbian police before travelling to Albania to receive military training Arrested in 1993 he was released at the behest of the Albanian Army and later returned to Kosovo where he continued launching attacks against the Yugoslav establishment In July 1997 he was convicted of terrorism in absentia by a Yugoslav court After several unsuccessful attempts to capture or kill him Serbian police launched an attack against Jashari s home in Prekaz in March 1998 The battle that followed resulted in the deaths of 57 members of Jashari s family including that of Jashari his wife brother and son Seen as the father of the KLA Jashari is considered a symbol of Kosovar independence by ethnic Albanians He was posthumously awarded with the title Hero of Kosovo following its declaration of independence in 2008 b The National Theatre in Pristina Pristina International Airport Adem Jashari and the Adem Jashari Olympic Stadium have been named after him Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Guerrilla activities 1 3 Death 1 4 Aftermath 2 Legacy 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Books 4 2 WebsitesBiography EditEarly life Edit Adem Shaban Jashari 8 was born in the village of Prekaz SAP Kosovo SFR Yugoslavia on 28 November 1955 9 as Fazli Jashari 1 Descended from Kosovo Albanian guerrillas who had fought Yugoslav forces decades prior 10 he was raised on Albanian war stories and was rarely seen without a gun 9 According to the journalist Tim Judah Jashari hated the Serbs and although he was one of the KLA s early recruits he was no ideological guerrilla 11 Guerrilla activities Edit See also Insurgency in Kosovo 1995 98 Drenica is a hilly region in central Kosovo inhabited almost exclusively by Kosovo Albanians Prior to the Kosovo War the government of Yugoslavia considered it the hotbed of Albanian terrorism 12 Jashari was a farmer 13 In 1991 he participated in an armed uprising against the Yugoslav authorities in Kosovo 14 During this period a Kosovo Albanian irredentist organization that came to be known as the Kosovo Liberation Army first emerged 13 From 1991 to 1992 Jashari and about 100 other ethnic Albanians wishing to fight for the independence of Kosovo underwent military training in the municipality of Labinot Mal in Albania 15 Afterwards Jashari and other ethnic Albanians committed several acts of sabotage aimed at the Serbian administrative apparatus in Kosovo Attempting to capture or kill him Serbian police surrounded Jashari and his older brother Hamez at their home in Prekaz on 30 December 1991 In the ensuing siege large numbers of Kosovo Albanians flocked to Prekaz pressuring the police to withdraw from the village 9 While in Albania he was arrested in 1993 by the government of Sali Berisha and sent to jail in Tirana 16 before being released alongside other Kosovo Albanian militants at the demand of the Albanian Army 17 With the Yugoslav forces now considering Prekaz a no go area Jashari launched several attacks over the next several years These targeted the Yugoslav Army VJ and Serbian police in Kosovo 9 Jashari was convicted of terrorism in absentia by a Yugoslav court on 11 July 1997 Human Rights Watch subsequently described the trial in which fourteen other Kosovo Albanians were also convicted as failing to conform to international standards 18 Pursuing Jashari for the murder of a Serb policeman Yugoslav forces again attempted to assault the Jashari compound in Prekaz on 22 January 1998 8 With Jashari not present thousands of Kosovo Albanians descended on Prekaz and again succeeded in pushing the Serbs out of the village and its surroundings The next month a small unit of the KLA ambushed Serbian policemen Four Serbs were killed and two were injured in the ensuing clashes At dawn on 5 March 1998 the KLA launched an attack against a police patrol in Prekaz 9 Death Edit Main article Attack on Prekaz In response to this attack the Yugoslavs organized a full scale revenge mission involving tanks APCs and helicopters 19 They were backed up by artillery from a nearby ammunition factory 20 With the intention of eliminating the suspects and their families 18 the police attacked villages that had been identified as KLA strongholds including Likosane and Cirez Human Rights Watch noted that special police forces attacked without warning firing indiscriminately at women children and other noncombatants KLA members and their families subsequently fled to Jashari s compound Here the police invited Jashari to surrender giving him a deadline of two hours in which to respond During this period a number of families left the compound 21 Jashari remained ordering his family members to stay inside and telling his militants to resist to the last man 22 Once the two hour deadline had expired