The Borneo Post

‘Kosovo’s Mandela’ Adem Demaci dies

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PRISTINA: Rights activist Adem Demaci who spent 28 years behind bars in Tito’s Yugoslavia for speaking out about discrimina­tion against ethnic Albanians – earning him the nickname Kosovo’s Mandela – has died at the age of 82.

Born in 1936, his long years in jail under the rule of communist leader Josip Broz Tito came to an end in 1990, the same year that Nelson Mandela was freed in South Africa.

An advocate of independen­ce for Kosovo, Demaci was awarded the European Parliament’s prestigiou­s Sakharov prize for human rights in 1991.

“Our teacher has died,” deputy speaker of the parliament Xhavit Haliti told MPs, announcing his death in parliament.

Lawmakers observed a minute’s silence in memory of Demaci whose “life and work will be remembered for as long as the Albanian nation and Albanians are alive,” Haliti said.

For the many who hailed him as the father of Kosovo, Europe’s newest nation, he was addressed as ‘Bac,’ a title reserved for the wisest and most influentia­l member in Kosovo families.

During his nearly three-decadeslon­g incarcerat­ion, Amnesty Internatio­nal recognised Demaci as a prisoner of conscience.

But the authoritie­s remained unmoved and he was not even allowed a temporary release to attend his mother’s funeral.

“I was in luck in that I was isolated (in a solitary confinemen­t) and no one could see me crying for days,” he later said.

After his release in 1990, Demaci took up the chair of a prominent Kosovo’s human rights watchdog.

By the mid-1990s, he was part of protests by ethnic Albanians against violence by the regime of the late Slobodan Milosevic. — AFP

 ??  ?? Adem Demaci
Adem Demaci

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