Borko "Boro" Vukmirović (Serbian Cyrillic: Борко "Боро" Вукмировић, IPA: [bǒːr(k)o vukmǐːrovitɕ]; 1 August 1912 – 10 April 1943) was one of the organizers of the anti-fascist uprising in Kosovo.
His father Nikola Vukmirović [bg], originally from the Montenegrin town of Rijeka Crnojevića, took part in the Ilinden Uprising in 1903.
After the uprising was suppressed, Nikola was imprisoned in the Ottoman Empire later moving to Bulgaria where he married Stojanka with whom he had three sons: Boro, Andro and Rade.
At that time, the Peć gymnasium had only six grades and further education had to be completed in Prizren for which his parents didn't have the funds.
At the beginning of August 1940, he was chosen as a member of the KPJ Regional Committees for Montenegro, Sandžak and Kosovo and Metohija.
[1] On 6 March 1945 by decree of the presidency of the Anti-Fascist Council for the National Liberation of Yugoslavia, Vukmirović and Sadiku were posthumously awarded the Order of the People's Hero and were among the first to be recipients.
In the years after the Second World War, Boro and Ramiz became a symbol of Brotherhood and Unity of the Serbian/Montenegrin and Albanian people and of the anti-fascist struggle in Kosovo and Metohija.