It has been suggested that 2001 anti-Albanian protests be merged into this article. (Discuss) Proposed since September 2024. |
Karpalak ambush | |||||||
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Part of the 2001 insurgency in Macedonia | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
National Liberation Army Albanian National Army[1] | Macedonia | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Unknown Unknown |
Nane Naumoski † Sašo Kitanoski † | ||||||
Units involved | |||||||
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Strength | |||||||
Unknown | 120 reservists[2] | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
None None |
10 killed 3 wounded 1 truck destroyed 1 bus destroyed | ||||||
The Karpalak ambush (Macedonian: Заседа кај Карпалак; Albanian: Pritë në Karpalak), referred to by Macedonians as the Karpalak massacre (Macedonian: Масакр кај Карпалак),[2] was an attack carried out by the National Liberation Army (NLA) against a convoy of the Army of the Republic of Macedonia (ARM) near the village of Grupčin on 8 August 2001 during the 2001 insurgency in Macedonia. Ten members of the ARM's Military Reserve Force, including two officers, were killed at Karpalak and three others were wounded. The ambush was the single deadliest incident of the conflict. It was speculated that the ambush was carried out in retaliation for a Macedonian police raid in Skopje, the day before in which five NLA insurgents were killed.
In the years following the ambush, the Macedonian government has commissioned several plaques commemorating the fallen reservists, which have become the frequent target of vandals. This has prompted complaints from veterans' organizations that the government has not done enough to ensure the reservists are properly commemorated.
"ANA" CLAIMS RESPONSIBILITY FOR KILLING OF TEN MACEDONIAN SOLDIERS Skopje, August 10 - A new armed group of ethnic Albanians on Thursday claimed responsibility for the killing of ten Macedonian army reservists in a highway ambush a day earlier. The "Albanian National Army" (AKSH) e-mailed a statement to several media in the region, on Albanian-language, saying a combined unit of its fighters and of the so-called National Liberation Army (NLA) carried the attack out "in revenge" for the killing of five NLA members by Macedonian security forces.