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8/03/2001 -
Trepça.net |
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The
Albanians of Presheve, Bujanovc and Medvegje |
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The
Platform-for prevention of the armed conflicts and
crisis solutions in Presevo, Medvegja and Bujanovac |
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- Xhemaludin
SALIHU
/ Preshevë
-
- Presheve,
Bujanovc and Medvegje are three Albanian communes incorporated
in the Republic of Serbia. Under the rule of the Ottoman
Empire, these regions have been an integral part of the Kosova
vilayet, and Presheve was known as the center of Zhupa region
since the 14th century.
-
- Following
the Berlin Congress of 1878, the border between the Kosova
vilayet and Serbia passed through Ristovac, between Bujanovc
and Vranja. Hence, on the basis of the decisions of this
congress, the Albanian territories of Toplica, situated in the
north of present day Kosova, as well as the regions in the
East going up to the vicinity of Nish, were annexed to Serbia.
-
- The
Serbian occupation of these territories was accompanied by a
campaign of genocide against the Albanian autochthonous
population and on this occasion over 700 Albanian villages
were expropriated and some of the people deported, while other
whole families were persecuted and massacred. Before and after
the year 1878, according to the administrative and territorial
division of the Ottoman empire. Presheve was kaza centre, also
comprising the Bujanovc territories.
-
- During
the Balkan wars (1912-1913) the Albanians of these
territories, like all the Albanians in Kosova, were submitted
to all-out Serbian terror and genocide. Consenquently, almost
the whole population of this region was forced to get down to
the South, to Shkup’s (Skoplje’s) plain and only after
several months returned to its own territories.
-
- After
the truncation of the Albanian territories in 1913 and after
World War I, Presheva was annexed to Serbia and became the
center of the Zhupa district of Shkup (Skoplje) including
Bujanovac and its surroundings. With Yugoslavia’s
administrative division in banovina (1929), Presheva and
Bujanovac were incorporated in Vardar’s banovin with Shkup
(Skoplje) as its centre.
-
- After
World War II, the Albanians of Presheva, Bujanovc and Medvegje
were again divided from the Albanians of Kosova and Macedonia.
-
- These
territories became district or commune centres in the framework of the Republic
of Serbia. Henceforth, in the hitherto states, the Albanians
of Presheva, Bujanovc and Medvegje had not had the possibility
to choose either the state or the federal unit in the
framework of which they would like to live.
-
- Since
the times of antiquity the region of Presheva, Bujanovc and
Medvegje has been inhabited by the Illyrians and has been part
of the Dardanian territory. Just like the early inhabitants of
Kosova and Western Macedonia, this population constitutes the
most ancient ethnos in these territories. It has undergone the
same ethnogenetic processes as the Albanians.
-
- Just
like in all the Albanian territories, Ottoman rule was
accompanied by the Islamisation of the Albanians of the
region. But dispite the religious tertaining of the
inhabitants, the administrative divisions imposed by different
occupiers, the inhabitants, the administrative divisions
imposed by different occupiers, the inhabitants of these
territories were and continue to be component part of the
Albanian ethnic entity. From the ethnographic viewpoint, they
constitute an entity with the Albanians of Kosova and Northern
Macedonia.
-
- They
use the same popular dialect and the same standard language.
In a closer region, they are an indivisible part of the
ethnographic, geographic and economic entity of the Karadak
zone, which extends into Kosova, Macedonia and Serbia, as well
as in the Gollak zone of Kosova. In the course of all the
historic periods the inhabitants of these areas have
maintained their living links with Podujeva, Gjilan, Kamenica,
Kaçanik, Shkup (Skoplje) and Kumanova.
-
- The
Presheva, Bujanovc and Medvegje region covers a territory of
1249 km2 and has a population of about 100 000
inhabitants. Albanians account of the absolute majority of the
population. Hence, in the Presheva commune the Albanians
constitute 95 % of the population, in Bujanovc about 65 % and
Medvegje over 35 % of the population, whereas the other part
of the population is composed of Serbs and Romanians.
-
- A
considerable part of the Serbian inhabitants of these communes
are colonists, established there after the violent deportation
en masse of the Albanians to Turkey (in 1912.1913, 1918-1941,
1953-1966) and during the colonizing agrarian reform
(1918-1941).
