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The Plav–Gusinje massacres of 1912-1913 occurred between late 1912 and March 1913 in the areas of the modern Plav and Gusinje municipalities and adjacent areas. More than 1,800 locals, mostly Muslim Albanians from these two regions were killed and 12,000 were forced to convert to Orthodoxy by the military administration put in charge of these regions by the Kingdom of Montenegro which had annexed them during the First Balkan War.

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  • Massaker am Pass von Previ (de)
  • Plav–Gusinje massacres (1912–1913) (en)
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  • Das Massaker am Previ-Pass (albanisch Qafa e Previsë) ereignete sich im Verlauf der Balkankriege am 9. März 1913 nach der Eroberung des Talls von Plava und Gucia am 8. Oktober 1912 durch das Königreich Montenegro. Dabei wurden 700 albanische Jungen und Männer aus den Dörfern , , sowie den Ortschaften Plava und Gucia getötet. Die Albaner wurden festgenommen und gefesselt in Zweierreihen zum Pass von Previ gebracht. Dort mussten sie ihre eigenen Gräber schaufeln, ehe sie von der Beranska Brigada (deutsch Brigade von Beran, albanisch Brigada e Beranës) hingerichtet wurden. (de)
  • The Plav–Gusinje massacres of 1912-1913 occurred between late 1912 and March 1913 in the areas of the modern Plav and Gusinje municipalities and adjacent areas. More than 1,800 locals, mostly Muslim Albanians from these two regions were killed and 12,000 were forced to convert to Orthodoxy by the military administration put in charge of these regions by the Kingdom of Montenegro which had annexed them during the First Balkan War. (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Ovg1912.046.jpg
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  • Das Massaker am Previ-Pass (albanisch Qafa e Previsë) ereignete sich im Verlauf der Balkankriege am 9. März 1913 nach der Eroberung des Talls von Plava und Gucia am 8. Oktober 1912 durch das Königreich Montenegro. Dabei wurden 700 albanische Jungen und Männer aus den Dörfern , , sowie den Ortschaften Plava und Gucia getötet. Die Albaner wurden festgenommen und gefesselt in Zweierreihen zum Pass von Previ gebracht. Dort mussten sie ihre eigenen Gräber schaufeln, ehe sie von der Beranska Brigada (deutsch Brigade von Beran, albanisch Brigada e Beranës) hingerichtet wurden. Verantwortlich für die Ermordung von 63 Männern aus dem Dorf und Dutzender weiterer aus der Umgebung war der erste Brigadier im Tal Radomir Vešović. Nachdem er im Dezember 1912 in die Ortschaft Deçan im Kosovo versetzt worden war, wurde Avro Cemović, im Volksmund auch Avro Cemi genannt, Oberbefehlshaber im Tal. Später wurde er wegen seiner Taten angeklagt. Dazu zählten Zwangskonvertierungen zum serbisch-orthodoxen Glauben. Unschuldige Bürger wurden standrechtlich zum Tode verurteilt. (de)
  • The Plav–Gusinje massacres of 1912-1913 occurred between late 1912 and March 1913 in the areas of the modern Plav and Gusinje municipalities and adjacent areas. More than 1,800 locals, mostly Muslim Albanians from these two regions were killed and 12,000 were forced to convert to Orthodoxy by the military administration put in charge of these regions by the Kingdom of Montenegro which had annexed them during the First Balkan War. Much of the military administration of Plav-Gusinje was manned by the captaincy of the Vasojevići tribe. Brigadier Avro Cemović was the chief leader of the perpetrators of the massacres. The events of the massacres and the forced conversions were stopped with the intervention mainly of Austria-Hungary in April 1913 after the killing of Franciscan Albanian monk in a similar campaign of forced conversion in western Kosovo. The events caused a wave of refugees towards Albania and the Ottoman Empire (modern Turkey). The descendants of the victims, Albanians and Bosniaks commemorate the events yearly and have erected memorials for their ancestors. (en)
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