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Prime Minister Albin Kurti marked the 23rd anniversary of the Rezalla massacre with homage to the memorial complex of the cemetery in this area, where he said that what happened there is clear evidence of the Serbian genocide in Kosovo.
“There is no doubt that this genocide is known worldwide today,” he said, “but local and international justice,” said Kurti, “must act more decisively in order to prosecute the perpetrators of these and those who gave the orders.”
“We placed fresh flowers here at the tombstone and cemetery of these martyrs of the nation, who were brutally shot just because they were Albanians and wanted to live free in their ancestral lands. 98 men and boys were rounded up and executed by Serbian forces and only 3 survived, this happened to you by chance. The goal was not to leave anyone alive, so this massacre is evidence of Serbia’s genocide in Kosovo. With cruel and barbaric execution they stole their lives and then stole their corpses. “There is no doubt that the genocide of Serbia is known worldwide, except by us Albanians who experienced it, therefore both local and international justice must act without delay and persistence so that those responsible and those who ordered it and the executors are tried and punished.”
On September 30 last year, the remains exhumed in Kizhevak, Serbia, were returned to Kosovo, which reportedly belonged to seven people identified by Rezalla, while the remains of the other two were exhumed years ago from the Raska mass grave. Kurti gave an interview to CNN last night where he underlined once again Kosovo’s desire to become part of NATO.
Kurti mentioned Serbia’s crimes against Albanians in Kosovo, then praised NATO’s decision to carry out bombings that stopped genocide, adding that Kosovo is also part of the alliance’s history, so the sooner we join, the more it will be fine, he said.
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