-
- The
Albanians of Presheva, Bujanovc and Medvegje have taken an
active part in all the cultural, social, economic, and
political processes, etc., of the Albanians as a whole. They
participated in the Albanian National Movement and
particularly in the Albanian League of Prizren, in the
anti-Ottoman uprising of the beginning of the 20th century,
which led to the Proclamation of Albania’s Independance, in
the struggle of the Albanians
of the truncated territories for liberation and national
unification during the years 1918-1941, as well
as against the reinvasion of these territories by
the Serbian, Macedonian and Bulgarian communist forces
at the end of World War II. Likewise, they have made an
important contribution to the development of the Albanian
national culture.
-
- The
territory of these communes is crossed by international
railways and highways linking Europe with Asia. Although these
communes have favourable natural and geographical conditions
due to continuous national oppression, many Albanians of these
areas have emigrated to Kosova and beyond it, to Turkey,
Western Europe, etc.
-
- During
World War II, aiming at narrowing the Albanian ethnic
territory and at assimilating the population, the Yugoslav
leadership separated the inhabitants of these areas from the
Albanians of Kosova and Macedonia. Since that time they were
incorporated in the Republic of Serbia, and in the district of
Vranja and Leskovc.
-
- The
Serbian communist totalitarian violence and chauvinistic
policy continued even in this period. The most concrete
manifestation of this policy was the violent expulsion of the
Albanian autochthonous inhabitants of these territories to
Turkey. Consequently, in that country there are as many
Albanians from these areas as there are here.
-
- Deportations
were not interrupted even after 1966, because there still
existed the factors that had originally brought them about and
instigated them. Later there followed the banning of cultural
and political activities. These ierritories were left in a
marked economic backwardness, while the prospect for the
development of the Albanian ethnic collectivity remained
closed.
-
- Economic
growth in the district of these communes are part of a display
of sensible disparity. Vranja, which is inhabited by Serbs has
reached another degree of development, and its industry works
with raw materials extracted from Presheva and Bujanovc, which
in the meantime remain the most backward from Presheva and
Bujanovc, which in the meantime remain the most backward and
poorest communes.
-
- Due
to the low-level economic growth, national incomes per capita
in Presheva are 5 times lower than the average in the Republic
of Serbia. Likewise, in 1988 the investment scale in Presheva
was only 6.2 % of the average in the Republic, and the index
of employed people was three times lower than in Serbia. In
the territory of this commune, all the Serbian inhabitants are
employed, whereas the few new jobs are reserved to the Serbs
coming from other communes.
-
- In Presheva, one out of 18
Albanian inhabitants is employed, in Bujanovc one out of 22,
whereas in Medvegje this ratio is a little more favourable.
Although in the Bujanovc commune the Albanians account for the
absolute majority of the population, they have only 30 % of
the delegats of the communal Assembly, constituting its
minotity.
-
- Injustices,
segregation and opression are particularly grave in the field
of education. In the territories of these communes, the
programs, texts and extension of the network of Albanian
education are determined by the responsible organs of the
Republic of Serbia. In the history of these areas the first
parallel of the secondary school in the Albanian language was
opened only in
1961, but recently after two decades of activity, the Albanian
secondary school, with about 700 pupils was closed in
Bujanovc.
-
- The
education of children in the Albanian language was banned in
the creshes and kindergartens of Bujanovc and Medvegje. All
materials of the Albanian national history have been removed
from the didactic programs of the Albanin schools of these
communes. After a barbarian undertaking over 2000 by the most
renowned Albanian authors, were removed from the libraries of
the school and the town. Over 100 Albanian teachers were
dismissed using violent measures and ideopolitical
differentiation from the Albanian school.
-
- The
Albanian cultural and informative activity in these communes
has become almost impossible. Meanwhile, by closing down the
mass media organs in the Albanian language in Kosova, these
areas have remained in thick darkness. Long ago it was not
allowed to issue any kind of newspaper in Albanian in these
Territories. The low level of economic growth, the low
standard of living, and shortages in health service have led
to a drastic spread of contagious diseas, while the infant
mortality rate is 80-100 per thousand; the highest in Europe.
