Republic of Kosova | ||||||||||
Republika e Kosovës | ||||||||||
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Anthem Himni i Flamurit Hymn to the Flag |
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Location of the Republic of Kosova within the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1999)
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Capital | Pristina | |||||||||
Languages | Albanian (official) | |||||||||
Government | Republic | |||||||||
President | Ibrahim Rugova | |||||||||
Prime Minister | ||||||||||
• | 1992–1999 | Bujar Bukoshi | ||||||||
Historical era | Yugoslav Wars | |||||||||
• | Established | September 22, 1992 | ||||||||
• | Disestablished | February 1, 1999 | ||||||||
Population | ||||||||||
• | est. | 2,000,000 | ||||||||
Currency |
Yugoslav dinar Albanian lek Deutsche Mark |
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Today part of | Kosovo |
The Republic of Kosova (Albanian: Republika e Kosovës) was a self-declared proto-state in 1992. During its peak, it tried to establish its own parallel political institutions in opposition to the institutions of the Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija held by the Republic of Serbia.
Late in June 1990 , Albanian members of the provincial assembly proposed a vote on whether to form an independent republic; the ethnic Serb president of the assembly immediately shut it down and promised to reopen the assembly on 2 July, which was later postponed.
On 2 July, the vast majority of Albanian members of the Provincial Assembly returned to the Assembly, but it had been locked; so in the street outside they voted to declare Kosovo a Republic within the Yugoslav Federation. The Serbian government responded by dissolving the Assembly and the government of Kosovo, removing any remaining autonomy. The Serb government then passed another law on "labour relations" which fired another 80,000 Albanian workers.
Ethnic Albanian members of the now officially dissolved Kosovo Assembly met in secret in Kačanik on 7 September and declared the "Republic of Kosova" in which laws from Yugoslavia would only be valid if compatible with the Republic's constitution. The assembly went on to declare the "Republic of Kosova" an independent state on 22 September 1992. This declaration was endorsed by an unofficial referendum held a few days later. Yugoslav authorities took this very seriously, and attempted to capture and prosecute those who had voted.
The Republic of Kosova received diplomatic recognition from Albania.
Kosovo Albanians organized a separatist movement, creating a number of parallel structures in education, medical care, and taxation.
From 1995 onwards, tensions in the region escalated leading to the Kosovo War which began in 1998, fought between the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the rebel Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA). The KLA-led campaign continued into January 1999 and was brought to the attention of the world media by the Račak massacre, mass killings of Albanians by Serb security forces. An international conference was held in Rambouillet, France later that spring and resulted in a proposed peace agreement (the Rambouillet Agreement) which was accepted by the ethnic Albanian side but rejected by the Yugoslav Government.