On the 27th anniversary of Bahri Fazliu’s death, family members, comrades, and state leaders paid tribute at his grave, honoring him as a significant figure in the liberation of the country, KosovaPress reports.
The acting Prime Minister of Kosovo, Albin Kurti, laid wreaths at Bahri Fazliu’s grave, describing him as a model of a liberation fighter even before the armed conflict.
Leader of the Alliance for the Future of Kosovo, Ramush Haradinaj, also paid tribute, saying the Fazliu family is a core of Kosovo’s freedom.
"A core of our freedom, of national liberation, stems from the Fazliu family — not only from Fahri and Bahri whom we remember today, but also from their broader connections to freedom with other families and the Zhitia family, and all other movements of that time. Bahri’s act of falling for freedom at the border triangle, which unjustly divides us, is the strongest message of liberty conveyed by this family," he said."Today marks 27 years since the heroic fall of my uncle. It is a more painful day for us and the family because my father, who is currently unjustly in The Hague, is absent after 27 years of being present at every anniversary. We remember Bahri only through his poetry, which he left behind: ‘Even death I will kiss, when the war calls; from the grave I will rise, and I will never stop fighting,’" he said.
Bahri Fazliu was also honored today by his comrades and fellow fighters.
The leader of the Movement for Unification, Valon Murati, stated that Bahri Fazliu was a central figure in the Albanian people’s struggle for freedom.
Bahri Fazliu heroically fell on May 7, 1998, in a place called Bogiqe in Montenegro.
He was a member of the National Movement for the Liberation of Kosovo (LKÇK) and a member of the Kosovo Liberation Army (UÇK). For several years, he lived in secrecy and served as the editor-in-chief of the magazine Çlirimi, published by the LKÇK. Bahri was the brother of hero Fahri Fazliu, who, along with Afrim Zhitia, died heroically on November 2, 1989, during a battle with Serbian police in the Bregu i Diellit (Sunny Hill) neighborhood in Pristina.