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[3]:21. The introduction of cable television through ISPs greatly increased the capacity of television coverage starting in the 2010s with companies bringing programming from Albania and foreign channels to Kosovo. According to a 2013 study by the Independent Media Commission, more than half of Kosovo receives their television signal through cable.
[3] Media in Pristina have followed all elections held in Kosova, [4] especially a great impact was noted in Kosova local elections, 2013,where media dedicated most of their time in political debates, advertisements and political parties programs. [5] The freedom and pluralism of the media is guaranteed by the Constitution of Kosova.
It would derive its name from one of the main core marxist organizations that formed LPK, National-Liberation Movement of Kosovo and other Albanian Regions (Albanian: Lëvizja Nacional-Çlirimtare e Kosovës dhe të Viseve tjetra Shqiptare në Jugosllavi, LNÇKVSHJ), founded in February 1978 by Metush Krasniqi, Jusuf Gërvalla and Sabri Novosella.
Ekrem Lluka "is the owner of the Dukagjini Group, which includes TV Dukagjini, Radio Dukagjini, Insurance Company, Slovenian-Kosovo Pension Fund, the mobile telephony business D3 Mobile, two hydro power plants in Albania, hotels, a hospital, a printing plant, a publishing house, the Tobacco import and distribution network, Birra Peja, etc."
[3] [4] The LPK's ideology was left-wing nationalism. Peter Schwarz, while talking about Kosovo Liberation Army (UÇK) in "Kosovo and the crisis in the Atlantic Alliance", (Sep, 1st, 1999), states: "In Germany a ban was in the course of being implemented against the core of the party, the Enver Hoxha-oriented KPM (Kosovo People's Movement)". [5]
In the early hours of 5 May, a US military AH-64 Apache helicopter crashed [298] approximately 45 miles (72 km), according to CNN, [299] or 40 miles (64 km), according to the BBC, [300] northeast of Tirana, Albania's capital, very close to the border between Kosovo and Albania. [298]
The same year, its Albanian majority—as well as the Republic of Albania—supported the proclamation of an independent Republic of Kosova. Following the end of the Kosovo War 1999, and as a result of NATO intervention , [ 5 ] [ 6 ] Serbia and the federal government no longer exercised de facto control over the territory.
It was originally established by the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo in 2001 [8] to provide 'provisional, democratic self-government'. On February 17, 2008, representatives of the people of Kosovo [ 9 ] unilaterally declared Kosovo's independence and subsequently adopted the Constitution of Kosovo , which came into ...