the two sides began exchanging gunfire In one of the houses where most of Jashari s extended family had gathered a mortar shell fell in through the roof causing many deaths After a two 21 or three day siege the police captured the Jashari compound 23 Once inside they discovered that Jashari and his brother Hamez had been killed 21 Also killed were Jashari s wife Adilje and his thirteen year old son Kushtrim 24 Overall approximately fifty eight Kosovo Albanians were killed in the attack including eighteen women and ten children under the age of sixteen 25 26 Goran Radosavljevic a major in the Serbian Interior Ministry said that Jashari used women children and the elderly as hostages 27 Speaking of the attack Yugoslav General Nebojsa Pavkovic stated that it was a normal policing action against a well known criminal It was successful The other details I don t remember 28 The only survivor was Besarta Jashari Hamez Jashari s daughter She claimed that the policemen had threatened her with a knife and ordered her to say that her uncle Adem Jashari had killed everyone who wanted to surrender 29 Aftermath Edit Soon after the attack against Prekaz 46 bodies were taken to a hospital morgue in Pristina on 7 March before being returned to Skenderaj the next day There they were placed inside a warehouse located on the outskirts of town Photographs taken during this time revealed that Jashari had received a bullet wound to the neck On 9 March the police publicly stated that they would themselves bury the bodies of those killed if they were not quickly claimed and buried by family members The next day the police dug a large grave near Donji Prekaz and buried the bodies of fifty six people ten of whom could not be identified On 11 March the bodies were disinterred by relatives and reburied in accordance with Islamic tradition 30 on a field known as the field of peace 31 The shootout at the Jashari family compound involving Adem Jashari a KLA commander and surrounding Yugoslav troops in 1998 resulted in the massacre of most Jashari family members 32 33 The deaths of Jashari and his family generated an international backlash against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 34 As news of the killings spread armed Kosovo Albanian militias emerged throughout Kosovo seeking to avenge Jashari s death as Albanians flocked to join the KLA 35 The event became a rallying myth for KLA recruitment regarding armed resistance to Yugoslav forces 32 Legacy EditThe exploits of Adem Jashari have been celebrated and turned into legend by former KLA members some in government and by Kosovar Albanian society resulting in songs literature monuments memorials with streets and buildings bearing his name across Kosovo 36 37 Dubbed the Legendary Commander Albanian Komandanti Legjendar by Albanians 38 Jashari is regarded by many in Kosovo as being the father of the KLA Portraits of him carrying an automatic weapon often adorn the walls of homes inhabited by ethnic Albanians 39 Considered a symbol of independence by Kosovo Albanians the anniversary of Jashari s death is annually commemorated in Kosovo 21 and his home has since been transformed into a shrine The field where he and his family were buried has since become a place of pilgrimage for Kosovo Albanians and several authors have equated Jashari with Albanian national hero Skanderbeg 40 as well as Albanian kacak rebels from the past 20 Following Kosovo s declaration of independence in 2008 Jashari was posthumously awarded the title Hero of Kosovo for his role in the Kosovo War 21 The football stadium in Mitrovica 41 the National Theatre in Pristina 38 and Pristina International Airport Adem Jashari have also been named after him 42 nbsp Bust of Jashari in Tirana nbsp The Adem Jashari Memorial Museum in Prekaz nbsp Jashari on a 2008 stamp of AlbaniaSee also EditAlbanian nationalism Kosovo References Edit a b Bekim Jashari zbulon nje detaj interesant rreth emrit te Adem Jasharit thote se e kishte emrin Fazli in Albanian Telegrafi 19 August 2018 Se fundmi Bekim Jashari ka publikuar detaje tjera interesante ku ka permendur se Adem Jashari fillimisht e kishte pasur emrin Fazli Shqiperia dhe UCK prapaskena te historise Qendrimi i Ramiz Alise dhe mandej i Berishes ndaj luftetareve kosovare dhe nje takim i fshehte Gazeta Tema in Albanian 2018 Retrieved 17 February 2023 State building in Kosovo A plural policing perspective Maklu 5 February 2015 p 53 ISBN 9789046607497 Liberating Kosovo Coercive Diplomacy and U S Intervention Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs 2012 p 69 ISBN 9780262305129 Dictionary of Genocide Greenwood Publishing Group 2008 p 249 ISBN 9780313346415 Kosovo Liberation Army KLA Encyclopaedia Britannica 14 September 2014 Albanian Insurgents