- League of Communists of Kosovo
-
League of Communists of Kosovo
Lidhjes Komuniste të KosovësLeader see full list below Founded 1944 Dissolved 1990 Headquarters Pristina, SAP Kosovo, SFR Yugoslavia Ideology Market socialism, Titoism, Communism, Marxism-Leninism Political position Left wing Official colours - Red Politics of Kosovo
Political parties
Elections
Kosovo branch of the League of Communists of YugoslaviaThe League of Communists of Kosovo was the Kosovo branch of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, the sole legal party of Yugoslavia from 1945 to 1990.
Contents
History and background
Unlike the various factions throughout Yugoslavia which composed the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, the Communist Party of Kosovo was founded in 1944 after the new country was formed. The status of an honorary autonomous province was presented to ethnic Albanian communists who helped the Yugoslav partizans in their struggles during World War II, carved out from the section of the former Ottoman province within the Socialist Republic of Serbia (i.e. whilst one chunk of the former province was given to Albania in 1912, the other sections of it were awarded to Yugoslavia's newly created republics: Montenegro and Macedonia). The new party was given the task of running certain local affairs. In 1952, the party was renamed the League of Communists of Kosovo.
From its creation, Kosovo's administration lacked real power. With various revisions of the constitution, the LCK was granted more and more power until when the new constitution was ratified in 1974, greater power was devolved to all branches.
During the early 1990s, growing ethnic tensions between the republics of Yugoslavia led to the breakup of the federal party — the Kosovo Communists wanted to upgrade Kosovo from an autonomous republic within Serbia to the 7th socialist republic of Yugoslavia, with the same status of Croatia, Montenegro, Bosnia, Macedonia, Slovenia and Serbia proper.
On October 12, 1990, it ceased to exist due to amendments to the constitution reverting Kosovo to its pre-1974 status by Slobodan Milosević.[1]
Leaders
President of the Provincial Committee of the League of Communists (Secretary before 1966)
- Miladin Popović (September 1944 - March 1945) (b.1910 - d.1945)
- Đorđije Pajković (March 1945 - February 1956) (b.1917 - d.1980)
- Dušan Mugoša (February 1956 - 1965) (b.1914 - d.1973)
- Velli Deva (1965 - 28 June 1971; 6 May 1981 - June 1982) (b.1923)
- Mahmut Bakalli (28 June 1971 - 6 May 1981) (b.1936 - d.2006)
- Velli Deva (6 May 1981 - June 1982) (b.1923)
- Sinan Hasani (June 1982 - May 1983) (b.1922 - d.2010)
- Ilaz Kurteshi (May 1983 - March 1984) (b.1927)
- Svetislav Dolašević (March 1984 - May 1985)
- Kolë Shiroka (May 1985 - May 1986)
- Azem Vllasi (May 1986 - May 1988) (b.1948)
- Kaqusha Jashari (May 1988 - 17 November 1988) (b.1948)
- Remzi Kolgeci (acting; 17 November 1988 - 27 January 1989)
- Rahman Morina (27 January 1989 - 12 October 1990) (b.1943 - d.1990)
References
- ^ Yugoslavia The Old Demons Arise, TIME Magazine, August 06, 1990
See also
- History of Kosovo
- League of Communists of Yugoslavia
- List of leaders of communist Yugoslavia
- Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Categories:- Communism in Kosovo
- Political parties established in 1944
- Political parties in Kosovo
- Political parties disestablished in 1990
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.