Velika attacks (1879)
The Velika attacks were a series of attacks during the Congress of Berlin carried out by Albanian irregulars.
Background
According to the decisions of the Berlin Congress, the territories of Plav and Gusinje were awarded to Montenegro. Still, the Ottomans did not provide conditions for Montenegro to take over Plav and Gusinje. Officially, they intended to respect the decisions of the Congress, but in reality the Ottomans supported the League of Prizren they had established, also to avoid the fulfilment of the obligations they undertook at the Berlin Congress. The Ottoman governor of Scutari sent ammunition to the local Muslim population of Gusinje in order for them to resist Montenegro.Prelude
Until October 1879, Montenegrin forces were able to march into Gusinje without resistance. When Montenegro prepared forces for such an expedition, the Ottomans intervened with the Great Powers to stop it, under the excuse of avoiding eventual conflicts. The Ottoman military officer Muhtar Pasha arrived at Prizren in November 1879, where he had 15 battalions. The Ottomans informed Montenegro that those forces would only be used to provide the peaceful transfer of Plav and Gusinje to Montenegro, which demobilized some of its forces based on this information. In the meantime, around 15,000 Albanian irregulars gathered in Gusinje. The British Ambassador at Istanbul, A. H. Layard, informed his government that the Porte did nothing to prevent the influx of armed bands into the Gusinje region, and emphasized that the Porte would be held responsible for the consequences.Historian Milovan Đilas emphasized that the northern Albanian tribes had territorial aspirations for the fertile plain along the river Lim in Plav and Gusinje. After the Berlin Congress, their aim was to descend into the valley before the official institutions of Montenegro grasped firm control over it.