2001 insurgency in Macedonia
0 sources
2001 insurgency in Macedonia
Summary
2001 insurgency in Macedonia is an insurgency[1]. It draws 1,813 Wikipedia views per month (insurgency category, ranking #7 of 62).[2]
Key Facts
- 2001 insurgency in Macedonia's instance of is recorded as insurgency[3].
- 2001 insurgency in Macedonia took place at Polog[4].
- 2001 insurgency in Macedonia took place at Kumanovo Municipality[5].
- 2001 insurgency in Macedonia is part of Yugoslav Wars[6].
- 2001 insurgency in Macedonia began on January 22, 2001[7].
- 2001 insurgency in Macedonia ended on August 13, 2001[8].
- 2001 insurgency in Macedonia occurred on 2001[9].
- Among those involved in 2001 insurgency in Macedonia was National Liberation Army[10].
- A participant in 2001 insurgency in Macedonia was North Macedonia[11].
- Among those involved in 2001 insurgency in Macedonia was Ali Ahmeti[12].
- A participant in 2001 insurgency in Macedonia was Boris Trajkovski[13].
- Among those involved in 2001 insurgency in Macedonia was Ljubčo Georgievski[14].
- Among those involved in 2001 insurgency in Macedonia was Vlado Bučkovski[15].
- A participant in 2001 insurgency in Macedonia was Ljube Boškoski[16].
- A participant in 2001 insurgency in Macedonia was Fadil Nimani[17].
- A participant in 2001 insurgency in Macedonia was Tahir Sinani[18].
- A participant in 2001 insurgency in Macedonia was Rahim Beqiri[19].
- 2001 insurgency in Macedonia's topic's main category is recorded as Category:2001 insurgency in Macedonia[20].
Body
When and Where
2001 insurgency in Macedonia occurred on 2001[9]. It began on January 22, 2001[7]. It ended on August 13, 2001[8]. Recorded location include Polog[4] and Kumanovo Municipality[5].
Context
2001 insurgency in Macedonia is part of Yugoslav Wars[6]. Its instance of is recorded as insurgency[3].
Participants
Recorded participant include National Liberation Army[10], North Macedonia[11], Ali Ahmeti[12], Boris Trajkovski[13], Ljubčo Georgievski[14], and Vlado Bučkovski[15].
Why It Matters
2001 insurgency in Macedonia draws 1,813 Wikipedia views per month (insurgency category, ranking #7 of 62).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 24 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21] It is known by 14 alternative names across languages and contexts.[22]