-
- Like
elsewhere in Yugoslavia, every manifestation of the
Albanians’s free thinking has been severely punished,
followed imprisonment and police persecution and by the loss
of the right to schooling and employement. The albanians of
these communes have been deprived of the right to contact and
communication with the motherland, Albania.
-
- The exodus of the
Albanians, particulary of youngsters, has assumed new
proportions as an effect of the freshest developments
following Yugoslavia’s dissolution, the war in Slovenia,
Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, the ever greater
impoverishment, and the attempts to mobilize and send the
Albanians of these zones to various war fronts. The banning of
circulation in the former Republic of Macedonia had a negative
effect on the further deterioration of the Albanians’
situation in these communes.
-
- The
general situation in these communes has led to increased
dissatifation, the strengthening of the Albanians resistance
and organisation to face the repressive regime, segregation
and apartheid. Recently, two political parties pursuing
democratic programs have been created there.
-
- Their
programmes are an embodiment of the basic demands of the
Albanians in these areas, such as those of free economic
organisation, liberty of thinking and organization and in
general the known internationally recognized standards of
human rights. Apart from these values, these parties, charity
and intellectuall societies that have started operating in
these communes, have as their principal goal the political,
economic, cultural liberation, the doing away with
segregational relations, henceforth, the unobstructed
development of all the Albanian
national cultural values on a common ethnic basis.
-
- These
parties have underscored that in order to attain a relatively
satisfactory degree of development in these communes on a
social, economic and national plane, they must not be
separated from the Serbian state hegemony. Their division from
the natural geo-economic, national, communicative, ecological,
and urban, etc., spheres has been one of their main
hindrances. For this reason, since 1968, the public demand has
been raised in this region for its unification with Kosova,
the creation of an entity that would ensure optimal
possibilities for allround development and that would help to
extinguish the permanent sources of inter-ethnic conflicts in
these areas.
-
- At
the time of former Yugoslavia’s destruction, the Serbian
state power intensified their endeavours to implement the
Serbian allnational project through war, violence and ethnic
cleansing. Under these circumstances, facing the danger of
national assimilation and forcibly imposed realities, aware of
the major problems the European Union, CSCE and UNO are facing
to resolve the problems among the peoples in the territories
of former Yugoslavia, the Albanians of this region
participated en masse in the Referendum of March 1 & 2,
1992.
-
- They
declared that they are for political and territorial autonomy,
for enjoying the right to join Kosova. In the most democratic
form, in the documents of the Peace Conference of Hague and
Brussels, the Albanians of Presheva, Bujanovc and Medvegje
that it was the most suitable democratic situation that would
enable free economic and cultural circulation within their
ethnic entity in the framework of the state community that
they were actually in.
-
- As
proposed by the Hague document, through autonomy or special
status and under respective international control, the
Albanians hoped to realize the right of
using national symbols, the right of autonomy in
education, culture, economy, health, services, etc., the right
of having a lawmaking organ, administrative structure,
including regional police and courts, which would treat cases
that had to do with the territory. The composition of these
organs would reflect the composition of the population of the
territory.
-
- The
presentation of these demands was closely linked with the way
autonomy was realised in the framework of Serbian state power
and policy, which, as it is alredy seen, use force, violence
and terror as the main argument to solve problems.
-
- Knowing
the history of international relations in the Balkans,
particularly in centralized and non-democratic Serbia, it is
absurd to expect that the solution to the question of autonomy
of the Albanians of these zones can be realized by
changing the laws of the constitution through a regular
procedure.
-
- Likewise, the possibility that this solution be
attained through interstate bilateral cooperation is actually
excluded. Under these conditions, the only way to deal with
this question is by negotiations and agreements beteen the
Albanians representatives of Presheva, Bijanovc and Medvegje
and those of the Serbian state power, but with international
mediation.
-
- The
furure work of drafting the documents of autonomy will be of
great value, not only regarding the definition of the
physiognomy of this autonomy, but also regarding their
presentation and endeavours to arouse the awareness of
international institutions.
- Institut
of History – Prishtina
- Institut
of History – Tirana
-
- THE
KOSOVA ISSUE – A HISTORIC AND CURRENT PROBLEM
- (Symposium
held in Tirana on April 15 – 16 1993 ) - Pg.215-219
-
- Tirana
1996
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