More than two and a half decades after the war, the testimonies of survivors and family members of the victims of the massacre in the Bosniak neighborhood in North Mitrovica continue to bear witness to the crimes committed against Albanian civilians.
Through painful memories, Bujar Sahiti describes to KosovaPress the moment when they were forcibly taken out of their homes, when men were separated from their families, and many of them were killed or went missing, while demands for justice and institutional handling of these crimes remain unresolved.
He said that the family had planned to leave for Albania, but they were stopped by armed masked individuals.
“We were supposed to go to Albania. At 09:30 AM we were supposed to leave by bus, but Serbs with masks came in, we didn’t know who they were. They entered our yard and took our money and gold. They only separated the men: ‘you, you, come here’. They threw us out, and as soon as we came out a bit further up, they shot with automatic weapons. We thought they had killed us immediately, but they didn’t let us return. Later, along the road, there was Serbian police who told us: ‘go, go, head to Albania, we’ve stopped you enough’, joking around,” Sahiti recounts.“When that meeting was held, everyone spoke before me. I was a representative of the Lumbardh and Bosniak neighborhoods. I took the floor and addressed Mayor Bajram Rexhepi: ‘Mayor, the house of Mustafë Sahiti has been put up for sale. I haven’t spoken with the owner, but the whole neighborhood is talking that it is for sale. I have a request: this house must not be sold for any price. In this house people were killed, massacred, looted, and expelled by Serbian Chetnik gangs. This house should be declared a site of Serbian genocide.’ His response was not very advanced for me and the neighborhood. He said: ‘property is sacred, whoever wants to sell it sells it, whoever doesn’t want to doesn’t’,” he said.
He says that according to testimonies, evidence was found at the scene proving executions.