The Bujan Conference began on December 31, 1943 and ended on January 2, 1944. A resolution was signed there, recognizing Kosovo's right to self-determination until secession and the realization of the desire of the Kosovo Albanian people to unite with Albania.
The Bujan Conference was held as a reconfirmation of the new circumstances created after the Mukje Meeting, as well as the result of the non-inclusion of Kosovo and other Albanian areas under the rule of the former Kingdom SKS, (Bujan Conference), which was held precisely to challenged the decisions of the II Meeting of the AVNOJ in Jajce (29-30 November 1943) and the non-inclusion of Kosovo as an independent entity that until then had been represented through Montenegro in the KACKJ.
Bujan as a place of reception for representatives of two nationalities (Albanians and Serbs) who were looking for an agreement to prevent further inter-ethnic conflicts. The meeting of the Conference was held in the tower of Sali Mani, the Bajraktar of Krasniqe, which was located near the base of the Main Headquarters of the UNC of Kosovo and of the Provincial Committee for Kosovo and the Dukagjini Plain, where 49 delegates representing all districts and strata participated. social of Kosovo. Among the participants were communists, nationalists and other democratic patriots, representatives of the Armed Forces, youth and anti-fascist women, etc.
49 delegates representing the people of Kosovo and the political forces aligned with the Anti-Fascist National-Liberation Front of Kosovo participated in this conference. The conference has examined the problems arising from the war against the invader for three consecutive days. It has elected the leadership of 9 people: Mehmet Hoxha (chairman) former prefect of Elbasan, Rifat Berisha (vice-chairman), Pavle Jovicevic (vice-chairman), Xheladin Hana (member), Fadil Hoxha (member), Hajdar Dushi (member), Zekeria Rexha (member), Milan Zeçarin (member) and Ali Shukri (member).
The Bujan conference came out with a final document, with a resolution approved at the conference, where it was said: Kosovo and the Dukagjin Plain is the province inhabited by the majority of the Albanian people, who, as always, and today, want to join Albania. The formulation of such a position, as Hajdar Dushi said, was based on the declarations of the PKJ and the KANC of Yugoslavia, in which the principle of self-determination of peoples until secession was recognized, this basic principle of the Atlantic Charter, solemnly announced by the allies of the anti-fascist coalition.
Below in the resolution, it is emphasized that the joint struggle with the other peoples of Yugoslavia against the Nazi occupier and his mercenaries is the only way to gain freedom, in which all peoples, including the Albanian people, will have the opportunity to self-determination over their own destiny, with the right to self-determination up to secession. The guarantor for this is the UNÇ of Yugoslavia and the UNÇSH of Albania, with which it is closely connected. In addition to these, our great allies, the Soviet Union, England and America (the Atlantic Charter, the Moscow and Tehran Conferences) guarantee this. Kosovo and the Dukagjini Plain is one side, which is populated for the most part by the Albanian population, which, as always, wants to join Albania today. Therefore, we feel obliged to point out the true path in which the Albanian people must walk to realize their aspirations. The only way to unite with Albania, for the Albanians of Kosovo and the Dukagjini Plain, is the common war with the other peoples of Yugoslavia.
In 1946, Tito declared for the American Associated Press agency that Kosovo and other Albanian territories will be returned to Albania. The leader of the former Yugoslavia, Josip Broz Tito, promised Enver Hoxha, in 1946, that he would return Kosovo and other Albanian territories that were in the Yugoslav union. The Serbian newspaper Pravda wrote that in 1946, Tito almost "gave" Hoxha Kosovo and Metohija, but also other Albanian territories. It is little known to the world, where the former Yugoslav leader had openly said that: Kosovo and other territories with an Albanian majority will be returned to Albania, Shekulli reports the article of the Serbian newspaper.
"If the communists come to power in Albania, it (Kosovo) can be under the jurisdiction of Tirana", the Yugoslav leader told the Associated Press. "The head of the Albanian state, Enver Hoxha, has always said that Tito promised him at the end of June 1946 that Kosovo and other territories with an Albanian majority would be part of Albania. However, these statements have not been given importance as the relations between Tirana and Belgrade have always been tense", the Serbian newspaper wrote further.
Tito's right-hand man, Edward Kardel, according to some conspiracy theories, on the occasion of his visit to Moscow had told Stalin that Kosovo would be given to Albania, with their fight against the occupier and his servants.