Keep NATO Forces Busy Time 6 March 2001 a b Elsie 2011 p 142 a b c d e Bartrop 2012 p 142 O Neill 2002 p 23 Judah 2008b for nothing Human Rights Watch 1998 p 18 a b Watson 2009 p 193 Elsie 2011 p 32 Judah 2002 p 111 Pettifer amp Vickers 2007 p 113 Pettifer amp Vickers 2007 pp 98 99 a b Human Rights Watch 1998 p 27 Bartrop 2012 pp 142 143 a b Pettifer 2005 p 144 a b c d e Bartrop 2012 p 143 Henriksen 2007 p 127 Judah 2008a p 81 Human Rights Watch 1998 p 29 Human Rights Watch 1998 p 28 Judah 2002 p 140 Henriksen 2007 p 128 BBC amp 12 March 2000 Kolsto Professor Pal 28 December 2012 Media Discourse and the Yugoslav Conflicts Representations of Self and Other Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 96 ISBN 9781409491644 Human Rights Watch 1998 pp 30 31 Judah 2008a p 28 a b Di Lellio amp Schwanders Sievers 2006a p 514 We concentrate on one symbolic event the massacre of the insurgent Jashari family killed in the hamlet of Prekaz in March 1998 while fighting Serbs troops This was neither the only massacre nor the worst during the recent conflict pp 515 516 Koktsidis amp Dam 2008 pp 169 Carmichael 2012 p 558 Petersen 2011 p 154 Di Lellio amp Schwanders Sievers 2006a pp 516 519 527 Di Lellio amp Schwanders Sievers 2006b pp 27 45 a b Luci amp Markovic 2009 p 96 Perritt 2010 p 36 Judah 2008a p 27 BBC amp 5 March 2014 Elsie 2012 p 222 Books Edit Bartrop Paul 2012 A Biographical Encyclopedia of Contemporary Genocide Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 38679 4 Carmichael Cathie 2012 Demise of Communist Yugoslavia In Stone Dane ed The Oxford Handbook of Postwar European History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 956098 1 Di Lellio Anna Schwanders Sievers Stephanie 2006a The Legendary Commander The construction of an Albanian master narrative in post war Kosovo PDF Nations and Nationalism 12 3 513 529 doi 10 1111 j 1469 8129 2006 00252 x Di Lellio Anna Schwanders Sievers Stephanie 2006b Sacred Journey to a Nation The Construction of a Shrine in Postwar Kosovo PDF Journeys 7 1 27 49 doi 10 3167 146526006780457315 Elsie Robert 2011 Historical Dictionary of Kosovo Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8108 7483 1 Elsie Robert 2012 A Biographical Dictionary of Albanian History New York I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 78076 431 3 Henriksen Dag 2007 NATO s Gamble Combining Diplomacy and Airpower in the Kosovo Crisis 1998 1999 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 358 1 Human Rights Watch 1998 Humanitarian Law Violations in Kosovo New York Human Rights Watch ISBN 978 1 56432 194 7 Judah Tim 2000 1997 The Serbs History Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia 2nd ed New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 08507 5 Judah Tim 2002 Kosovo War and Revenge New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 09725 2 Judah Tim 2008a Kosovo What Everyone Needs to Know New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 974103 8 Judah Tim 2008b The Serbs History Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 14784 1 Koktsidis Pavlos Ioannis Dam Caspar Ten 2008 A success story Analysing Albanian ethno nationalist extremism in the Balkans PDF East European Quarterly 42 2 161 190 Luci Nita Markovic Predrag 2009 Events and Sites of Difference Marking Self and Other in Kosovo In Kolsto Pal ed Media Discourse and the Yugoslav Conflicts Representations of Self and Other Farnham England Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 1 4094 9164 4 O Neill William G 2002 Kosovo An Unfinished Peace Boulder Colorado Lynne Rienner Publishers ISBN 978 1 58826 021 5 Perritt Henry H 2010 The Road to Independence for Kosovo A Chronicle of the Ahtisaari Plan New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 11624 4 Petersen Roger D 2011 Western Intervention in the Balkans The Strategic Use of Emotion in Conflict New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 50330 3 Pettifer James 2005 Kosova Express A Journey in Wartime Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 20444 0 Pettifer James Vickers Miranda 2007 The Albanian Question Reshaping the Balkans New York I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 86064 974 5 Philips David L 2012 Liberating Kosovo Coercive Diplomacy and U S Intervention Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 30512 9 Watson Paul 2009 Where War Lives Toronto McCleland amp Stewart ISBN 978 1 55199 284 6 Websites Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Adem Jashari Behind the Kosovo crisis BBC 12 March 2000 Kosovo footballers draw with Haiti in Mitrovica debut BBC 5 March 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Adem Jashari amp oldid 1180408579, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.