Ukshin Hoti

Ukshin Hoti
Ku është Ukshin Hoti (Where is Ukshin Hoti). Graffiti in Prishtina.

Ukshin Hoti (1943-1999) was an Albanian philosopher and activist. Hoti was a professor of international law and later philosophy at the University of Pristina and founder of UNIKOMB, a political party of Kosovo. Since 1982 he had been arrested several times by Serb authorities. In 1994 he was convicted to five years in the Dubrava prison. In May 1999, when his sentence ended and he was to be released, guards of the prison relocated him.[1] His whereabouts are unknown and many human rights activists consider him dead.

Life

Ukshin Hoti (Serbo-Croat: Укшин Хоти, Ukšin Hoti) was born in the village of Krusha e Madhe, municipality Orahovac/Rahovec (depending on language) in Republic of Kosovo. He studied political science at the University of Zagreb and the University of Belgrade and did postgraduate research at the University of Chicago, Harvard University, and the University of Washington in international relations and political science.[2] From 1975, Hoti taught international law at the University of Pristina and held an administrative position at the parliament of Kosovo.

In 1982 he was sentenced by a Yugoslav court and spent three and a half years in prison for his support to the students' uprising of 1981, although he was not charged with the use or advocacy of violence.[2][3] In 1983 Amnesty International declared him a prisoner of conscience.[3] On 28 September 1994, he was sentenced to five years in the Dubrava penitentiary for "endangering the constitutional order of Serbia".[2] On May 16, 1999 the day he was to be released, he was last seen alive by three inmates.[4] Rather than be released, he was transferred to the prison of Niš, and from then, he went missing.[2]

Books from Ukshin Hoti:

His works include the treatise, the Philosophical Politics of the Albanian Cause (Albanian: Filozofia politike e ceshtjes shqiptare), published in English in 1998.[2] He was also nominated for the Sakharov Prize in 1998.[5] His brother Afrim, a member of Vetëvendosje was elected a deputy of Kosovo in the Kosovan parliamentary election, 2010.

See also

Sources

  1. "Pan-Albanianism: How Big a Threat to Balkan Stability?" (PDF). International Crisis Group. February 25, 2004. Retrieved 20 August 2010.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Elsie, Robert (2004). Historical dictionary of Kosova. Scarecrow Press. p. 78. ISBN 0-8108-5309-4.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Amnesty International report. Amnesty International Publications. 1983.
  4. Human Rights Watch (November 2001). Under orders: war crimes in Kosovo. Human Rights Watch. p. 245. ISBN 1-56432-264-5.
  5. "Official Journal of the European Communities". Europa. Retrieved 10 January 2012.