Today marks the 27th anniversary of the massacre in Meja, Gjakovë, where 376 people were killed on April 27, 1999.
Twenty-seven years ago, Serbian forces surrounded the Rekë e Keqe area and the Lug of Carragojë in the municipality of Gjakova.
In a planned operation, all roads were blocked, leaving open only two routes leading toward Meja.
The gathering of boys and men aged between 15 and 60 began in the early morning hours.Units of the Serbian army, police, Red Berets, paramilitaries, and masked neighbors formed a cordon reminiscent of the images of Srebrenica massacre, executing 376 Albanian men on what was known as the holiday marking the last Yugoslavia, created amid bloodshed through the political maneuvers of Slobodan Milošević on April 27, 1992.
That day, none of those detained managed to leave Meja alive. After the war, some of their mutilated bodies were found in mass graves across Kosovo, while there is information suggesting that others are still somewhere in Serbia.