Adem Demachi- 28 years of freedom after 28 years of prison

Today, it is 28 years since the release of Adem Demach activity. At that time, he has been wonderfully received by thousands of citizens. He was arrested and sentenced three times, thus suffering 28 years in Yugoslavia's prisons. On April 21, 1990, Adem Demach and many friends from prisons [...]
At that time, he has been wonderfully received by thousands of citizens.
He was arrested and sentenced three times, thus suffering 28 years in Yugoslavia's prisons.
On April 21, 1990, Adem Demach and many friends from Croatia's prisons were released.
In the first interview a day or two after his release from prison, which he gave to Slovenian television, without expressing any hatred or revenge anger, Demach tried to pave the way and paths for finding acceptable and favourable solutions for all who not only in words but also in deeds were for freedom and equality in Balkan spaces.
To all the journalists with whom he had the chance to meet, Adem Demach told them that Mr. Milosevic, with his policy, works for the defeat of Yugoslavia. Yugoslavia had already been involved in decomposing fever.
Demach tried to cause such decomposition to develop gradually, peacefully and without bloodshed. This seemed possible from the perspective and circumstances of the day.
At a meeting in Ljubljana, ahead of a large audience, Demac, he did not hesitate to express himself against the wartime variant for resolving non-compliance with Serbia.
During 1975, when Demaci was imprisoned, in Kosovo, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Vojvodina, among the Albanians of Macedonia and Montenegro, many arbitrary detentions were established and many court processes were set up against people whom Serbian secret police considered dangerous and carriers of Yugoslavia's disinformative forces.
To that end, on October 6, 1975, Adem Demaci was imprisoned in Pristina for the third time.
In the devised process, following cruel investigations, they were sentenced, to false witnesses and ruthlessly, Adem Demaci, Rexhep Mala (the deceased), Skender Kastrati, and 16 others. The sentences were cut by 15 to 5 years.
Ademi Demac did not give up on the idea that Albanians have the right to be free and equal with all other Balkan peoples and to pronounce his sentence on him for 15 years he received with smiles.
Now he was quite clear that Yugoslavia had entered the path of its safe defeat.
In March 1990, in the infamous cabin of Stara Gradiska, where Adam Demach and thirty other Albanians remained, police authorities for the first time allowed International Red Cross officials to enter.
Otherwise, Adem Demaci suffered 28 years in Yugoslavia's prisons, also called Europe's Nelson Mandela.
Adem Demaci led the Council for Human Rights and Freedoms (KMDLNJ) from 1990 to 1995. In 1991 it was honoured by the European Parliament at the Sakharov Award.
During the 1998/1999 period, when meetings were held in Ramboullet for Kosovo's future, he was the KLA's political spokesman.
He was chairman of the Kosovo Writers' League (2005-2007).












