Timeline of the Kosovo War
Appearance
Timeline of the Kosovo War. Abbreviations:
- Combatants
- KLA—Kosovo Liberation Army
- FARK—Armed Forces of the Republic of Kosovo
- VJ—Yugoslav Army
- NATO—North Atlantic Treaty Organization
- Peace-keeping forces
- KFOR—Kosovo Force (NATO)
- Organizations
- ICTY—International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (UN)
- IICK—Independent International Commission on Kosovo
- KDOM—Kosovo Diplomatic Observer Mission
Background
1981
Date | Event |
---|---|
11 March | 1981 protests in Kosovo: Student protest starts at the University of Pristina |
1 April | Between 5,000 and 25,000 demonstrators of Albanian nationality call for SAP Kosovo to become a constituent republic inside Yugoslavia, as opposed to an autonomous province of Serbia. |
2 April | Presidency sends special forces to stop the demonstrations and declares a state of emergency in regards to Kosovo. State of emergency lasts 7 days.[1] |
3 April | End of demonstrations during which 9 people are killed and more than 250 injured.[2] |
1996
Date | Event |
---|---|
21 April | Kosovo Albanian student Armend Daci was shot by a Serb civilian sniper in Sunny Hill, Prishtina. |
25 April | Three KLA members shoot in Restaurant Çakor in Deçan and kill three people. |
1998
- 28 February: Firefight in Likošane. 4 policemen killed by KLA.
- 28 February: Serbian police killed 14 Albanians of the Ahmeti family.
- 5 March: KLA attacks police station.
- 5–7 March: Attack on Prekaz. Yugoslav victory. 28 militants and 30 civilians killed by VJ.
- 23 April: Albanian–Yugoslav border clashes. Yugoslav victory. 18 militants killed by VJ.
- 25 May and 1 April: Ljubenić massacres.
- 22 June–1 July: Battle of Belaćevac Mine. Yugoslav victory.
- 18 July: Albanian–Yugoslav border clashes. Yugoslav victory.
- 25–26 July: KLA abandonment of the Lapušnik prison camp. 23 of 35 inmates killed by KLA.
- 6 July–17 August: Battle of Lođa. Yugoslav victory.
- 17–20 July Battle of Orahovac. Yugoslav victory.
- 28 July–17 August: Battle of Junik. Yugoslav victory.
- 11–12 August: Battle of Glodjane. Yugoslav victory.
- 9 September: Lake Radonjić massacre.
- 26 and 29 September: Gornje Obrinje massacre.
- 3 December: Albanian–Yugoslav border clash. Yugoslav victory.
- 14 December: Albanian–Yugoslav border clashes. Yugoslav victory.
- 14 December: Panda Bar massacre.
- 23–27 December: Battle of Podujevo. Yugoslav victory.
1999
- Račak massacre.
- NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, Operation Allied Force.
- F-117A shoot-down.
- Bombing of Novi Sad.
- Bela Crkva massacre.
- Velika Kruša massacre.
- Suva Reka massacre.
- Izbica massacre.
- Drenica massacres.
- 13 April: Albania–Yugoslav border incident. Status quo ante bellum.
- Vučitrn massacre.
- Battle of Košare. Both KLA and Yugoslav sides claim victory.
- Grdelica train bombing.
- NATO bombing of Albanian refugees near Gjakova.
- NATO bombing of the Radio Television of Serbia headquarters.
- NATO bombing of Belgrade streets.
- Lužane bus bombing.
- Cluster bombing of Niš.
- United States bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade.
- Koriša bombing.
- Ćuška massacre.
- Battle of Pashtrik. Yugoslav victory.
References
- ^ "KOSOVO: ONE YEAR AFTER THE RIOTS". Archived from the original on 2011-07-28.
- ^ Reuters (30 July 1981). "6 More Yugoslavs Sentenced For Ethnic Rioting in Kosovo" – via NYTimes.com.
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Further reading
- Tim Judah (2002). Kosovo: War and Revenge. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-09725-2.