30 years of sleep: This was LDK in three decades, with sleeping pills and ghosts

The Democratic League of Kosovo today celebrates the 30th anniversary of its establishment, being the oldest parliamentary party in Kosovo. Thirty years of sleep or 30 years of napping is the dilemma. The LDK was founded on December 23rd 1989 by a group of prominent Kosovo intellectuals, including Ibrahim Rugova, Fehmi Aganin, Yusuf Bujovin, Xhemal [...]
The LDK was founded on December 23rd 1989 by a group of renowned Kosovo intellectuals, including Ibrahim Rugova, Fehmi Agani, Yusuf Bujovin, Xhemajl Mustafa, and many others.
This political party at that meal opposed Serbia's measures that had taken control of Kosovo by removing the autonomy gained in 1974. Because of nationalist and separatist ideology, it was immediately banned by Yugoslav authorities.
Fears With Sleep Medicines
But it had only strengthened this party. Chairman Rugova at the time had called for the boycott of the civilian census being conducted by Yugoslav institutions, and out of which came only 9 thousand and 91 Albanians in Kosovo. This had spread the LDK's extraordinary strength in that period, which was extended as a nationwide movement.
This gave way to the establishment of parallel institutions and the full boycott of institutional life organised by Belgrade.
A referendum on self-rule was held in 1992, in which 87 percent of Kosovo Albanians had voted for independence.
But the Kosovo issue was forgotten at the 1995 Dayton Conference, which was the strongest blow to the cause of Kosovo Albanians and the LDK. This had overshadowed this party in other political developments, in which the KLA was the one that took over in a form leading the country.
Initially, the LDK had denounced this military group as terrorism, but then Rugova had withdrawn his words and participated in the Ramboullet Conference, along with the KLA delegation.

It's not that Rugova loved the chair so much, the chair actually loved Rugova.
The role of the LDK during wartime was strongly denounced by Mr. Adam Demasch at that time, which had opened an office for him The NLA had Mr. Albin Kurti. Similarly, Rexhep Qosja had been a harsh critic of Mr. Rugova and his policy, as it continues to be after two decades.
Fearing the violence of the Serbian regime, Mr. LDK. Rugova had attacked him with an attack on insomnia by repeatedly holding Friday's conference, where there was a call for discretion.
After the War, however, The LDK came out first, constantly winning any election party until the end of 2007.
Ghost
But in January 2006, Mr. Rugova died and this party underwent a chaos that marred the previous structure, split the party in two, and lost over half the previous votes.
Since Mr. Rugova, officials of this party have repeatedly tried to win politically by restoring his personality to discussion, and even naming his policy “Rugovism” although, still, it is not known what such a quality implies.

Their obsession had even gone so far, that the chairman of a LDK branch in Pristina by the name of Borovci had confessed how he had spoken to the late Rugova at a party meeting. These comments were followed by a massive public laugh.
The seating site is known as the assembly where Mr. Chairman of the Party was elected. Fatmir Sejdiu, who would then become LDK chairman. At that assembly, several LDK members would face each other physically on very ugly scenes that were repeated even this year in several Kosovo towns while domestic elections were being held, confirmed as President Isa Mustafen.
Mayors
After Sejdiu, Mr. Sejdiu's party took over. Mustafa, who is not leaving the party leader for almost a decade now.
However, this political party also succeeded in producing rebellion within it, giving the idea that, however, there was a greater domestic democracy than other political parties. It was Vjosa Osmani, who opposed many of her party's decisions, and who was empowered as political figure with exactly the shocks she gave to the party elite. Mr. Speed Bulqi, who abandoned the LDK for Vetevendosje.

This political party has so far had only three heads, Mr. Ibrahim Rugova, Mr. Fatmir Sejdiu and Mr. Isa Mustafa.
The LDK in this election managed to win 28 deputies, while widely believed that without Vjosa Osmani as a candidate for prime minister, the party would be twice as weak.
Because of its mild stances under very difficult circumstances for the country, the LDK has often been called a passive party and has been compared to sleeping medicine.
Since its establishment, the LDK has adopted many pro-European policies, while being profiled as centre-right party. /Periscope












