73th anniversary of Kosovo annexation by Serbia

Following Kosovo's restoration and annexation in 1945 and after the construction of the most divided wall between Albania and Albanians in Kosovo, the Kosovo issue and the other three remaining under the former Yugoslavia would remain unresolved further. In the Prizren Assembly, held on July 8th-10th 1945, Kosovo will also officially [...]
In the Prizren Assembly, held on July 8th-10th 1945, Kosovo would be formally annexed by Serbia. With the approval of the Resolution from the Federation Assembly on July 23rd 1945, and the Serbian one September 1945, the Kosovo issue would be considered a closed issue.
Although many decisions had been made during LANC and many agreements for self - determination had been made according to the will of the people, they not only disobeyed but in the worst manner were violated, and were called hostile decisions, while people who compiled them were called enemies of the people who, as such, were persecuted and liquidated.
At the Prizren Assembly Resolution (second edition of the National Liberation Council of Kosovo, Prizren, July 1945), it was declared that Kosovo “its population's willing joining federal Serbia under Yugoslav Federation”.
Such a resolution of the Kosovo population's own “issue against the logic of the objective character of the national structure of Kosovo and the vast space and, with the continuation of the ethnic Albanian majority in the Balkans, not only did it not historically shut down the Kosovo and Albanian problem, but it did reopen this situation virtually in the new historical context, to geopolitical mass in the Balkans.
All of this influenced nationalist forces in Kosovo to react sharply to the decisions the assembly brought arbitraryly.











