This is the Pristina égangster Unickatil mentioned in the last song (Photo)

When his name was mentioned, there were others who trembled. Gani Krasniqi, who in Pristina and elsewhere in Kosovo is known as Gani Kolovic, has a famous career in the field of fair-style private wars, which was a breath of the 1970s. The fair war had no police or state but [...]
When his name was mentioned, there were others who trembled. Gani Krasniqi, who in Pristina and elsewhere in Kosovo is known as Gani Kolovic, has a famous career in the field of fair-style private wars, which was a breath of the 1970s. The fair war had no police or state behind it, but it followed the unwritten loyalty and rules that were strictly respected by actsmen who were being fought in the appointed place.
Ghani Kolovica, 30 years in battle, has never been a loser. His champion life has been filled with remarkable loyalty to man and to national and human cleanness, which is rarely encountered anywhere in the world. He loved power, but he did not serve evil. His career is a manly display in the service of defenseless people, in the service of the nation and in the defeat of evil. It was he who created order for the first time in Pristina's region, showing Serbian gangs the time zone in Pristina and creating the main square in the mall for Albanians. It was he who created new interethnic order in Pristina, where Serbs who inherited the state power of violence suffered “under his fists, to be released before the man named Gani Kolovica. The largest confirmation reached the eve of 1970, when in Pristina's “Tok bahce” park, he beat the Arfin, known as leader of Serbian gangs, who came to his uncles in Pristina. The blood of Arkan by Ghani's strong fists gave the latter the authority of the invincible. And, since then, with Serb gangs in Pristina, they were not the main words as they used to...
In 1989-90s Gani Kolovica, when he even changed much of the former image, was key to protecting the Albanian school in Pristina, cleaning schools from hooligans who obstructed the Albanian teaching process in Kosovo's parallel education. Once again, he was forced into the old trade - confronting the hooligans, whom they thought had already grown old. For many years Gani Kolovica was the protection of Albanian schools in Pristina, which few people knew. Even fewer people knew he was on the list of salaries of education workers, with wages equal to educators. After that he became a member of KLA, which was officially a military police officer.
Today Gani Kolovica is disabled by the KLA war and retires. He says he was happier when he participated in the KLA than he did today. Ghani Kolovica and the merits of education and much else have been written in various books.
“Kosovo” made a long conversation with former Pristina gangster Gani Kolovica: His life of fair warfare, which was a spirit of time and victory from those battles. His travels to face power with those who claimed they could beat the champion of Kosovo and beyond in the former Yugoslavia.
Ghani Kolovica is an incomplete chapter of a powerful intelligent world of knowledge. He was an excellent student at school, and he never caused incidents of his own own or other people's rage. He devoted his life to the good of his people.
Who, in fact, was Gani Kolovica?
Why do they know you more like Gani Kolovica?
It's my country, Old Kolovica, from where I was also called that and, in fact, they knew me more by this name than by my real name, Krasniqi. Kolovic is now part of Pristina. But I am a people known as Gani Kolovica.
You were once known as “Pristina gangster”. Why this expression?
It's been a breath of time to fight fair. It was fighting at certain locations where we measured our forces. All this happened in youth. The fighting site has been Pristina's “Tok gardenja”. I have also been beaten there by Zelko Ranzhnjtovic the Belgrade Criterion. He had his uncles in Pristina and often came from Belgrade to Pristina. He has remained very well in Pristina and knew Pristina well.
How did the fight with the Arkin take place?
Arkan heard of me being strong. He did not like it and wanted to preserve the champion power of the powerful every corner in Yugoslavia. It hindered my name and my development as strong, because that probably meant Pristina Serb subjection. If someone who took the mayor of the fittest in Pristina were to change things, just as it did in reality. He had not counted me as strong on his beating list and had sent a friend of mine to ask that we fight fair, and I accepted it. He had taken his friends, and I had my own group, which belonged mainly to my brothers and cousins, because I always calculated that they would never let me down at any difficult time. We've started our beating on “Tok bahce” and we've been beaten half an hour. I kicked him with my fists so I left him bloody. He was very strong. When I fell it, he struck the ground with his hand, and gave it up, and I didn't take any more; for he accepted defeat. After we've stood up, we've reached out to each other and it's all over.
Was it hard to fight Arkan?
Courage was the first element I've ever been in a fight against the Arkin. But it has also been the thirst for freedom of Albanians that has given me courage and courage to do everything for our freedom. Someone had to begin courage, and somewhere we had to start to express our power. There was no other way. We were so fucked up and we felt bad. I didn't like feeling humiliated in front of Serbs. This made me not afraid of Arkan or any other Serb in Pristina, because there were such capadeins, such as, by the way, Bane, who led Serbian gangs against Albanians.
Did victory over Arkan in Pristina change anything in direct relations?
The reality was yes. For the first time publicly it became clear that an Albanian beat up a strong Serb, known in Pristina as Pristina's capadaiu. Until that time, he did what he wanted and feared everyone. /Kosovo/













