Marked by pain, low attendance, and many unanswered questions, the 27th anniversary of the Kovaçëve Massacre in Mitrovica was commemorated today. On April 14, 1999, Serbian forces killed 31 Albanian civilians after forcibly removing them from their homes and executing them.
Shahdie Pllana-Hoti, who lost two brothers and her husband, says the memories of that day remain vivid and painful, describing the moments of separation and execution as unforgettable.
She expressed dissatisfaction with the institutional and social treatment of this event, emphasizing that the victims of this massacre are not treated the same as others and that commemorations are marked by low participation.
According to Halit Barani from the Council for the Protection of Human Rights and Freedoms, the victims were forcibly taken from their homes by a Serbian paramilitary group and executed near the “Meto Bajraktari” school.
“Here, 27 years ago, on April 14, 1999, in the afternoon hours, a group called the ‘Frangjësit’ from Belgrade—Serb Chetnik criminals led by the chief criminal Oliver Ivanovic, together with Igor Simic and others—took 31 Albanians, mostly young men, out of their apartments and homes, lined them up in front of the ‘Meto Bajraktari’ school and executed them one by one. Some were taken into the yard of the Kurshumliu house, Haki Kurshumliu, and four of those who were waiting in line to be executed were released by Oliver Ivanovic. For this reason, they are not here today; I don’t know why, but they should have been present and given statements to the media. The 31 bodies were then taken, removed from here, and buried in a sloped field between the villages of Suhodoll and Vidimriq in an attempt to make them disappear. Later, on September 25, 26, and 27, 1999, their exhumation took place—26 were identified, while five remain unidentified and are still in the Rahovec morgue, along with many other missing persons,” Barani said.