After the re-occupation and annexation of Kosovo in 1945 and after the building of the separation wall between Albania and the Albanians in Kosovo, the issue of Kosovo and the other territories that had remained under the former Yugoslavia would remain unresolved. In the Assembly of Prizren, held on July 8-10, 1945, Kosovo was officially annexed by Serbia.
With the approval of the Resolution by the Federal Assembly on July 23, 1945 and by the Serbian Assembly on September 1, 1945, the issue of Kosovo would be considered a closed issue.
In the Resolution of the Assembly of Prizren (the second meeting of the National Liberation Council of Kosovo) it was announced that Kosovo “by the will of its population joined federal Serbia within the Yugoslav Federation”.
Such a solution of the issue “by the will of the population of Kosovo itself” against the logic of the objective character of the national structure of Kosovo and the wide and continuous space of the Albanian ethnic majority in the Balkans, not only would not historically close the problem of Kosovo and the Albanian one, but had reopened this issue in a virtual way in a new historical context, in a geopolitical way in the Balkans. All of this had influenced the nationalist forces in Kosovo to react harshly to the decisions that the assembly had made arbitrarily.
/abcnews.al

