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Saturday, April 5, 2025

Pilot on mission to promote Kosovo

by

20100402

Koso­vo na­tion­al James Berisha is on a mis­sion to high­light the plight of his coun­ty, which gained in­de­pen­dence on Feb­ru­ary 17, 2008, af­ter years of eth­ic and civ­il wars. Berisha, a com­mer­cial pi­lot for Texas-based Sier­ra West Air­lines, left Texas last May to raise aware­ness and pro­mote in­ter­na­tion­al recog­ni­tion of Koso­vo's in­de­pen­dence, which was most­ly ig­nored by many coun­tries. An eth­ic Al­ban­ian, his 47-year-old fa­ther was mur­dered dur­ing the con­flict be­tween the eth­nic Serbs and Al­ba­ni­ans ten years ago. Berisha said it was the death of his fa­ther that in­spired him to fly his sin­gle-en­gine Lear­jet around the world to pro­mote the in­ter­na­tion­al recog­ni­tion of Koso­vo's in­de­pen­dence af­ter decades of war that left the coun­try scarred and beat­en.

In an in­ter­view with the Balkan In­sight, he elab­o­rat­ed on his mis­sion say­ing: "I will thank those coun­tries who have al­ready recog­nised us, I will tell oth­ers how im­por­tant it is for Koso­vo to be recog­nised world­wide, and I will try to end racial stereo­types that be­lit­tle our peo­ple." Sit­ting down with the Guardian yes­ter­day, Berisha said he had just com­plet­ed his tour of 34 South and Cen­tral Amer­i­can coun­tries. He said of those 34, on­ly five ful­ly recog­nised Koso­vo's in­de­pen­dence. Berisha said dur­ing his talks with those gov­ern­ments, he learned the main rea­son many na­tions in that part of the West­ern Hemi­sphere chose not to recog­nise Koso­vo in­de­pen­dence–be­cause of their po­lit­i­cal and eco­nom­ic deal­ings with Rus­sia.

He said dur­ing his vis­it to Paraguay, the pres­i­dent qui­et­ly told him that the gov­ern­ment does recog­nise Koso­vo's in­de­pen­dence, but kept it qui­et be­cause of their eco­nom­ic ties with Rus­sia to which 65 per cent of its meat is ex­port­ed. Berisha said he had re­ceived a warm re­cep­tion in each coun­try and many had tak­en an in­ter­est in learn­ing about the tur­bu­lent his­to­ry of Koso­vo and it's vic­to­ry over the op­pres­sive Russ­ian and Ser­bian forces. He said from Trinidad, he would con­tin­ue to vis­it each coun­try in the Caribbean and end in Flori­da. Berisha said his mis­sion was to­tal­ly self- fund­ed and if it wasn't for gen­er­ous do­na­tions from the pub­lic, he said laugh­ing, he would have prob­a­bly "starved to death by now."

He leaves Trinidad to­day, af­ter a three-day stay. He smiled and com­pli­ment­ed the peo­ple of Trinidad for their warmth and at­ten­tion.

Berisha said his next stretch would be the Eu­ro­pean and Asian con­ti­nents.

For more in­for­ma­tion about James Berisha's mis­sion vis­it his Web site fly­ing­forkoso­vo.com.

Back­ground on Koso­vo

�2 In 1974 Koso­vo was grant­ed au­ton­o­my and the sta­tus of a fed­er­al unit with­in the Ser­bian re­pub­lic.

�2 Through the 1980s, an­ti-Al­ban­ian sen­ti­ment ran ram­pant, fu­el­ing Ser­bian Pres­i­dent Slo­bo­dan Milo­se­vic's cam­paign on re­vok­ing the province's au­ton­o­my.

�2 By the late 1990s, Serbs and Mon­tene­grans had dropped to 15 per cent of the Koso­vo's pop­u­la­tion.

�2 In 1998, the Koso­vo Lib­er­a­tion Army, formed by rad­i­cal Koso­vo Al­ba­ni­ans, be­gan fight­ing the Ser­bian se­cu­ri­ty forces. By Oc­to­ber 1998, the fight­ing left 300,000 rur­al Al­ba­ni­ans home­less.

�2 In 1999, NA­TO lauched a bomb­ing cam­paign over Koso­vo, af­ter Ser­bia con­tin­ued its at­tacks against the Koso­vo Al­ba­ni­ans.

�2 In 2004, Al­ban­ian in­se­cu­ri­ty ex­plod­ed in­to two days of Koso­vo-wide mob at­tacks on Serb com­mu­ni­ties.

�2 Af­ter four years of ex­haust­ing peace- keep­ing ef­forts by NA­TO, EU and the UN, Koso­vo de­clared its in­de­pen­dence from Ser­bia on Feb­ru­ary 17, 2008.


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