Kosovo Polje

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Fushë Kosova / Fushë Kosovë
Косово Поље / Kosovo Polje
Location of Fushë Kosova / Fushë KosovëКосово Поље / Kosovo Polje
District District of Priština
Villages 18
Population (2002)[1]
 - Total 40,000
Area code(s) +381 38

Kosovo Polje ( Albanian Fushë Kosovë or Fushë Kosova; Serbian Косово Поље or Kosovo Polje, literally "Kosovo Field" or "blackbird field"; sometimes German: Amselfeld) is a town and municipality in the Pristina district of central Kosovo, at 42.63° North, 21.12° East, or approximately 8 kilometres south-west of the capital Priština. In 2003 the city had a total population of 28,600.[citation needed]

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[edit] History

Kosovo Polje is the nearest town to the site of the Battle of Kosovo of 1389, although it is of little historic interest itself. In April 1987 it became the scene of a famous incident when Slobodan Milošević – at the time chairman of the League of Communists of Serbia – was sent to Kosovo Polje's Hall of Culture (town hall) to calm a crowd of angry Serbs protesting at what they saw as anti-Serb discrimination by the Albanian-dominated Kosovo administration. When Serb citizens complained they had been beaten by Albanian police, he told them that "No one has the right to beat you ... No one will beat you ever." The incident earned Milošević the support of Serbian people, propelling him to the presidency of Serbia two years later.

Prior to the 1999 Kosovo War, Kosovo Polje was the town in Kosovo in which the Serb population formed its largest percentage at 24%. The United Nations High Commission for Refugees estimated in March 1998 that its population (estimated at 40,000) was around 24% Serb, 59% Albanian and 17% from other national communities.

Kosovo Polje saw considerable violence before, during and after the war. In December 1998, the Serb deputy mayor of Kosovo Polje was killed by Kosovo Liberation Army fighters despite reportedly taking a moderate line on Serb-Albanian relations. Kidnaps and assassinations of Serbs and Albanians continued until the war began. The town's Albanian population was forcibly expelled, reportedly by local Serbs and paramilitaries, and many local Albanians were killed.

At the war's end in June 1999, most of the Albanian population returned while many of the town's Serbs were expelled. The remaining Serb population found themselves in an enclave in an Albanian-dominated region. Thousands of Serbs and Roma from other parts of Kosovo, who had fled their homes, took refuge in Kosovo Polje, where a large refugee camp was established.

Ethnic tension flared repeatedly in the years after the war and a number of Serbs were killed by Albanian extremists.[citation needed] Under this continuing pressure, the Serb population of Kosovo Polje shrank steadily until, by July 2002, the newspaper Blic was reporting that only 550 Serbs remained in Kosovo Polje. The town was seriously affected by the March 2004 unrest in Kosovo, which saw a number of Serb houses burned and more Serbs forced to flee (the Serbian government claimed that 2,000 people had been expelled, though this is inconsistent with the earlier reports of the number of Serbs in the town). A number are reported to have returned since then and at least some of the destroyed properties have been rebuilt by the UNMIK.

[edit] Demographics

Ethnic Composition, Including IDPs
Year Albanians  % Serbs  % Ashkali  % Roma  % Other  % Total
1991 17,374 53.4 8,346 25.7 32,500
1998 23,600 59 9,600 24 40,000
June 2000 34,000 84 4,000 10 2,600 6.4 300 0.7 60 0.14 40,500
April 2002 34,000 85 3,239 8 2,259 5.6 388 1 21 0.05 40,000

Source: UN Municipal Community Office. Accurate figures for the April 2002, but previous year’s statistics are estimate only, due to lack of insufficient data. It is noted that the 1991 census was highly politicised and is thus unreliable. Ref: OSCE[1]

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