Fadil Nura
Fadil Nura | |
---|---|
Mayor of Skenderaj | |
Assumed office 2 November 2021 | |
Preceded by | Bekim Jashari |
Member of the Assembly of the Republic of Kosovo | |
In office 19 November 2020 – 2 November 2021 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Prelloc, SAP Kosovo, SR Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia | 4 March 1979
Nationality | Kosovan Albanian |
Political party | PDK |
Children | 2 |
Education | University of Pristina |
Military service | |
Political representative | Kosovo Liberation Army |
Fadil Nura (born 4 March 1979) is a politician in Kosovo. He was a member of the Assembly of the Republic of Kosovo from 2020 to 2021 and has been the mayor of Skenderaj since 2021. Nura is a member of the Democratic Party of Kosovo (PDK).
Early life and career
[edit]Nura was born to a Kosovo Albanian family in the village of Prelloc in the municipality of Skenderaj, in what was then the Socialist Autonomous Province of Kosovo in the Socialist Republic of Serbia, Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He graduated from the University of Pristina's Faculty of Law in 2005 and earned a master's degree from the same institution in 2008. From 2008 to 2010, he was director of Skenderaj's administrative and staff department.[1]
Politician
[edit]Nura was deputy mayor of Skenderaj from 2011 to 2014 and was the municipality's acting mayor from 2014 to 2017.[1] He was a deputy minister of justice in the government of the Republic of Kosovo from 2018 to 2019.[2]
Parliamentarian
[edit]Nura received the sixty-second position on the PDK's electoral list in the 2019 Kosovan parliamentary election. Parliamentary elections in Kosovo are conducted under open list proportional representation, and he finished in eighteenth place among the list's candidates.[3] The list won twenty-four seats, and Nura would have been elected had the assembly mandates been assigned solely on the basis of votes received. Due to a requirement for one-third female representation, however, he did not initially receive a seat.[4][5]
He was awarded an assembly mandate on 19 November 2020 as a replacement for party leader Kadri Veseli, who resigned from parliament after being indicted for war crimes and crimes against humanity in the Kosovo War.[6] The PDK served in opposition during this period.
Nura finished in sixteenth place among the PDK's candidates in the 2021 parliamentary election and was re-elected when the party list won nineteen mandates.[7][8] Vetëvendosje won the election, and the PDK continued in opposition. Nura was a member of the committee for oversight of public finances and the committee on agriculture, forestry, rural development, environment, spatial planning, and infrastructure.[9]
Mayor of Skenderaj
[edit]Nura ran against incumbent Skenderaj mayor Bekim Jashari, an independent politician, in the 2021 Kosovan local elections. During the campaign, Nura said that the PDK had refrained from fielding a candidate against Jashari in the previous 2017 Kosovan local elections and that he himself had supported Jashari's candidacy. He added, however, that Skenderaj had stagnated under Jashari's leadership and that the municipality now needed "protectionism, not dilettantism."[10] He defeated Jashari in the first round of voting. After winning the mayoral election, Nura resigned from the Republic of Kosovo assembly on 2 November 2021.[11]
In September 2023, Nura announced that Skenderaj had laid the foundation stone for a memorial on the location where the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) appeared publicly for the first time.[12]
Electoral record
[edit]Local (Skenderaj)
[edit]Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fadil Nura | Democratic Party of Kosovo | 13,123 | 57.89 | |
Bekim Jashari (incumbent) | Independent List Bekim Jashari | 9,236 | 40.74 | |
Sokol Haliti | Civic Initiative "For Skenderaj" | 311 | 1.37 | |
Total | 22,670 | 100.00 | ||
Source: [13] |
References
[edit]- ^ a b Fadil Nura, Minister of Justice, Republic of Kosovo, accessed 13 January 2022.
- ^ FADIL NURA, Republic of Kosovo – Skenderaj, accessed 25 September 2023.
- ^ ZGJEDHJET E PARAKOHSHME PËR KUVENDIN E REPUBLIKËS SË KOSOVËS 2019 – Rezultatet dhe Statistikat (Rezultatet e të gjithë kandidatëve (renditja si në fletëvotim)), Central Election Commission, Republic of Kosovo, p. 5, accessed 2 February 2022.
- ^ "25 deputetët e ardhshëm të PDK-së në Kuvendin e Kosovës", Telegrafi, 7 November 2019, accessed 13 January 2022. The article's title is erroneous; the PDK list won twenty-four seats.
- ^ ZGJEDHJET E PARAKOHSHME PËR KUVENDIN E REPUBLIKËS SË KOSOVËS 2019 – Rezultatet dhe Statistikat (Ndarja e ulëseve në Kuvend (Subjektet dhe kandidatët e zgjedhur)), Central Election Commission, Republic of Kosovo, p. 5, accessed 14 January 2022.
- ^ "Fadil Nura deputeti i ri i PDK-së në Kuvend, zëvendëson Kadri Veselin", Telegrafi, 19 November 2020, accessed 13 January 2022.
- ^ ZGJEDHJET E PARAKOHSHME PËR KUVENDIN E REPUBLIKËS SË KOSOVËS 2021 – Rezultatet dhe Statistikat (Rezultatet e të gjithë kandidatëve (renditja si në fletëvotim)), Central Election Commission, Republic of Kosovo, p. 27, accessed 21 January 2022. He received the fiftieth position on the PDK list in 2021.
- ^ ZGJEDHJET E PARAKOHSHME PËR KUVENDIN E REPUBLIKËS SË KOSOVËS 2021 – Rezultatet dhe Statistikat (Ndarja e ulëseve në Kuvend (Subjektet dhe kandidatët e zgjedhur)), Central Election Commission, Republic of Kosovo, p. 5, accessed 20 January 2022.
- ^ Fadil Nura Archived 2021-10-19 at the Wayback Machine, Assembly of the Republic of Kosovo, accessed 25 September 2023.
- ^ "LAJME Fadil Nura: Bekim Jashari e refuzoi emblemën e PDK-së, pas 17 tetorit do të jem kryetar", In Fokus, 10 October 2021, accessed 13 January 2022.
- ^ "Fadil Nura jep dorëheqje nga pozita e deputetit", Telegrafi, 2 November 2021, accessed 13 January 2022.
- ^ "Skenderaj, nis ndërtimi i një memoriali në vendin ku për herë të parë doli publikisht UÇK-ja", Telegrafi, 16 September 2023, accessed 25 September 2023.
- ^ ZGJEDHJET PËR KRYETARË TË KOMUNAVE 2021 – Rezultatet dhe Statistikat (Raundi i parë) – Rezultatet për Kryetar të Komunave, Central Election Commission, Republic of Kosovo, p. 22, accessed 12 January 2022.