Country Kosovo Car plates 06 Elevation 499 m District District of Gjilan Postal code 61000 | Time zone CET (UTC+1) Website Municipality of Vitina Area 270 km² Population 47,434 (2014) Area code(s) +381 280 | |
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Weather 13°C, Wind S at 10 km/h, 58% Humidity |
Vitina (Serbian, Витина) or Vitia (Albanian, Vitisë) is a town and municipality in the District of Gjilan of south-eastern Kosovo.
Contents
- Map of Viti
- Kosovo vitina vandals destroy memorial to fallen wwii resistance fighters
- Ottoman period
- Kosovo War and aftermath
- Contemporary
- References
Map of Viti
Kosovo vitina vandals destroy memorial to fallen wwii resistance fighters
Ottoman period
The municipality has several settlements historically inhabited by the Laramans, crypto-Catholics.
Kosovo War and aftermath
Following the 1999 Kosovo War, it was the home of A Company, 2/505 Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, the first KFOR troops to begin stabilization efforts in the municipality. After the initial unit left, Vitina was the site of a subsequent international scandal when a Staff Sgt. Frank J. Ronghi, from A company, 3/504 Parachute Infantry Regiment raped and killed a local girl. The subsequent investigation uncovered serious training and leadership deficiencies in the 3/504 Parachute Infantry Regiment, and catalysed a tremendous change in the training of units deploying for peacekeeping operations.
During the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, the Orthodox cemetery in Vitina and the village of Dobreš were hit by missiles.
In August 2003, explosive devices planted in Klokot destroyed five Serb houses, with several injuries, including two American KFOR soldiers.
Serbian Orthodox cemeteries have been destroyed in Vitina, among other towns, and in 2004 during unrest, nuns of the Binča monastery were physically attacked, by ethnic Albanians.
Contemporary
In 2013 in response to a KLA monument being removed by Serbian authorities in Preševo, a Kosovo Albanian crowd in Vitina demolished a Yugoslav-era memorial for anti-fascist Partisans that were killed during the Second World War. Members of the Kosovo Police were present but did nothing to intervene. The incident was filmed and posted to YouTube.