- Journal of Balkan and Black Sea Studies
- Issue: 6
- The Yugoslav State Security Service and Physical Violence in Socialist Kosovo
The Yugoslav State Security Service and Physical Violence in Socialist Kosovo
Authors : Isabel STROEHLE
Pages : 101-130
View : 12 | Download : 3
Publication Date : 2021-06-30
Article Type : Research
Abstract :As the movement toward decentralization in Yugoslavia accelerated following the Brioni Plenum of 1966, the Kosovo branch of the League of Communists sought to support its demands for an expansion of the province’s autonomy and Albanian nationality rights by revealing so-called "deformations" ("deformations”), including violence of the state security service in Kosovo province. While it formally succeeded in that effort, on a local level this strategy undermined the political legitimacy of Yugoslav Communist rule in multiethnic Kosovo. Using court case files and documented interrogations of security service officials by party commissions, the article first reconstructs one of the most-debated incidents of extreme state violence in Yugoslav Kosovo: the confiscation of weapons from villagers in 1955–1956. The article then explores, using archival materials of the League of Communists of Kosovo and Serbia, the ways in which the Kosovar Communist leadership debated the state security and intelligence agencies’ excessive use of violence a decade later The author argues that the leadership’s aspiration to reshape the memory of the earlier phase of Yugoslav Communist rule in Kosovo through releasing selected pieces of information caused outrage locally and undermined the leadership’s effort to legitimate its rule more fully, particularly as the promised lustration failed to materialize. The moralizing discourse of the leadership, as opposed to legal accountability, merely emphasized this failure and ultimately contributed to narratives of victimisation at the hands of the national "Other.”Keywords : Kosovo, socialist Yugoslavia, state violence, nationality policy