Post by account_disabled on Mar 2, 2024 3:50:59 GMT
When I first heard Albin Kurti's interview from a Serbian prison, I was surprised by the questions, but I was more speechless by the answers. The entire interview was spectacular, unique and unparalleled in the history of journalism. A young man, a former student of the University of Pristina, a political prisoner in Serbia, openly challenges the butcher of the Balkans, President Slobodan Milosevic. According to the press of the time, Albin Kurti was arrested on April 27, 1999 in Pristina. Until May 2, 1999, he was held in Pristina prison. From May 2 to June 10 in Lipjan prison. From June 10 to December 13, 1999 in Pozharevci prison and from December 13 to March 13, 2000, in Nis prison.
This period coincides with Cambodia WhatsApp Number Data the height of the Kosovo War, with the NATO bombing campaign, but also with the Serbian massacres - the deportation of 800,000 Albanians, the macabre murders, rapes, and disappearances of the corpses of Kosovar youth. At the same time that Albin Kurti was being interviewed by a bunch of journalists, a few hundred kilometers away, bulldozers were opening mass graves for the corpses looted in Kosovo by Serbian vampires. Later, while reworking that interview, I have tried to decipher what does not stand out in the first impression.
The event itself is unusual, especially considering the time of the interview, the smell of blood and the ruins of that cannibalistic war. Ukshin Hoti - one of the thinkers of the Albanian issue had disappeared somewhere in the catacombs of Serbia, Fehmi Agani and Bajram Kelmendi had been mercilessly killed by the Serbian regime, while Ibrahim Rugova had been a hostage of Milosevic for a while. Guess what - from that earthly hell, Albin Kurti shone with a spectacular interview from Pezhoravc prison, exposing Slobodan Milosevic himself.
This period coincides with Cambodia WhatsApp Number Data the height of the Kosovo War, with the NATO bombing campaign, but also with the Serbian massacres - the deportation of 800,000 Albanians, the macabre murders, rapes, and disappearances of the corpses of Kosovar youth. At the same time that Albin Kurti was being interviewed by a bunch of journalists, a few hundred kilometers away, bulldozers were opening mass graves for the corpses looted in Kosovo by Serbian vampires. Later, while reworking that interview, I have tried to decipher what does not stand out in the first impression.
The event itself is unusual, especially considering the time of the interview, the smell of blood and the ruins of that cannibalistic war. Ukshin Hoti - one of the thinkers of the Albanian issue had disappeared somewhere in the catacombs of Serbia, Fehmi Agani and Bajram Kelmendi had been mercilessly killed by the Serbian regime, while Ibrahim Rugova had been a hostage of Milosevic for a while. Guess what - from that earthly hell, Albin Kurti shone with a spectacular interview from Pezhoravc prison, exposing Slobodan Milosevic himself.